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Video: Owner Shares Why One Must Be a ‘Dog Person' To Visit Their House
Video: Owner Shares Why One Must Be a ‘Dog Person' To Visit Their House

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Video: Owner Shares Why One Must Be a ‘Dog Person' To Visit Their House

Isn't it adorable when some dogs are over-friendly? This Instagram video shows how a Pit Bull and Labrador-mix named Rhubarb treats his guests by clinging to them. They must be a 'dog person' if they want to visit the owner's house. In the caption, the uploader refers to the pet's behavior and says, 'We don't make the rules, Rhubarb does.' Owner reveals that their dog 'has no concept of personal space' in video In a cute and funny video on Instagram, a Pit Bull and Labrador-mix named Rhubarb has an excellent way to greet his owner's guests. Towards the beginning of the clip, the pet parent states that people must be 'a dog person' if they want to visit their house. The reason is that Rhubarb does not understand the 'concept of personal space.' It further shows the dog playing with the guests and clinging to them. The canine absolutely loves the attention as he is also seen sitting on the humans' faces while receiving scratches. Rhubarb seems super friendly to the guests, as he repays their love with licks and tail wagging. At the end, the dog does not leave any space while he hugs one man's shoulder and keeps his head on the visitor's head. The latter, too, does not mind Rhubarb's closeness even when he is busy working on his laptop. Meanwhile, viewers share their thoughts in the comments, praising the video. A user wrote, 'That's fine I don't need personal space when it comes to dogs.' Another mentioned, 'Please invite me! I want to hug Rhubarb every time I see her anyway!' One individual further commented, 'I would love that kind of invasion of personal space!' Netizens also requested that the owner send them invitations to their house, as they also want to be with Rhubarb. Moreover, the video has garnered over 251K likes at the time of writing. The post Video: Owner Shares Why One Must Be a 'Dog Person' To Visit Their House appeared first on DogTime. Solve the daily Crossword

Animal shelter worker mauled to death by pit bulls rescued from dog-fighting ring
Animal shelter worker mauled to death by pit bulls rescued from dog-fighting ring

New York Post

time2 days ago

  • New York Post

Animal shelter worker mauled to death by pit bulls rescued from dog-fighting ring

A Mississippi animal shelter worker was mauled to death by two pit bulls saved from a dog-fighting ring, according to reports. Clifford Phillips Jr., 57, was attacked and killed while trying to put the dogs into a pen at Second Chance Animal Alliance in Yalobusha County, where he had worked for two years, WREG reported. 'A dog was already in a pen and he was trying to put another dog in there,' a longtime friend, Dudley Woods, told the outlet — saying the horrific July 17 attack was caught on camera. Clifford Phillips Jr., 57, died after the attack at Second Chance Animal Alliance in Yalobusha County, where the Pit Bull and Pit Bull mix jumped on top of him as he tried to cage the rescued duo in a pen. Angela Edwards As one of the dogs tried to escape, Phillips 'tried to hold him off with his foot' — just for the dog to bite onto it and pull the staffer down, the friend said of what the footage reportedly showed. 'And then the other dog jumped in with him… and they killed him,' he said, 'They got it all on tape down there.' Responding cops shot and killed one of the attacking dogs in a bid to get Philips, but were unable to save him, the outlet reported. The other dog was also later euthanized. The two dogs were a part of a dozen held at the shelter as part of a court-ordered seizure over animal abuse and dog fighting, local outlets reported. The two dogs who attacked Phillips were a part of a dozen held at the shelter after a court-ordered seizure over animal abuse and dog fighting. WREG Second Chance Animal Alliance said it had been cooperating with investigators. 'It has been one week since the death at the shelter of our friend and employee Cliff Phillips … While we cannot address every question or rumor we have seen over this past week, we have cooperated with local officials,' the shelter said in a statement. 'Please know that we take the safety and security of our volunteers and employees seriously. We are proud of the work we do in our community and will remain vigilant as we continue to do it.' Phillips was 'quiet, caring and unassuming' and 'never met a stranger' because he 'loved people,' according to his obituary. 'Cliff enjoyed meeting people and swapping stories about their past experiences and sharing details of his own. He will be greatly missed by all who knew and loved him,' it said 'Cliff loved to read, listened to music, and enjoyed singing — he had a deep singing voice that resonated with his listeners. He loved to sing at his church, Sylva Rena Baptist Church, and was faithful in attendance,' the obituary said.

Trump's Social-Media Habit Is Getting Weirder
Trump's Social-Media Habit Is Getting Weirder

Atlantic

time22-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Atlantic

Trump's Social-Media Habit Is Getting Weirder

Summer weekends in America are good for lots of things: baseball games, cookouts, farmers' markets, sipping a bev next to a lake. Or, if you're President Donald Trump: crashing out on social media in hopes of distracting the nation from nonstop coverage of his long friendship with Jeffrey Epstein. Trump is an inveterate poster, known for his erratic style and late-night tirades. But over the weekend, as the world refused to move on from his administration's bizarre handling of the Epstein files —which has led segments of his base to completely melt down —Trump went on a posting spree that was alarming, even by his own standards. On Sunday alone, Trump posted 33 times on Truth Social, sending off 20 posts between 6:46 and 8:53 p.m. eastern. He demanded that the Washington Commanders and Cleveland Guardians revert to their original names (the Redskins and Indians, respectively), and posted an AI-generated video of Barack Obama being arrested in the Oval Office set to the song 'Y.M.C.A.,' by the Village People. Trump also shared a contextless, grainy video that looks like it was scraped from some viral social-media post. It includes no captions and features 25 stitched-together clips, set to music, of people doing wild or dangerous stunts: A woman appears to catch a charging cobra with her bare hands, a man does a forward flip from one moving skateboard to another, various people contort their bodies in strange ways, a dude stands on the footrests of a moving dirt bike. Even some of Trump's die-hard fans on Truth Social seemed caught off guard by the video, struggling to draw a connection between it and Trump's politics. 'Was expecting a video of you at the end!' one top commenter wrote. (A spokesperson for the White House did not answer my questions about why the commander in chief was posting an extreme-sports highlight reel on Sunday night.) The bizarre video was immediately recognizable to me as the type of garbage that clogs the feeds of many people who still use Facebook, a platform that is filled with inscrutable slop posted by spammers and content farmers. By the early 2020s—before generative-AI images took over —Facebook had already transformed into a vast wasteland of low-quality memes, repurposed videos, and strange pages dedicated to clips like 'Shelter Pit Bull Made His Bed Every Day Until a Family Adopted Him.' This type of content fits in a category that I have taken to calling 'soft-brain scrolling.' It falls somewhere between probably harmless and not nutritious; it's mostly low-quality algorithmic arbitrage that helps click farmers make a buck. Your confused relatives seem to love it. That the account belonging to the president of the United States is now posting to the entire world like a Facebook Uncle, though, is a troubling sign. (It's unclear if Trump does all of the direct publishing himself, though The Washington Post reported last month that aides have been surprised by messages posted to his account in the wee hours of the morning. In the past, he would reportedly dictate and edit his own tweets, down to the odd capitalization of specific words.) He's exhibited milder forms of Facebook Uncle syndrome for years now—even in 2016, Trump would retweet white-supremacist accounts, angrily live-tweet Saturday Night Live, and publicly congratulate himself—but the behavior appears to be getting worse. The best analogue for this moment may be Trump's online raging after the January 6, 2021, insurrection. During this period, Trump was temporarily banned from mainstream platforms such as Facebook and Twitter. He launched Truth Social in 2022 and began making and sharing more extreme posts, including hundreds from accounts promoting QAnon conspiracy theories. In one day in 2022, he reportedly posted 50 separate times—in many cases about how the 2020 election was supposedly stolen. The tone this past weekend felt similar, with Trump posting an AI-generated image of officials from the Obama administration and former FBI Director James Comey in orange prison jumpsuits, arrayed in a Brady Bunch– style grid. The center of the image reads 'The Shady Bunch.' Along the same lines, Trump also posted a caps-laden message to his followers last week, demanding that they move on from the Epstein 'Hoax' and calling it 'bullshit' from the 'Lunatic Left.' He is lashing out, on the defensive, and seemingly unable, or at best unwilling, to control his screen time. Trump has always loved to post, obviously, and even the generative-AI stuff isn't new, exactly. Last year, during his presidential campaign, Trump fully embraced the technology as a propaganda tool, posting and reposting images of himself praying, Taylor Swift fans endorsing him en masse (that was before the real Taylor Swift endorsed his opponent), and AI Kamala Harris speaking in front of a hammer and sickle flag. As the Post reported in its article about Trump's social-media use, in the first four and a half months of this term, Trump 'posted to Truth Social over 2,200 times—more than three times the number of tweets he sent in the same period in 2017.' Unlike the material we saw over the weekend, a lot of Trump's posts during that period were clear political statements and directives. During Trump's tariff vacillations, which caused markets to plummet, he posted on Truth Social that Americans should 'BE COOL' and not become 'PANICANS,' an invented term for people who expressed genuine concern that Trump was destroying the economy. (MAGA influencers tried and failed to make that one stick.) Trump also used his account to threaten world leaders. For instance, he lashed out at Colombian President Gustavo Petro over his attempts to block deportation flights. (Petro backed down.) In May, he used the account to admonish Russian President Vladimir Putin, suggesting that 'if it weren't for me, lots of really bad things would have already happened to Russia,' and that Putin was 'playing with fire!' His posting in the lead-up to bombing Iran was another example of Trump forcing the world to hang on his every word; eventually, he announced the strike via Truth Social. In all cases, Trump was posting, however maniacally, from a position of power and demonstrating influence. Not so recently. The week that preceded the Truth Social binge on Sunday may very well have been the most frustrating of Trump's second term, not only because the Epstein scandal threatened to tear apart his MAGA coalition, but because Trump could not persuade the usual people to drop the story. As my colleagues Ashley Parker and Jonathan Lemire reported over the weekend, 'the limits of his power over normal allies became evident' as Trump failed to get Rupert Murdoch or The Wall Street Journal 's editor in chief, Emma Tucker, to stop the paper from publishing a story about a lewd 50th-birthday letter that Trump allegedly sent to Epstein. Trump had to deal with frustrations like these during his first term, when he was often checked and handled by career politicians and beset by press leaks from anonymous staffers, and faced constant backlash from the media and Silicon Valley. But Trump's second term has been different. He's surrounded mostly by true believers and sycophants and able to engage somewhat freely in various forms of government dismantling and corruption. Numerous media companies have bowed to Trump or appeared to soften their adversarial stance. At Trump's inauguration, Silicon Valley's most powerful executives stood behind him, offering a tacit show of support for his administration. The vibe had shifted in Trump's favor, and he behaved with impunity. Yet the Epstein case has been a genuine hurdle. Republicans are seemingly desperate to make the story go away, so much so that Speaker Mike Johnson shut the House down early to avoid 'political games' and block any potential votes calling for the release of files pertaining to Epstein. One can tell a lot about how Trump feels about his own power and influence by the way he's posting. There are multiple ways to interpret Trump's weekend posts. The most basic is that Trump's long-standing obsession with AI slop and memes—working in overdrive right now—is a useful propaganda tool. Before he needed a grassroots meme army to provide memes; now polished and bespoke Trump slop is always just a ChatGPT query away, no genuine enthusiasm required. A second reading is to see Trump's affinity for reposting fan art as Executive Cope. Here, the slop is a way for Trump to escape and imagine the world as he'd like it to be. In slop world, Trump is not embattled, getting screamed at by his supporters over what looks to them like a guilty cover-up on behalf of a pedophile. Instead, he's arresting Obama. It's pure fan fiction that depicts Trump having power in a moment when, perhaps, he feels somewhat powerless. A third reading of Trump's Truth Social posts—especially his reposting of strange viral Facebook garbage and angry culture-war stuff railing against 'woke' sports-team names—suggests that these posts aren't part of any kind of strategy or coping mechanism, but examples of a person who is addled and raging at things he feels he has no control over. For years, people have offered anecdotes that Trump behaves online like some isolated, elderly people who have been radicalized by their social-media feeds—in 2017, Stephen Colbert memorably likened Trump to America's first racist grandpa. His recent posting certainly fits this template. And paired with some of Trump's other cognitive stumbles— he seemingly forgot last week that he had appointed Fed Chair Jerome Powell —it all starts to feel more concerning. In this context, Trump's Truth Social page is little more than a rapid-response account that illustrates a world that doesn't actually exist: one in which POTUS looks like a comic-book hero, is universally beloved, and exerts his executive authority to jail or silence anyone who disagrees with him. This sort of revenge fantasy would be sad coming from anyone. That it is coming from the president of the United States, a man obsessed with retribution, who presides over a government that is enthusiastically arresting and jailing immigrants in makeshift camps, is terrifying. All of this points to what my colleague Tom Nichols noted almost exactly one year ago, when Trump accepted the Republican presidential nomination: The president 'is emotionally unwell.' In describing Trump's speech that night, Nichols said that his long, often pointless digressions 'were the ramblings of a man who has serious psychological problems. All of it was on display last night: rage, paranoia, pettiness, desolating selfishness.' The same explanation could be applied perfectly to Trump's Truth Social posts over the weekend. Trump called for Senator Adam Schiff to be prosecuted. He appeared pathologically aggrieved—spending part of his Saturday night posting a detailed infographic intended to debunk the supposed 'Russia hoax' from an election that happened almost nine years ago. (Propaganda experts say this is an attempt by Trump and his administration to rewrite history.) He posted a fake mug shot of Obama. And, on Sunday morning, he pecked out a 103-word message congratulating himself on his first six months in office. Rage, paranoia, pettiness, and desolating selfishness: Trump appears consumed more and more by an online world that offers him the chance to live out the fantasy of the unilateral power and adulation that he craves. Talking about Trump and social media is complicated because, unlike most users, Trump can post ridiculous things, transform news cycles, and force the world to react to his posts. But lately, his posts are not having the desired effect. It's possible that what observers witnessed this weekend is a tipping point of sorts. Trump's posts, instead of influencing reality, suggest that the president is retreating from it entirely.

Pit Bull Bites Child Inside Auto-Rickshaw In Mumbai, Owner Laughs
Pit Bull Bites Child Inside Auto-Rickshaw In Mumbai, Owner Laughs

News18

time20-07-2025

  • News18

Pit Bull Bites Child Inside Auto-Rickshaw In Mumbai, Owner Laughs

In Mumbai's Mankhurd, Mohammad Sohail Hasan allegedly set his Pit Bull on 11-year-old Hamza, who was playing in a rickshaw. Hasan laughed during the attack. A case was filed. A disturbing incident unfolded in Mumbai's Mankhurd area when a 43-year-old man, identified as Mohammad Sohail Hasan, allegedly set his Pit Bull on an 11-year-old boy, intentionally unleashing the dog's aggression. The child, Hamza, was playing inside a parked auto-rickshaw when the attack occurred on July 17. A video capturing the incident shows the terrified boy cornered in the rickshaw as the Pit Bull bites him, while Khan laughs and fails to intervene, seemingly amused by the child's fright. He wasn't even holding on to the dog's leash. After a few seconds, the boy is heard screaming, and the dog leaps to bite his chin. He somehow manages to escape the vehicle even as the pitbull grabs his clothes. The dog's owner, instead of helping the child, keeps laughing as his pet runs after the boy, NDTV reported. The boy suffered injuries to his chin and was left shaken. 'The dog bit me. Then, I ran away. He even grabbed my clothes," said the victim, Hamza, on the attack on him. He also said that he pleaded with the dog's owner to help him, but he kept laughing. He further claimed that no one came forward to help him. 'They were just filming the attack," he said. Hamza said that he was 'very scared" after the attack. A case was filed by the police on Friday against the dog's owner, Hasan, based on the complaint by the father of the victim. As per the complaint, Hasan let go of his dog on the child who was playing inside a parked autorickshaw. The case has been registered under sections 291 (negligent abandonment of animals), 125 (causing simple hurt) and 125(A) of the Indian Penal Code (BNS). The accused has also been issued a notice under section 35(3) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS). view comments First Published: July 20, 2025, 21:37 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Video: Man Laughs As His Pit Bull Bites Child Inside Auto-Rickshaw In Mumbai
Video: Man Laughs As His Pit Bull Bites Child Inside Auto-Rickshaw In Mumbai

NDTV

time20-07-2025

  • NDTV

Video: Man Laughs As His Pit Bull Bites Child Inside Auto-Rickshaw In Mumbai

Mumbai: An 11-year-old boy was bitten by a Pit Bull after it was intentionally unleashed on him by its owner in Mumbai's eastern suburb. In a video of the incident, the scared child was seen inside an auto-rickshaw with the dog sitting next to him. Its owner was seen sitting in the front seat of the rickshaw, amused by the child's frightened reactions. He wasn't even holding on to the dog's leash. Seconds later, the boy is heard screaming, and the dog leaps to bite his chin. He somehow manages to escape the vehicle even as the pitbull grabs his clothes. The dog's owner, instead of helping the child, keeps laughing as his pet runs after the boy. The incident happened in Mankhurd area on Thursday. "The dog bit me. Then, I ran away. He even grabbed my clothes," said the victim, Hamza, on the attack on him. He also said that he pleaded with the dog's owner to help him, but he kept laughing. The child also claimed that no one came forward to help him. "They were just filming the attack," he said. Hamza said that he was "very scared" after the attack. The police have filed a complaint on Friday against the dog's owner - identified as Mohammad Sohail Hasan (43) - based on the complaint by the father of the victim. As per the complaint, Mr Hasan let go of his dog on the child who was playing inside a parked autorickshaw. The case has been registered under sections 291 (negligent abandonment of animals), 125 (causing simple hurt) and 125(A) of the Indian Penal Code (BNS). The accused has also been issued a notice under section 35(3) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).

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