Author: J.P. Knowles

  • Belligerent Woman Gets What She Deserves On Board Airplane

    Belligerent Woman Gets What She Deserves On Board Airplane

    It appears as though flight attendants being assaulted by passengers has become far too commonplace. A woman on a flight to Nashville Saturday night attacked two flight attendants then was zip-tied by another passenger and was subsequently arrested while shouting for officers to “shoot me.”

    Crew members had contacted authorities before landing at the Nashville International Airport and police were waiting to arrest the 42-year-old woman who was taken off the flight for “unruly behavior” then arrested for public intoxication.

    The plane took off from Fort Lauderdale around 6 p.m, it was some time after take-off that the woman punched one flight attendant, and pulled the hair of another. Following the attack, a fellow passenger restrained the woman’s feet by using zip-ties.

    The woman, who smelled of alcohol, had slurred speech, and had bloodshot eyes, told officers that she had drunk “a lot.”

    When she’d been arrested, she shouted at the officers that “I didn’t do anything wrong” and “shoot me.” The woman also tried to avoid being placed in the police car by stiffening her legs, so officers could not close the door.

    “Thank you to our guests who assisted our crew and local law enforcement for their assistance,” Spirit Airlines spokesperson Nicole Aguiar said. “We will work with the relevant authorities to ensure this individual is prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

    She was jailed Saturday evening, spent the night sobering up, and released Sunday morning. The flight crew did not press charges.

    Police arrested a passenger on a Jetblue flight in September for choking a flight attendant then rushing the cockpit. A flight attendant was assaulted on a flight from New York in October and was left bloodied and in need of medical attention.

  • WATCH Pilot Dangle From Plane To Save The Day

    WATCH Pilot Dangle From Plane To Save The Day

    The captain and crew of a Southwest Airlines flight went above and beyond to assist in locating a passenger’s cell phone after they had left it behind.

    After the aircraft had already departed from the gate at Long Beach Airport in California, the Dallas-based airline posted a brief video clip showing a pilot reaching out of the cockpit window to borrow a phone from a ramp worker.

    “The Captain immediately suggested that the ramp agents on the ground try to jump the phone up to him so he could return it to the customer. The rest was captured on video,” a spokesperson said.

    When a passenger on another flight discovered the phone and informed ground staff, the owner had left the device behind before boarding and the plane had already pushed back.

    The gate guards moved into action right away.

    “They quickly passed the phone to our Ramp Agents, who jumped it up to the Captain to get it back to the Customer,” the airline said in a statement.

    The video was posted on this week on World Kindness Day, an international holiday founded in 1998 to encourage kindness throughout the world.

    “We love seeing the goodwill efforts of our employees helping out a fellow passenger. We are grateful to see our team jumping in to help passengers often,” the spokesperson added.

  • Six Teens On Spring Break Found Clinging To Life On The Font Lawn

    Six Teens On Spring Break Found Clinging To Life On The Font Lawn

    Six teens celebrating spring break in a Fort Lauderdale suburb suffered cardiac arrest after ingesting fentanyl-laced drugs.

    Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue officers responded to a call from neighbors, where they found six people who were showing signs of a drug “overdose.”.

    “There were multiple people in cardiac arrest in the front yard,” Chief Stephen Gollan said. “Narcan was deployed as quickly as possible.”

    Only four of the teens had gone into cardiac arrest after ingesting what police believed to have been cocaine laced with the highly potent and deadly narcotic fentanyl. It was only after attempting CPR the two other individuals went into cardiac arrest due to the potency of the fentanyl.

    “When they went down in cardiac arrest, two of their friends began doing CPR,” the chief explained, “and they were exposed from the drug contact from the fentanyl.”

    All victims were rushed to Broward Health Medical Center and Holy Cross Hospital, with one in critical condition and the other five in stable condition.

    “This is extremely alarming to us,” Gollan said. “Fentanyl is extremely, extremely potent and can stop your heart, your respiration.”

    Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid roughly 80-100 times stronger than morphine, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The substance is often mixed with cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, and marijuana to increase potency and dependency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted.

  • Lawmakers Push To Take Medals From Fallen American Soldiers

    Lawmakers Push To Take Medals From Fallen American Soldiers

    Representatives propose to revoke Medals of Honor given to American soldiers who took part in the infamous 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre, which claimed the lives of 250 Native Americans, chiefly women and children.

    As an addition to the fiscal 2023 military policy law, legislation was passed last week to take back the medals, which are the country’s highest decoration for bravery. Similar attempts have been made in the past, but during compromises between the House and Senate versions of the law, they were finally abandoned.

    Twenty members of the 7th U.S. Calvary Regiment received Medals of Honor for their participation in the Dec. 29, 1890 massacre on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, close to Wounded Knee Creek.

    In violation of the 1868 Treaty of Laramie, which stipulated that the tribe would live in the Black Hills in what was then the Dakota Territory, the U.S. government sought to acquire the Great Sioux Reservation.

    In addition to the hundreds of Native Americans that perished at Wounded Knee, more than 30 troops also perished there.

    Congress issued an apology for the killing on the 100th anniversary of Wounded Knee in 1990, but did not withdraw the medals. Sen. John McCain, a former head of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs and a member of the GOP, stated in 1996 that the slaughter did not justify stripping the medals from recipients.

  • Researchers Say Marijuana Is Causing Strange New Side Effect

    Researchers Say Marijuana Is Causing Strange New Side Effect

    Scromiting, which is a blending of the words “screaming” and “vomiting,” is a condition characterized by bouts of abdominal discomfort and nausea so painful that the affected may begin to yell. And it’s caused by extreme marijuana usage.

    Users on Twitter joked about the unusual — but real — term on Sunday after a reporter, who wrote about the phenomenon in a piece about marijuana use in California, laid out a series of tweets admonishing marijuana use and calling its legalization in California a “public health disaster.”

    But Cannabinoid Hyperemesis Syndrome, or CHS, is an actual condition that affects a select group of heavy habitual marijuana users.

    CHS can be relieved with hot showers or prescribed medication, but it only goes away when the person stops using marijuana. Many patients refuse to believe that marijuana is causing their symptoms and are resistant to giving it up.

    In 2019, a cannabis user named April Moon said she was reluctant to attribute her CHS symptoms to marijuana because, like most users, she had been fine using marijuana before.

    “I was in denial. I didn’t want to believe it was true,” she said. “Cannabis is my world. It’s my whole life.”

    Infections, kidney failure due to dehydration, and significant weight loss can result from CHS, and it can be deadly if left untreated.

    A 2017 study found that men are more likely to have the condition, and reported at least weekly cannabis use.

    Conditions like CHS may be a product of the higher concentrations of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, in marijuana today than in the 1990s, research shows. Because of the way cannabis is grown and modified now, a joint in the ’90s may have had 1-3 mg of THC, while a joint now could have upwards of 18 mg of THC.

    Research also found that some emergency rooms in states that legalized marijuana had seen an uptick in those with CHS visiting the emergency room.

  • Blue Angels In Danger Of Being Canceled By California

    Blue Angels In Danger Of Being Canceled By California

    A former Blue Angels flight leader responded to a San Francisco Democrat who suggested banning the historic Navy air squadron on Tuesday by inviting him to come see the show for himself.

    Captain Eric Doyle appeared on “Fox & Friends First” to discuss his reaction to the suggestion as well as the overall theme surrounding the fighter jet demonstration.

    “I think he should come join us at Fleet Week and see some of his constituents,” Doyle said. “Fleet Week is one of the best air shows of the season. So many great people out there.”

    “They’re excited, so I don’t think if they took a vote on it that that bill would pass right now,” he added.

    Dean Preston, a self-described Democratic socialist from San Francisco’s District 5, made the suggestion in a tweet over the weekend.

    “The Blue Angels should not be allowed to fly over San Francisco,” the post read. “That’s it. That’s the tweet.” He did not elaborate any further.

    The Blue Angels were previously set to perform this weekend, but the show was canceled due to fog.

    “To take a note out of the mission statement for the Blue Angels, it’s to inspire a culture of excellence and service to country or just service, and that’s really what it’s all about,” Doyle said. “It’s not recruiting, it’s service. So putting the needs of others before the needs of your own, and that’s what we hang our hat on.”

    “So honestly, that’s kind of what he’s doing right now,” he continued. “He’s serving his city and his country actually in a different way than maybe some of the service members in the military, but it’s really it’s all cut from the same cloth.”

     

  • Biden Admin Makes A Confession About Russian Sabotage

    Biden Admin Makes A Confession About Russian Sabotage

    In an interview on Tuesday night, a top U.S. official explicitly declared that the country was not responsible for the attack on two Russian pipelines late last month.

    The interview comes after “extraordinary” damage was caused to three lines in Russia’s Nord Stream natural gas pipeline system last Monday. The CIA had previously warned that the pipeline would be targeted for sabotage because of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s conflict in Ukraine.

    When asked about it by Fox News anchor Bret Baier, John Kirby, the National Security Council’s coordinator for strategic communications, said that the United States “had nothing to do with it.”

    “That’s just Russian propaganda and disinformation,” Kirby claimed. “Now, we know it was an act of sabotage, but there’s an investigation going on right now. I don’t think we’re going to get into credentialing that in terms of who was responsible. We’re going to let the investigators take a look at that. But, clearly, this was an act of sabotage.”

    After playing a clip of Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying that the pipeline’s destruction was “a tremendous opportunity to once and for all remove the dependence on Russian energy, and thus to take away from Vladimir Putin the weaponization of energy as a means of advancing his imperial designs,” Baier pressed Kirby once more on the subject.

    Kirby once again declared that the Biden administration was not responsible for the attack.

    “Not to belabor this, but for the people who look at this and say, ‘why would Russia attack its own pipeline that creates leverage over Europe and perhaps the West,’ what do you say to them?” Baier asked.

    “Again, I can’t speak to specific accountability for this act of sabotage,” Kirby responded. “I can just assure you the United States had nothing to do with it, of course. That’s just Russian propaganda. And look, we’re — again, without — without crediting it to anybody right now, what I would say is, just look at what Russia has done in the past since the last seven months of this war and when it began, and that is to weaponize energy.”

  • Two Florida Guys Get The Shock Of Their Lives While Out Hunting

    Two Florida Guys Get The Shock Of Their Lives While Out Hunting

    If you live in the deep south, spotting a few wild gators is nothing new. There are over one million wild alligators living in Florida alone and about another million in Louisiana. The Okefenokee Swamp in the wetlands covers over 400,00 acres of North Florida and South Georgia and is a great place to see these massive creatures in their natural habitat.

    These guys in Florida were no strangers to wrangling these giant lizards and were hoping to bag a decent-sized gator to throw on the grill. They quickly found that they might have bitten off a bit more than they could chew.

    Two Florida men recently caught an enormous 12-foot alligator after waiting three years to receive a permit. ABC-affiliate station WEAR said that the men successfully bagged the gator on their first attempt.

    The capture happened Monday morning on the Perdido River, WEAR reported. Andy Sokol and his friend Tanner were hoping to catch an eight-foot alligator — enough meat for a barbecue, Sokol said, according to Fox 29. Instead, the pair got much more than they bargained for.

    “I knew when we got a hook in him we were like, ‘OK, he’s pretty big.’ But then when we saw this giant foot and this giant tail come up next to the boat, we were like, ‘OK, he’s really big,’” Sokol told WEAR.

    What ensued was a heated two-hour struggle but the men were determined and hungry and eventually subdued the gator.

    “It was definitely a different kind of battle,” Sokol continued. “It’ll get your heart going, definitely. I think the small boat really enhanced that feeling. But it was fun, it was definitely fun.”

    Sokol told WEAR that the experience was unforgettable and he hopes to receive a permit for next year’s harvest.

    It must be noted that Sokol and his friends obtained all of the proper hunting licenses. Every year about 15,000 Floridians apply to the Florida fish and Wildlife Commission for permits but only 7,000 are available.

  • House Republicans Seek To Destroy IRS And Taxes

    House Republicans Seek To Destroy IRS And Taxes

    A bill sponsored by Republicans in the House of Representatives would dismantle the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), do away with the federal income tax, and in its place, enact a national sales tax.

    The House will vote on Georgia Republican Rep. Buddy Carter’s reintroduced Fair Tax Act, which seeks to rein in the IRS, eliminate the national income tax as well as other taxes, and replace them with a single consumption tax. Fox News Digital has learned this.

    In order to advance his bid for the gavel, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., forced the vote on the bill forward as part of a deal with members of the House Freedom Caucus.

    “Cosponsoring this Georgia-made legislation was my first act as a Member of Congress and is, fittingly, the first bill I am introducing in the 118th Congress,” Carter said in a press release.

    “Instead of adding 87,000 new agents to weaponize the IRS against small business owners and middle America, this bill will eliminate the need for the department entirely by simplifying the tax code with provisions that work for the American people and encourage growth and innovation,” Carter added.

    “Armed, unelected bureaucrats should not have more power over your paycheck than you do,” he added.

    The bill specifically abolishes the IRS, which is set to hire 87,000 new agents unless congressional Republicans can block it, and imposes a national sales tax. It also repeals the national personal and corporate income taxes.

    The bill also repeals the payroll, gift, and death taxes and would substitute a national consumption tax for the existing tax system.

    The bill was co-signed by 11 people, including Cammack, Duncan, Good, Rep. Andrew Clyde of Georgia and Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, leader of the House Freedom Caucus.

    The proposal demonstrates the staunch opposition that House Republicans have for the Biden administration’s policies of enlarging the federal government, which include additional funding for 87,000 IRS positions.

     

     

  • Stacy Abrams Takes The Money And Runs Away From Employees

    Stacy Abrams Takes The Money And Runs Away From Employees

    Stacey Abrams, a Democrat who raised more than $100 million in her second unsuccessful bid to become governor of Georgia, appears to have left behind a number of unsatisfied staff members.

    Several staff members told Axios that they stopped getting paid a week after Abrams lost to Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, and some of them admitted that they were having trouble even paying their rent on time.

    “People have told me they have no idea how they’re going to pay their rent in January,” one former staffer said. “It was more than unfortunate. It was messed up.”

    Axios reported that “money became so tight that most of the 180 full-time staffers were given an abrupt paycheck cutoff date — just a week after the November election.”

    Reporter Lachlan Markay summed up Abrams’s campaign’s money troubles on social media: “Stacey Abrams’ lavishly funded campaign ended in serious debt and quickly cut off paychecks to staffers.”

    National Journal’s Matt Holt accused Axios of engaging in a “remarkable spin… considering they raised more than $100 million.”

    According to representatives for unsuccessful Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker, they would continue to pay campaign workers through December.

    Since announcing on December 14 that she is “teaming up to produce a music documentary for Discovery+” with pop star Selena Gomez, Abrams has not tweeted from her official account in nearly a week.