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Once they're gone, they're gone: These are the 293+ absolute best Cyber Monday 2025 deals

admin - Latest News - December 1, 2025
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Cyber Monday 2025 is your last chance for the year’s best deals. Shop sales from Apple, Amazon, Shark and more before popular products sell out.



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October 8, 2025
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November 19, 2025
Nov. 18, 2025, 10:34 AM ESTBy Elmira AliievaIt is a case of wolves in fishermen’s clothing as several of them have been spotted pulling crab traps from waters off Canada’s west coast in what scientists say may be the first documented case of the animals using a tool. Members of the Heiltsuk Nation, an Indigenous government in the province of British Columbia, had placed the traps to capture invasive green crabs that destroy eelgrass habitats which support marine life and decimate the clam, herring and salmon populations the tribe depends on for food. But on their return, they found some of them had been shredded to pieces, according to a study published Monday in the journal Ecology and Evolution. The finger of blame was initially pointed at both bears and wolves, although some suspected marine mammals might have been behind the damage because the traps were submerged in deep water near the community of Bella Bella at all times. A team of researchers led by Kyle Artelle, a professor at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse, New York, and Paul Paquet, an adjunct professor at Canada’s University of Victoria, set out to solve the mystery. Within a day, they caught their culprit after installing remote, movement-triggered cameras overlooking the water. A video showed a female wolf diving into the water to grab a fishing float, carrying it to the beach and repeatedly tugging on the attached rope until the trap surfaced. She then tore it apart to eat the fish inside.“This sequence appears to demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of the multi-step connection between the floating buoy and the bait within the out-of-sight trap,” the study’s authors wrote. While domestic animals, including dogs, have been previously observed using tools to their advantage, this is the first recorded case of such behavior in wild canids which include wolves, coyotes, jackals and foxes. Whether the trap-pulling behavior counts as conscious “tool use” remains a matter of scientific debate.Tool use involves understanding how to connect a tool, like a rope, to a desired outcome, such as a trap, Benjamin Beck, a comparative psychologist specializing in animal cognition and biodiversity conservation, told NBC News in an email Tuesday. While he acknowledged the wolf’s behavior was “a significant demonstration of cognitive complexity,” Beck said “string-pulling is not tool use because the user (in this case the wolf) was not responsible for tying the rope to the trap.” Beck, who has authored many scientific papers and books, including 1980’s “Animal Tool Behavior,” said that establishing that connection between the rope and the trap required more intellectual ability “than simply exploiting a pre-existing connection.”New recorded research shows a wolf pulling a rope to get food.K.A. Partelle and P.C. Paquet, Ecology and Evolution, 2025The authors themselves have also acknowledged that alternative explanations, such as simple trial-and-error learning, could account for the wild wolves’ behavior.However, when animals perform “multi-step behaviors repeatedly and efficiently,” even the simplest explanation for their actions may involve at least some “causal understanding” on their part, they wrote, adding that this “would be assumed for a human in similar circumstances.”Christina Hansen, an assistant professor in animal behavior at Linköping University in Sweden, agreed that she would classify the actions as “string pulling.” Such behavior has been documented before in captive wolf populations, where animals cooperated in a string-pulling task for a reward, she said, adding that it would be interesting to see whether the behavior spread in the wild wolf population “by social learning.” “That is, if other wolves pick up this behavior from the wolf that started pulling in the traps,” Hansen said. Regardless of the extent to which the wolf truly understood the trap’s mechanics, the very act of appropriating human tools to achieve a goal is what the authors said was “noteworthy.”They also stressed that a negative perception of wolves could now be challenged by findings on their intelligence. “I personally do not believe that intelligence, especially as we humans conceive it, should be a criterion for respect and conservation of wildlife,” Beck said. “But cases like this are dramatic reminders of the wonders and connectedness of our natural world.”Elmira AliievaElmira Aliieva is an NBC News intern based in London.
November 7, 2025
Nov. 6, 2025, 7:42 PM EST / Updated Nov. 6, 2025, 10:59 PM ESTBy Frank Thorp VWASHINGTON — The Senate on Thursday voted down a measure requiring congressional approval for any military action by President Donald Trump against Venezuela.The bipartisan resolution failed in a 49-51 vote that required a simple majority to pass. Two Republicans — Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Rand Paul of Kentucky — joined all 47 Democrats voting in support of the measure.Hours after the vote, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced another strike on an alleged drug boat in the Caribbean. The administration has carried out at least 17 such strikes in the region, including the Eastern Pacific, killing at least 69 people.Trump last month indicated that he would not seek congressional approval for additional military strikes against alleged drug traffickers. Instead, he said, “We’re just gonna kill people that are bringing drugs into our country.”Sen. Todd Young, R-Ind., an outspoken critic of administrations of both parties conducting military strikes without congressional approval, said in a statement Thursday that his no vote was “not an endorsement of the Administration’s current course in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific.”“As a matter of policy, I am troubled by many aspects and assumptions of this operation and believe it is at odds with the majority of Americans who want the U.S. military less entangled in international conflicts,” Young said.Members of Congress last month voiced concern over the Trump administration not sharing information about the military strikes. The administration later held a briefing for Republicans but excluded Democrats, sparking criticism on both sides of the aisle. On Wednesday, some Senate Democrats were included in a classified briefing with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Hegseth.A similar resolution related to strikes in the Caribbean Sea failed in the Senate, 48-51, last month. Like Thursday’s vote, Murkowski and Paul were the only Republicans to support that measure.Frank Thorp VFrank Thorp V is a producer and off-air reporter covering Congress for NBC News, managing coverage of the Senate.Rob McLean contributed.
November 8, 2025
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