Skip to content

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Multiple news sources at #1 place!

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

Home - BBC US politics - US citizen released by Taliban after nine-month detention

Posted in
  • BBC US politics

US citizen released by Taliban after nine-month detention

by The editor•28 September 2025•Posted inBBC US politics

Amir Amiry is expected to return to the US after months of negotiations for his release, which were led by Qatari mediators.

The editor
More by The editor

You might also like

Carney says US-Canada trade deal likely to include some tariffs

How the US got left behind in the global electric car race

US axes website for reporting human rights abuses by US-armed foreign forces

Post navigation

Previous Article Previous article:
Vance says ‘certainly’ will be more indictments after Comey
Next Article Next article:
Trump pushed to prosecute Comey, but his own actions could undermine the case

The Atlantic

  • My Quest to Find the East Wing Rubble

    An entire part of the White House can’t just disappear.

  • What Progressives Keep Getting Wrong

    Graham Platner is the perfect embodiment of the left’s strategy for returning to power. This is a problem.

  • The Shutdown Is a Knife at a Gunfight

    The two sides may forge a deal, but what difference will it make to a president who doesn’t respect Congress at all?

  • Trump Is Trying—And Failing—To Shield MAGA From the Shutdown

    The administration has tried to hurt only “Democrat things.” It’s not that easy.

  • Steve Bannon and the Murderers and Hitmen Who Became His ‘Besties’

    What the man who has Trump’s ear learned in prison

Talking Points Memo

  • Steve Bannon and the ‘Plan’ for a Neverending ‘Age Of Trump’

    Hello, it’s the weekend. This is The Weekender ☕️ Steve Bannon, the MAGA broadcaster and once-and-future adviser to President Donald...

  • Chicago Federal Judge Hauls Bovino in to Court

    A Chicago federal judge on Friday demanded that CBP commander and federal escalation impresario Greg Bovino appear next week in...

  • Emil Bove Starts Judicial Career With a Sneer

    One year ago, Emil Bove was a simple defense lawyer for then-presidential candidate Donald Trump. He had represented him throughout...

  • Justice Department Announces Plans to Monitor Polling Sites in New Jersey and California

    In response to requests from state Republican parties, the Department of Justice announced plans on Friday to send federal election...

  • Fear, Greed, Civic Virtue and the Fall of the Elites

    Members of America’s founding generation had an ambivalent and evolving understanding of the role and importance of public or civic...

Fox News

  • Early voting underway in New York, New Jersey amid hotly contested mayor and governor races

    Early voting started Saturday, Oct. 25, in New York and New Jersey, which have hotly contested races that are drawing national interest ahead of Election Day.

  • Potential 2028 contender campaigns for Spanberger in key Tidewater area

    Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro campaigns for Virginia's Abigail Spanberger as 2028 presidential speculation grows around the Democratic rising star.

  • Expert warns Democrats risk backlash over failure to condemn violent rhetoric in their ranks

    Democrats face messaging crisis ahead of critical elections as party grapples with political violence concerns and lacks cohesive policy platform, expert warns.

  • Here's when 2025 Election Day early in-person voting comes to a close across the US

    Early voting deadlines approach fast across America with major races in New Jersey, Virginia and New York City. Find your state's cutoff date before Election Day.

  • DHS to soon deport Abrego Garcia to African nation after illegal alien's return from El Salvador, filing says

    The Trump administration says it could soon deport Salvadoran illegal alien and alleged MS-13 member Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia to Liberia.

The Hill

  • Parents know best — let's start listening to them 

    The Federal Scholarship Program would give parents more choices for educating their children, while also providing additional funding for public and nonpublic schools, if states opt-in to the program.

  • Harvard's unblinking hypocrisy: Dean denounces 'evil' police, 'whiteness' 

    Gregory Davis is really sorry for the "disruption." For a Harvard resident dean, one would think that he was referencing a malfunctioning fire alarm, not years of racist, hateful messages. It is akin to Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger (D) referring to the "poor choice" of words of her endorsed candidate for attorney general,...

  • Russia kills 4 in overnight strike on Ukraine, days after Trump issues oil sanctions

    Russian strikes on Ukraine overnight left four people dead and several others injured, days after President Trump issued sanctions on Russian oil companies as peace talks in the region have largely been stagnant. In Kyiv, two people were killed and at least 13 wounded from a ballistic missile strike early Saturday, Tymur Tkachenko, head of...

  • Prison contracts should reward results, not occupancy rates 

    When payment rewards full units, you get full units, not safer or more effective ones. Public or private, paying for occupancy guarantees the wrong work gets done.

  • Stephen Miller sidesteps question on US troops in Venezuela as tensions rise

    White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller on Friday dodged a question from reporters about the potential for ground troops on Venezuelan soil, as tensions escalate amid the Trump administration's war on drugs in the Caribbean. While he said he "would not now or ever get into any detailed discussion" about potential military options,...

Categories

  • Adventure
  • Architecture
  • Astronomy
  • BBC US politics
  • Beauty
  • CNN
  • Democracy matters – defending democracy
  • Fashion
  • Featured articles
  • FiveThirtyEight
  • Food
  • Fox news
  • Just security
  • Movie Stuff
  • NPR
  • Painters Matter
  • Politico
  • Politics Matters
  • Real Clear Politics
  • Talking Points Memo
  • The Atlantic
  • The Guardian
  • The Hill
  • Travel

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

Find Us

This is a good place to read all your sources at just one stop.

Address
123 Main Street
New York, NY 10001

Hours
Monday–Friday: 5:00AM–5:00PM
Saturday & Sunday: Only urgent matters

The abouve looks good so I left it there, like I would be running a regular physical operation as well ,-)

You can reach me at editor@thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

The Guardian

  • Early voting starts for New York mayoral and New Jersey gubernatorial races

    Zohran Mamdani is facing off against Andrew Cuomo in New York, and Jack Ciattarelli and Mikie Sherrill are competing in New JerseyPolling places opened on Saturday for the start of in-person voting for two of the year’s most closely watched elections: the New York City mayor’s race and the contest to pick New Jersey’s next governor.New Yorkers are choosing between Democrat Zohran Mamdani, Republican Curtis Sliwa and former New York governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat on the ballot as an independent. The incumbent mayor, Eric Adams, is also on the ballot but dropped out of the race last month and recently threw his support behind Cuomo. Continue reading...

  • ‘I am not done’: Kamala Harris says she may run for president again

    In a BBC interview, former vice-president says she isn’t done with politics and could ‘possibly’ be the next presidentKamala Harris says she is not done with politics and strongly suggested that she is considering another bid for president in a new interview.In an interview scheduled to air on the BBC on Sunday morning, Harris says that she would “possibly” be the next president, making the clearest suggestion to date that she will make another run for the White House in 2028 despite lagging far behind in the polls. Continue reading...

  • Pennsylvania city divided over Trump as it reels from economic whiplash

    As Trump’s tariffs and funding cuts suspend projects in Erie, some residents view the changes as a necessary evilIt was set to be the most expensive project that the beaten-down manufacturing sector of Erie, Pennsylvania, had seen in decades. In a blighted corner of town, a startup planned a $300m plant that would turn plastic waste into fuel for steel factories.Neighborhood advocates in Erie’s impoverished east side hoped the facility would provide the jobs and prosperity they needed. Environmentalists decried the pollution they expected the plant to bring. Unions got ready for what they hoped would be hundreds of jobs created by its construction, with more to come once it opened. Continue reading...

  • RFK Jr to urge Americans to eat more saturated fats, alarming health experts

    Guidance from health and human services secretary contradicts decades of dietary recommendationsRobert F Kennedy Jr, the health and human services secretary, is planning to issue guidance encouraging Americans to eat more saturated fats, contradicting decades of dietary recommendations and alarming experts.“My response and sort of counsel to myself was to stay calm, and let’s see what happens, because there was no indication given as to how, why, when this potential shift would occur,” said Cheryl Anderson, an American Heart Association board member and professor at the University of California, San Diego’s school of public health and human longevity science. Continue reading...

  • Trump was planning to send troops to San Francisco. Now he’s not. Here’s why | Joe Eskenazi

    The US president’s reversal was as capricious as his original plan. What if local billionaires had urged him to stick with it?This story was published in collaboration with Mission Local.The mayor of San Francisco said on Thursday that Donald Trump had simply called him – no go-betweens or consigliere required – and told him there would no longer be a deployment of federal agents or troops to the city.Joe Eskenazi is an editor and columnist for Mission Local. Io Yeh Gilman and Xueer Lu contributed reporting Continue reading...

Politico

  • GOP redistricting effort in New Hampshire is frozen

    Republican lawmakers see no path forward without buy-in from GOP Gov. Kelly Ayotte.

  • The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics

    Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the foibles, memes, hypocrisies and other head-slapping events in the world of politics. The fruits of these labors are hundreds of cartoons that entertain and enrage readers of all political stripes. Here's an offering of the best of this week's crop, picked fresh off the Toonosphere. Edited by Matt Wuerker.

  • Why Sen. Rand Paul feels like GOP ‘whipping boy’

    The Kentucky Senator sounds off about the Trump administration’s failure to uphold its foreign policy and Epstein revelation promises.

  • Sen. Rand Paul and Katelyn Jetelina | The Conversation

    Sen. Rand Paul and Katelyn Jetelina | The Conversation lead image

  • Platner reshuffles campaign and sends out NDAs as he struggles to get ahead of controversies

    The Maine Senate candidate is bringing on a new campaign manager, among other changes.

NPR

  • What one Texas Republican Congressman tells his constituents about the shutdown

    The government shutdown is dragging on, with no serious negotiations between the parties. The House is not in session and most members are back home in their districts, hearing from constituents.

  • Week in Politics: Trump's relations with Latin America and Canada; East Wing demolition

    We discuss President Trump's escalation in Latin America, trade with Canada, and demolition at the White House.

  • Northern California to decide on redistricting, potentially benefiting Democrats

    In Northern California, congressional districts could be redrawn by a vote on Election Day. Republicans say they're victims of the national redistricting fight, while Democrats blame President Trump.

  • A report claims left-wing terrorism is rising. The data paints a complicated picture

    The report's claim comes with caveats. Its critics say it does more to reveal issues around collecting and analyzing domestic terrorism data than it does to clarify the current state of the problem.

  • Trade tensions hang over Trump's Asia trip, but he still aims to make a deal

    President Trump plans to attend a summit in Malaysia before meeting the new Japanese prime minister in Tokyo and talking to Chinese President Xi Jinping in Korea.

Five Thirty Eight

  • What Americans Think Of The Biden Impeachment Inquiry

    Welcome to Pollapalooza, our weekly-ish polling roundup. It’s officially impeachment season again. On Tuesday, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced that he’s directing three House committees to start investigating whether President Biden benefited from his son Hunter’s business dealings overseas. McCarthy accused the Biden family of “a culture of corruption,” saying that the Biden administration

  • The Second GOP Debate Could Be Smaller, With Or Without Trump

    The second Republican presidential primary debate is less than two weeks away, so time is running out for GOP contenders to meet the Republican National Committee’s qualification criteria. To make the Sept. 27 debate, each candidate must have at least 3 percent support in two qualifying national polls, or at least 3 percent in one

  • The Senate Is Losing One Of Its Few Remaining Moderate Republicans

    On Wednesday, Utah Sen. Mitt Romney announced he would not run for reelection in 2024. On the surface, the electoral impact of Romney’s decision is minimal — his seat should stay safely in Republican hands. But it’s still notable because it represents the departure of one of the few remaining Republican senators who had a

  • Why ‘Bidenomics’ Isn’t Working For Biden

    Welcome to FiveThirtyEight’s politics chat. The transcript below has been lightly edited. nrakich (Nathaniel Rakich, senior elections analyst): For a long time, the economy has been seen as a big liability for President Biden in his reelection bid. Inflation soared in 2021 and 2022, culminating at a rate of 9.1 percent last June. The same

  • Why Biden Is Losing Support Among Voters Of Color

    Among the most politically tuned-in, last week saw the kind of hand-wringing and accusations of bias surrounding the polls that you’d usually expect from the final two months of a campaign, not the final year and two months of a campaign. The focus was largely on general election polls: Whether a Wall Street Journal poll

Painte

Paul Klee

Paul Klee

24 April 202330 December 2024
Michael Parkes

Michael Parkes

24 April 202312 July 2025
Wassily Kandinsky, 1903, The Blue Rider (Der Blaue Reiter)

Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky

20 December 202012 July 2025
Copyright © 2025 thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org.
Powered by WordPress and HybridMag.
  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Multiple news sources at #1 place!

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

bladibla

Scroll Up