Donald Trump tweets at wrong Ivanka during daughter's CNN interview, Official Leaks


Wrong Ivanka, Donald Trump!
The President-elect mistook a woman in the United Kingdom for his 35-year-old daughter while proudly live-tweeting her interview airing on CNN Monday night.
“@Ivanka Trump is great, a woman with real character and class,” read a tweet Trump shared from Massachusetts chiropractor Lawrence Goodstein, whose account has since gone private amid sudden publicity.

His daughter’s longtime Twitter handle is @IvankaTrump — not @Ivanka, an account used by Ivanka Majic since 2007. Trump failed to correct his daughter’s username while editing Goodstein’s original tweet: adding a comma and lowercasing “Great.”
The social media misfire has “consistently” been plaguing Majic for at least six years, said a man who answered a phone at her Brighton home. It has only gotten worse as Trump plugged away at his White House bid.“Too many Twitter notifications meant for Ivanka Trump rather than me,” she wrote in Feb. 2016. “I fear it will only get worse.”

ISIS Computers '80 Percent' Full of Porn, Ex-Official Members Says.


Two former special operations soldiers, who separately went on countless raids against terror targets in Iraq, said they personally found pornography on many of their missions -- both on laptops and in the form of magazines and DVDs.
"Those guys had all kinds of sick s---," said Jack Murphy, an ex-Special Forces soldier and current editor-in-chief at the special operations news website SOFREP.com.
In one infamous case, a huge stash of pornography was found by U.S. Navy SEALs during the raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in May 2011, according to a U.S. official. The official said at the time that the material was hidden away in a wooden box in the al-Qaeda leader’s bedroom.
A former counterterrorism official told ABC News that U.S. intelligence initially suspected coded messages might be hidden in the bin Laden porn files, but it turned out they were just what they appeared to be.

The viewing of pornography is generally seen as “haram,” or forbidden, in mainstream Islam, not to mention in the extremist interpretations espoused by al-Qaeda and ISIS.
But a senior law enforcement official who has worked terrorism cases involving al-Qaeda and ISIS in the U.S. and abroad said, “There has yet to be a case where some crazy porn stuff hasn't come up ... It never fails.”
The former analyst said that it’s possible the terrorist groups’ strict public posturing fueled perverse private habits like the viewing of extreme pornography and, in the more recent case of ISIS, codified sexual abuse of female slaves.
“I think it’s indicative of their hypocrisy of what they’ve said they believe in — their perverted version of their religion,” the former official said.

Mothers Speak Out From Refugee Camps, Heart Touching (Must Watch)




Astronaut Gene Cernan Didn't Just Go to the Moon, He Took All USA with him...


One bright moonlit night in Florida, as we headed back to the ABC News workspace at the Kennedy Space Canter, astronaut Gene Cernan turned to me and pointed up to the big yellow ball in the sky.
"You see that spot just by the 'eye?'" he asked me, referring to the unmistakable face of the Man in the Moon. "You see that? That's where I landed. That's the Valley of Taurus-Littrow."
The grin on his own face was boundless; the pride, palpable. The last human to leave his footprints on the lunar surface knew he'd had the experience of a lifetime.
How lucky we were as a nation, and as a space-going species, to have Gene Cernan, who died Monday at the age of 82, as one of us. His enthusiasm for space travel and his ability to convey its wonders were marvels. And he did it with the precision of an engineer and the artistry of a poet.
In time, through a series of circumstances, I became ABC's lead space anchor and correspondent, and always sitting beside me on the booth was the indefatigable astronaut. Cernan's unabashed cheerleading for the success of the shuttle ("Go, baby, go!" he memorably said into his microphone as the Columbia first lifted off) was a perfectly acceptable contrast to our own journalistic neutrality. And made for some warm moments of humanity on the air.
In 1983, during the 2 a.m. launch of STS-8 -– NASA's first attempt to send up a shuttle without benefit of daylight -– Cernan turned to me after liftoff and said, fairly bubbling, "Do you believe me now, Lynn?" He was talking about his own last launch on Apollo 17, more than a decade earlier, a nighttime display that he'd witnessed from inside of the spacecraft, and about which he was endlessly exuberant. I told him I got it.
I learned a lot from Cernan, some of it not exactly technical.
He told me about the old "Right Stuff" days, when the swaggering guys in the silver suits would drive into the Space Center just flashing a pack of cigarettes, palmed in their hands, rather than credentials. And he taught me that some of that macho tradition persisted.
During one launch, as I contemplated the potentially dodgy fate of the humans on board the world's most complicated flying machine, I uttered the word, "fear."
Cernan, with only a bit of humor in his voice, corrected me, saying, "Astronauts are never frightened, Lynn. A little apprehensive at times, but never frightened."

Trump already plotting 2020 Re-election (complete with slogan) ON-POLITICS


                    President-elect Donald Trump unveils his 2020 campaign slogan.
Donald Trump and his aides have made no secret of the fact they are already looking toward a re-election bid in 2020.
Apparently, they even have a new slogan.
The New York businessman who won the presidency by campaigning on the mantra "Make America Great Again" says he plans to update that motto three years from now: "Keep America Great."
Trump trademarked his campaign slogan for 2016, and he indicated to The Washington Post he plans to do so again.

Woman Spots Barefoot Girl Alone on Highway, THEN Realizes Her Mom's Car Wreck is Behind Her



This heartbreaking story entails a woman noticing a little girl and witnessing a horrible car accident that involved the girl's mother.

#1 Sleepy Driver



It was just another day driving around her two children when Angela Shymanski noticed herself falling asleep at the wheel. She was driving with her 5-year-old daughter, Lexi, and her 10-week old son Peter. When her eyes closed again...things took a literal turn for the worst...