TODAY'S TALKING POINTS |
Russia's security chief said an act of terror brought down Metrojet flight 9268. Officials confirmed that a bomb had been placed on the jet that crashed over Egypt's Sinai Peninsula on Oct. 31, causing the plane to shatter in midair, killing all 224 people on board. Authorities arrested two airport workers suspected of helping the attackers, and Russia's offering a $50 million reward for information leading to anyone else involved. ISIS has said they brought the plane down. |
In the wake of the Paris attacks, at least half of U.S. governors said they’ll deny Syrian refugees entry. It took one passport belonging to a Syrian refugee to spur panic. It was found near the dead body of a Paris attacker who entered Europe last month, and it has some politicians wondering if the plan to welcome 10,000 refugees to the U.S. in the next year is a good one — but they probably can’t stop them from coming. President Barack Obama slammed the GOP candidates who said Syrian refugees shouldn’t be permitted. Wondering if your state wants to keep asylum seekers out? Here’s a map. |
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The number of people killed by police in the U.S. this year has officially reached 1,000. A man who was fatally shot in Oakland, California, on Sunday was the 1,000th person added to the Guardian’s investigative database “The Counted,” which logs every fatality at the hands of law enforcement in 2015. |
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A former Mississippi firefighter received the most extensive face transplant in history. Fourteen years ago, a raging fire left Patrick Hardison severely disfigured. Even after undergoing 71 surgeries to sculpt some semblance of a face, he said “kids ran screaming and crying when they saw me.” But last August, he had a life-changing 26-hour surgery that gave him a new face — and his medical team just declared it a major success. |
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