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Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Bathroom scale helps suspicious wife figure out husband is cheating: ‘This is expert-level sleuthing'
A woman's digital scale didn't just track pounds — it may have tipped the scales on her marriage. In a viral Reddit post, a suspicious wife claims she uncovered late-night weigh-ins on their shared digital scale — while she was away and her cheating husband was supposedly flying solo at their condo. 'I checked the digital scale's memory out of curiosity and it showed two 'unassigned' weigh-ins at exactly 120 lbs, logged at 12:25 a.m. and 12:26 a.m. back-to-back,' she wrote under the handle u/throw-Doubt303. 'For context, I do not weigh 120 lbs, and I was not there on that date, just my husband.' The couple had already separated after the husband's past infidelity, but agreed not to see other people while 'working on' themselves. But these mysterious midnight measurements raised more than a few eyebrows. 'The goal was to work on ourselves to help build a better foundation and we agreed not to see other people,' she explained in the comments section. The Reddit jury wasted no time in delivering its verdict. 'Pro tip — don't tell him you know there was a female there. Get in touch with attorneys to make a game plan,' one commenter advised. 'This is two back-to-back weights. This is pretty simple. He has moved on and is already hooking up with other women. No need to overthink this.' 'This is the confirmation you need — close down your heart to this douche and plan your new life. No more wasted energy on what, or who, he might be doing,' another chimed in. One user even applauded the digital detective work: 'This is expert-level sleuthing. Men underestimate our level of intuition. When you confront him, he'll probably try to paint you as crazy or paranoid. You're not.' As previously reported by The Post, one other woman discovered her boyfriend was cheating on her, not with the help of a scale, but thanks to her Ring camera. Influencer Alexa Losey returned from a two-week business trip — and walked straight into a betrayal. The lifestyle creator dropped the bombshell on an episode of Chloe Madison's 'The Unbothered Podcast' earlier this spring, revealing how her 'abusive' relationship came crashing down after her Ring cam busted her now-ex-boyfriend cheating. Losey noted that she uncovered her ex's cheating after finding dirt in her La Mer moisturizer, checking Ring cam footage, and spotting a mystery woman visiting nightly — then got revenge by printing hundreds of screenshots and hiding them all over the house. Looks like these ladies didn't need a private investigator — just a smart scale and a smart doorbell to catch their not-so-smart men. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Ukraine's parliament to consider restoring power of anti-graft agencies
Ukraine's parliament to consider restoring power of anti-graft agencies By Dan Peleschuk KYIV (Reuters) -Ukrainian lawmakers on Thursday are expected to consider a bill restoring the independence of the country's two main anti-corruption agencies, aiming to defuse a political crisis that has shaken faith in President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's wartime leadership. Thousands of protesters rallied in Kyiv and other cities in recent days in a rare show of discontent after lawmakers led by Zelenskiy's ruling party rushed through amendments last week defanging the respected agencies. Zelenskiy reversed course after the outcry and under pressure from top European officials, who warned Ukraine was jeopardising its bid for EU membership by curbing the powers of its anti-graft authorities. Demonstrations had continued even after he submitted the new bill restoring their independence, with hundreds rallying near the presidential administration in Kyiv late on Wednesday to chants of "Shame!" and "The people are the power!". "I really want parliament to vote (for the new measure) just as quickly as it did last time," said protester Kateryna Kononenko, 36, referring to last week's fast-tracked approval of the controversial amendments. Activists also called for demonstrations near parliament ahead of Thursday's vote in an attempt to pressure lawmakers to approve the new bill. Eradicating graft and shoring up the rule of law are key requirements for Kyiv to join the EU, which Ukrainians see as critical to their future as they fend off a Russian invasion. Last week's amendments had given Zelenskiy's hand-picked general prosecutor the power to transfer cases away from the anti-graft agencies and reassign prosecutors - a step critics had said was designed to protect allies from prosecution. While much smaller, the rallies of the past week have sparked comparisons to Ukraine's 2014 Maidan revolution, when protesters toppled a president they accused of corruption and heavy-handed rule. More than two-thirds of Ukrainians support the recent protests, according to a recent survey by Ukrainian pollster Gradus Research. CORRUPTION FIGHTERS The National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Specialised Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAPO) have stepped up a closely watched campaign against graft since Russia's February 2022 invasion. They have produced charges against lawmakers and senior government officials, including a then-deputy prime minister who was accused last month of taking a $345,000 kickback. Speaking to Reuters last Friday, after Zelenskiy's reversal, NABU chief Semen Kryvonos said he expected pressure against his agency to continue, fuelled by what he described as corrupt forces uninterested in cleaning up Ukraine. He added that he and other anti-corruption officials felt a greater sense of responsibility following the protests, but also called on the country's leadership to help their effort. "This responsibility must be shared with the government, which needs to react and say, 'Okay, there's corruption here - let's destroy it.'" Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Ukraine's parliament to consider restoring power of anti-graft agencies
Ukraine's parliament to consider restoring power of anti-graft agencies By Dan Peleschuk KYIV (Reuters) -Ukrainian lawmakers on Thursday are expected to consider a bill restoring the independence of the country's two main anti-corruption agencies, aiming to defuse a political crisis that has shaken faith in President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's wartime leadership. Thousands of protesters rallied in Kyiv and other cities in recent days in a rare show of discontent after lawmakers led by Zelenskiy's ruling party rushed through amendments last week defanging the respected agencies. Zelenskiy reversed course after the outcry and under pressure from top European officials, who warned Ukraine was jeopardising its bid for EU membership by curbing the powers of its anti-graft authorities. Demonstrations had continued even after he submitted the new bill restoring their independence, with hundreds rallying near the presidential administration in Kyiv late on Wednesday to chants of "Shame!" and "The people are the power!". "I really want parliament to vote (for the new measure) just as quickly as it did last time," said protester Kateryna Kononenko, 36, referring to last week's fast-tracked approval of the controversial amendments. Activists also called for demonstrations near parliament ahead of Thursday's vote in an attempt to pressure lawmakers to approve the new bill. Eradicating graft and shoring up the rule of law are key requirements for Kyiv to join the EU, which Ukrainians see as critical to their future as they fend off a Russian invasion. Last week's amendments had given Zelenskiy's hand-picked general prosecutor the power to transfer cases away from the anti-graft agencies and reassign prosecutors - a step critics had said was designed to protect allies from prosecution. While much smaller, the rallies of the past week have sparked comparisons to Ukraine's 2014 Maidan revolution, when protesters toppled a president they accused of corruption and heavy-handed rule. More than two-thirds of Ukrainians support the recent protests, according to a recent survey by Ukrainian pollster Gradus Research. CORRUPTION FIGHTERS The National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Specialised Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAPO) have stepped up a closely watched campaign against graft since Russia's February 2022 invasion. They have produced charges against lawmakers and senior government officials, including a then-deputy prime minister who was accused last month of taking a $345,000 kickback. Speaking to Reuters last Friday, after Zelenskiy's reversal, NABU chief Semen Kryvonos said he expected pressure against his agency to continue, fuelled by what he described as corrupt forces uninterested in cleaning up Ukraine. He added that he and other anti-corruption officials felt a greater sense of responsibility following the protests, but also called on the country's leadership to help their effort. "This responsibility must be shared with the government, which needs to react and say, 'Okay, there's corruption here - let's destroy it.'"