Tim Sykes Makes $1,000 On A Stock Trade From His Lamborghini
Tim proves you can trade from ANYWHERE, see the trade details here: http://tim.ly/15p1c4v and learn Tim’s strategy for free.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLttsYwRMDA
Tim Sykes Makes $1,000 On A Stock Trade From His Lamborghini
Tim proves you can trade from ANYWHERE, see the trade details here: http://tim.ly/15p1c4v and learn Tim’s strategy for free.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLttsYwRMDA
Tim Sykes Invites You To The Lamborghini Life
The Lamborghini Life is coming soon and it’s yours if you really want it badly enough.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aaHTYIC-yQ8
Tim Sykes $235,000 Lamborghini Lesson Re: Loaning To Friends
Tim has 7 free video lessons here: http://tim.ly/sykes7 but perhaps this Lamborghini lesson is even more valuable when you become a millionaire like him!Tim has 7 free video lessons here: http://tim.ly/sykes7 but perhaps this Lamborghini lesson is even more valuable when you become a millionaire like him!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1SWsPELa5NI
Tim Sykes’ Brand New $235,000 Lamborghini Gallardo
Tim gets sick going too fast and is not that smart so if he can make millions of dollars, you can too!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJVVpbG-tUE
Tim Sykes 1st Ride In His New $235,000 Lamborghini
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOeF4eGwPN8
A rusted 1.5 metre-tall piece of landing gear believed to be from one of the hijacked planes destroyed in the Sept. 11 attacks has been discovered wedged between a mosque site and a luxury high-rise apartment building near the World Trade Center.
As Bangladesh reels from the deaths of hundreds of garment workers in a building collapse, the refusal of global retailers to pay for strict factory inspections is bringing renewed scrutiny to an industry in a country known for hazardous workplaces and low wages.
U.S. intelligence agencies added the mother of the Boston bombing suspects to a government terrorism database 18 months before the bombings, two officials told The Associated Press. She says she has never been linked to crimes or terrorism.
Audie Cornish talks to Kelly McEvers about her reporting out of Syria and what people there are saying about U.S. intervention.
The White House says it still needs to corroborate information it has received that suggests Syria’s government has used chemical weapons. That act would cross a “red line” drawn by President Obama. At that point, the question becomes: What might the U.S. do in response? The Pentagon is already planning.
The tiny Gulf nation of Qatar has been “punching above its weight” diplomatically in the region in recent years. Now, it’s taking a prominent role in Syria, arming rebels there. The U.S. wants to see such aid go to moderates. Qatar has its own approach.
As rescuers continued to pull corpses and survivors from the rubble of a collapsed garment factory in Bangladesh, some consumers in Canada were shocked to learn that items from their favourite brands were made there.
George Jones, the hard-living country singer who recorded dozens of hits about good times and regrets and peaked with the heartbreaking classic He Stopped Loving Her Today, has died.
The White House now believes Syria has used chemical weapons. But President Obama has shown no inclination toward military involvement in another Middle Eastern war.
Up to 15 people are feared trapped after a hospital building partially collapses in central India.
The death toll in the collapse hovers around 300, but rescue workers hope some of the hundreds more buried in the rubble can be taken out alive.
The symbol of rapprochement between the neighbors is the latest victim of rising tensions on the Korean Peninsula.
The cause of the blaze at a facility near Moscow is under investigation. Police tell Russian media that most of the estimated 38 victims likely had been under sedation and died in their sleep. Only three people are reported to have survived. A nurse was able to lead two patients to safety.
The United Nations Security Council unanimously approved a new UN peacekeeping force for Mali on Thursday to help restore democracy and stabilize the northern half of the country which was controlled by Islamist jihadists until a France-led military operation ousted them three months ago.
Two tourists from the U.S. swim between 12 and 14 hours to reach dry land after the boat they chartered sank off the coast of St. Lucia. The captain and first mate were also rescued.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the surviving Boston Marathon bombing suspect, was released from a civilian hospital and transferred to a federal medical detention centre in central Massachusetts. The news comes a day after it was alleged Tsarnaev and his brother had also intended to attack New York City.
Unification Minister Ryoo Kihl-jae says Seoul has decided to withdraw the roughly 175 South Koreans still at a jointly run factory complex in North Korea, news that raises a major question about the survival of the last symbol of inter-Korean co-operation.
A Russian court is to consider whether one of the jailed Pussy Riot band members is eligible for early release as she has served half of her two-year sentence.
Officials in Bangladesh say at least 280 people were killed in a building collapse earlier this week. Renee Montagne talks to Anbarasan Ethirajan of the BBC to find out the latest information.
A bus has collided with the wreckage of a truck that was attacked by Taliban insurgents in southern Afghanistan, killing 30 people aboard the bus in a fiery crash, officials say.
Crews in Bangladesh are boring deeper into the wreckage of a garment-factory building that collapsed two days earlier in Savar, near Dhaka, hoping for miracle rescues that would prevent the death toll from rising much higher, as angry relatives of the missing clashed with police.
The World Health Organization released a six-year plan to wipe out the few remaining pockets of polio and ensure the virus doesn’t come back. With less than 20 polio cases so far this year, the world is closer than ever before to eradicating polio.
A fire raged through a psychiatric hospital outside Moscow early Friday, killing 38 people, including two nurses, emergency officials said.
Interior Minister Miguel Rodriguez Torres said Timothy Hallet Tracy was paying right-wing youth to hold violent protests in the aftermath of the elections narrowly won by Nicolas Maduro, the late Hugo Chavez’s chosen successor. Tracy’s family says he was making a documentary.
Robert Siegel talks to Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee, who is the ranking member of the Foreign Relations Committee, about the U.S. intelligence assessment regarding chemical weapons in Syria. Corker says there is not yet enough evidence to take military action against the Syrian government. He adds that the real challenge now is to keep the more extremist anti-Assad-regime rebels from having the upper hand.
You think clovers and hearts are impressive? Wait till you get a load of these Japanese latte drawings. A culture that values the beauty of the ephemeral has brought us a new level of art in foam.
When monkeys move to a new place, they want to eat what the locals are eating, a new study finds. It’s among the first to see strong social behaviors in eating among wild animals.
A body pulled from waters off a Providence park was that of a 22-year-old Brown University student missing since last month, the Rhode Island medical examiner’s office says.
The brutal rape of a five-year-old girl in India has caused public outcry there, and led to the arrest of two men. Host Michel Martin explores what the case says about how India handles sexual assault cases. She speaks with Anand Giridharadas, a columnist at The New York Times.
About a century ago, a beautiful tradition emerged in the Italian city of Naples: Cafe-goers would buy a cup of coffee anonymously and in advance for a less-fortunate stranger. With much of Europe now in tight financial times, the custom is spreading across the continent.
The administration has warned Syria against using chemical weapons but does not say how this might change U.S. policy toward the Syrian regime.
U.S. intelligence has concluded “with some degree of varying confidence” that the Syrian government has twice used chemical weapons in its fierce civil war, the White House and other top administration officials say.
All the living American presidents past and present are gathering in Dallas, a rare reunion to salute one of their own at the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Center.
At least 160 have died and hundreds more are trapped beneath rubble at the site of the garment factory collapse near the capital, Dhaka.
A massive, partly fossilized egg laid by a now extinct elephant bird has sold for more than double its estimate at a London auction.
Spain’s National Statistics Institute says the country’s unemployment rate shot up to a record 27.2 per cent in the first quarter of 2013.
The surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings acknowledged to the FBI his role in the attacks but did so before he was advised of his constitutional rights to keep quiet and seek a lawyer, officials say.
Multiple explosions aboard two fuel barges near Mobile, Ala., led to a major fire Wednesday night that left three people critically injured with burns and created a situation so unstable that fire and rescue officials decided to let the fire burn into the night.
A garment factory building in Bangladesh that collapsed, killing at least 175 people, had been ordered evacuated after deep cracks became visible, but the factories flouted the order and continued working, officials say
The Syrian government and rebels blamed each other for the destruction of the minaret of the 11th century Umayyad Mosque in the ancient city of Aleppo. One archaeologist described the damage as “a disaster.”
The investigation into the Boston Marathon bombing continues. Investigators have spoken with the parents of the suspects in Russia. Audie Cornish talks to Dina Temple-Raston about the latest developments.
Officials from the U.S. Embassy in Moscow were in Dagestan in southern Russia on Wednesday to question the parents of the Tsarnaev brothers.
After decades of military rule, Myanmar is experiencing rapid economic and social reforms. But some now fear that long-suppressed ethnic and religious tensions will be hard to contain. Violence between Buddhists and Muslims that began in the western part of the country last year now appear to be spreading.
The landlocked nation wants to reclaim access to the Pacific that it lost in a 19th century war. But it’s unclear if Chile will submit to the International Court of Justice and engage in the process.
Five people were found shot to death today at a house in a tiny west-central Illinois town and a suspect was fatally wounded in a police chase and exchange of gunfire with officers, authorities said.
Kentucky’s junior senator, who gained a good deal of attention from a 13-hour anti-drone filibuster, is again making news related to the use of unmanned aerial vehicles. But now, the potential 2016 Republican presidential candidate is clarifying his statement that “I don’t care” if a drone is used to kill a liquor store robber.
The announcement of the military exercises comes as China and Japan square off over disputed islands in the East China Sea.
Hector Ruiz is one of the few Latinos who have led Fortune 500 companies. He grew up poor in a small coal-mining town in Mexico. He shined shoes to help his family get by, and walked across the U.S.-Mexico border each day to go to high school in Texas. Host Michel Martin talks with him about his new memoir, Slingshot.
The Syrian civil war rages just a short distance across the frontier from Israeli-occupied territory. As spring blossoms around them, Israelis are watching warily.
Officials say the eight-story building on the outskirts of the capital, Dhaka, housed several garment factories.
Opponents of the new law threw bottles, cans and metal bars. Police responded with tear gas. President Francois Hollande has appealed for calm.
Officials from France, Britain and Israel claim chemical weapons have been used in Syria. President Obama has warned Syria that the use of chemical weapons would be a red line. U.S. officials say they are looking into the latest allegations of chemical-weapons use but have not come to the same conclusions that others have.
Officials in Bangladesh’s capital Dhaka say the building housed several garment factories. At least 70 people were killed and many more are trapped in the rubble.
Bassem Youssef, the wildly popular host of an Egyptian political satire TV show, pokes fun at Egypt’s president, Islamists and others. But he’s now facing a slew of legal suits accusing him of everything from insulting the president to apostasy. His legal troubles are in many ways a test case for freedom of speech in the new Egypt.
The local government in China’s restive northwestern region of Xinjiang says that a clash between authorities and assailants has left 21 people dead in what it describes as an act of terrorism.
A tweet from The Associated Press’ Twitter account claiming the White House had been bombed caused investors to suddenly push the Dow down more than 100 points in two minutes Tuesday before it became clear the report was untrue and AP’s account had been hacked.
Heavy rain causes mass flooding that forces thousands from their homes in the U.S. midwest
CBC’s Catherine Mercier reports from the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea, where a group of Canadian veterans made the trip back and reconnected with a part of their past.
Bolivia, a landlocked nation since 1904, is hoping to reach the sea once again by suing Chile at the International Court of Justice for the land it lost in the War of the Pacific.
The Americans and the Europeans have different approaches to horse racing, and one key split is over the question of doping. While many drugs are allowed in the U.S., they are banned in European racing.
Microsoft founder Bill Gates met with South Korean President Park Geun-hye Monday, to discuss nuclear energy and other topics. But the handshake they shared created the biggest stir in Korean society, after Gates greeted Park with a smile — and his left hand jammed into his pants pocket.
Apples, oranges and … squirrel? A new interactive map pinpoints more than a half-million locations around the world open to foraging for typical and not-so-typical free foods.
The RCMP says the two men accused of plotting to derail a Via passenger train received assistance from al-Qaeda elements in Iran, which the country denies. Here is a look at the complicated history between Iran and al-Qaeda.
French lawmakers have legalized same-sex marriage after months of bruising debate and street protests that brought hundreds of thousands to Paris.
A federal official says the man charged with sending poison letters to U.S. President Barack Obama, a U.S. senator and a Mississippi judge has been released from jail.
An Israeli military official says Syria employed the weapons in a series of recent incidents. The U.S., meanwhile, has said little on the subject and has not made similar accusations against Syria.
British, French and Israeli officials say they have evidence that the Syrian government repeatedly used chemical weapons against civilians. Though the U.S. hasn’t confirmed the allegations, the Obama administration previously said that the use of chemical weapons could provoke a stronger response.
France will join 13 other nations that have legalized gay marriage within their borders. In another three, including the U.S., same-sex marriage is legal in some jurisdictions. The new French law also legalizes adoptions by same-sex couples.
UNICEF says it will intensify and accelerate efforts to help children and parents affected by Saturday’s 7.0-magnitude earthquake in China that killed at least 190 and wounded more than 12,000, noting that many may be reliving the trauma of the deadly quake in 2008.
A car bomb took out the front wall and the reception area of the French embassy in what some suspect was an attack related to France’s military intervention in Mali.
A senior Israeli military intelligence official has accused Syrian President Bashar al-Assad of using chemical weapons last month in his battle against insurgent groups.
Clashes erupted in northern Iraq when security forces raided a rally site used by Sunni demonstrators early on Tuesday, killing at least 23 people and wounding dozens in an escalation likely to enrage protesters who have been rallying against the government for months.
Earthquakes, polluted air, cancer clusters near industrialized centres. China seems to be undergoing a scourge of almost biblical proportions, Patrick Brown writes. And don’t think its people — or its new leaders — haven’t noticed.
The two brothers suspected of bombing the Boston Marathon appear to have been motivated by a radical brand of Islam but do not seem connected to any Muslim militant groups, U.S. officials said after interrogating and charging Dzhokhar Tsarnaev with crimes that could bring the death penalty.
Katherine Russell was a talented artist, a good student who grew up Christian and the daughter of a suburban doctor. She converted to Islam and became the wife of a man who would become a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings and a subject of one of the biggest manhunts in U.S. history.
That tasty cup of java from your favorite gourmet coffee shop began life on a farm thousands of miles away. Farmers who cater to the specialty coffee market compete on quality. And some use the higher prices their beans fetch to reinvest in their businesses and improve conditions for workers.
The RCMP says that the two men they charged today in connection with an alleged plot to attack a Via Rail passenger train received “direction and guidance” from al-Qaeda in Iran.
If that should be confirmed, it will likely be the first time that the group has supported an attack or attempted attack in the West, according to Seth Jones, a security expert.
In a statement issued in Luxembourg by the bloc’s Foreign Affairs Council, the EU said the arms embargo on the country will remain in place. Human Rights Watch criticized the decision to lift sanctions.
Brazil’s largest city is more about business than art. But a new crop of creators — who work in media as different as crochet, graffiti and poetry — is trying to change that by sprucing up public spaces.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who was charged today in his hospital room, is eligible for the death penalty.
A company contracted by NASA to deliver supplies to the International Space Station successfully launched a rocket on Sunday in a test of its ability to send a cargo ship aloft.
A German data protection agency fined Google Inc. 145,000 euros ($194,000) for illegally recording information from unsecured wireless networks — an amount it acknowledged is “totally inadequate” as a deterrent to the multinational giant.
Korean pop music leads many teens to practice dance moves, for perfect synchronization, and to consider plastic surgery, for the perfect face.
Brazil’s largest city is more about business than art. But a new crop of creators — who work in media as different as crochet, graffiti and poetry — is trying to change that by sprucing up public spaces.
The two suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing were ethnically Chechen. The central Asian region of Chechnya has a troubled history. It has also seen some of that region’s most notorious terrorist incidents in recent memory. Host Michel Martin learns more from Alexey Malashenko of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
More than 180 people are reported to have been killed by Saturday’s strong temblor. Aftershocks and landslides are making difficult to get to the villages and other places in Sichuan province that were hit hard.
Efforts underway today in China’s mountainous Sichuan province after a quake Saturday that killed at least 188 people showed that the government has continued to hone its disaster reaction — long considered a crucial leadership test in the country — since a much more devastating earthquake in 2008
Gunfire erupted at an apartment complex in a city south of Seattle and five people were shot to death, including a suspect who was shot by arriving officers, police said early Monday.
A Turkish civilian helicopter was forced to make an emergency landing in a Taliban-controlled area of eastern Afghanistan, and the insurgents took all nine people aboard the aircraft hostage, including eight Turks, officials say.
Police in India say they have arrested a second man in connection with the abduction and rape of a five-year-old girl.
Six days of clashes in two Damascus suburbs may have killed hundreds of people, a dramatic spike in the death toll in the Syrian civil war, activists say the same day the European Union plans to lift its oil embargo on the country to provide more support to forces aiming to oust President Bashar al-Assad.
The surviving suspect in the deadly Boston Marathon bombing remains unable to speak with a gunshot wound to the throat, while the city’s police commissioner says the two suspects had such a large cache of weapons that they were probably planning other attacks.
Coffee is social stimulant, solitary pleasure, intellectual catalyst. It also connects us to far corners of the globe. From small specialty farms in Guatemala to large, industrial operations in Brazil and unexpected corners of the world, like Vietnam, the world’s morning cup of Joe makes quite a journey.
Oscar-winning actress Reese Witherspoon is “deeply embarrassed” about what she said to police officers during her husband’s arrest in Atlanta for driving under the influence of alcohol.
Landslides and congested roadways are hindering rescuers’ progress as they make their way to rural communities in Sichuan Province. The earthquake Saturday, which killed at least 186, is a test of the new leadership’s response to natural disaster.
Tens of thousands of demonstrators took to sunny Paris boulevards on Sunday to protest the expected passage this week of a bill legalizing gay marriage. One protestor called the bill “a threat to the social fabric.”
Rescuers in China pushed into remote villages in Sichuan province, hit by an earthquake that has killed 186 and injured more than 11,000.
survivors to spend a night in cars, tents and makeshift shelters.
The Syrian opposition called on Hezbollah to withdraw its fighters from the country, as activists said regime troops supported by gunmen linked to the Lebanese Shiite militant group battled rebels Sunday for control of a string of villages near the Lebanon-Syria border.