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Here's the biggest news you missed this weekend

admin - Latest News - December 7, 2025
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered the U.S. military on Sept. 2 to kill all 11 people on a suspected drug-smuggling boat because they were on an internal list of narco-terrorists who U.S. intelligence and military officials determined could be lethally targeted, the commander overseeing the operation told lawmakers in briefings, according to two U.S. officials and one person familiar



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Dec. 7, 2025, 5:26 PM ESTBy Rohan NadkarniThe Baltimore Ravens lost 27-22 to the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, and one controversial call in the fourth quarter played a major role in a game with significant consequences.Both the Ravens and the Steelers entered Sunday with 6-6 records, though they arrived at them in completely opposite ways. Pittsburgh started the season 4-1 before a 2-5 slide. Baltimore, meanwhile, started 1-5 before winning five straight, then lost to the Cincinnati Bengals last week.Both sides were desperate in a game that would give the winner the lead in the AFC North.With less than three minutes to go in the fourth quarter, the Ravens were driving when quarterback Lamar Jackson appeared to find tight end Isaiah Likely for a 13-yard touchdown in the middle of the end zone.Likely caught the ball in the end zone and took two steps before the ball was knocked out of his hands. Initially, the referees ruled the catch a touchdown. Upon replay review, however, Likely was determined not to have made a “football move” after his two steps, and the play was ruled an incomplete pass.“They made a call,” Likely told reporters after the game. “Gotta live with what the refs say at the end of the day.”The decision took the go-ahead touchdown off the board for Baltimore. Three plays later, the Ravens turned the ball over on downs after failing to convert a 4th and 5.Baltimore would possess the ball one more time, but with only one timeout and 74 yards needed to score, the Ravens fell short.The fallout from the non-touchdown is considerable.Instead of Baltimore getting a late lead, the Steelers held on for the win and moved to 7-6. Pittsburgh is now first place in the division and fourth in the AFC. The Ravens, on the other hand, fell from fourth all the way to 10th place, and are two games behind the Indianapolis Colts for the final playoff spot in the conference.To make matters worse for Baltimore, its final four games of the season won’t be easy.Three of the Ravens’ last four matchups are on the road. Their only home game in the last month of the season is against the currently 11-2 New England Patriots.Baltimore isn’t done, as it has a Week 18 matchup against Pittsburgh to exact revenge. But because the Ravens can no longer win the head-to-head tiebreaker against the Steelers, they will need some help to come back win the AFC North.Rohan NadkarniRohan Nadkarni is a sports reporter for NBC News. 
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Dec. 7, 2025, 6:31 PM EST / Updated Dec. 7, 2025, 6:36 PM ESTBy Marlene Lenthang and Meriam BouarroujHundreds of works were damaged at the Louvre in Paris when a pipe burst because of flooding, the museum’s deputy general administrator said.The flooding last week damaged at least 300 to 400 works in one of the Egyptian antiquities libraries in the museum, Francis Steinbock, the deputy general administrator, told French broadcast station BFM TV.The flooding led to a burst pipe and affected one of the three rooms of the library in the Egyptian antiquities department, he said. A complete count of affected works is underway, he said.Steinbock described some of the works as books — some several hundred years old and dating to the late 19th century. He said that some of the books were wet and that work is underway to dry them, including dehumidifying them page by page with the help of Buffard paper and modifying plants.Some of the works are visual periodicals and archaeology journals that are consulted by Egyptologists, Louvre staff members and researchers, he said.He noted that the area of the pipe break is part of museum spaces that will undergo a major renovation of the ventilation and heating system starting in September. It’s the latest setback to plague the most visited museum in the world, which was the site of a daring jewelry heist nearly two months ago.On Oct. 19, four thieves swept through the Louvre in less than eight minutes and stole eight of France’s crown jewels, valued at an estimated 88 million euros ($102 million).The work to track down the stolen jewels continues, according to Paris’ prosecutor. Four men believed to be part of the robbery team have been arrested, one of them last month. All have preliminarily been charged with robbery by an organized gang and criminal conspiracy. At the time of the three other arrests in October, Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau said DNA traces were found at the scene or on items linked to the robbery.A woman was also arrested in October on preliminary charges of complicity in theft and criminal conspiracy. She has denied any involvement, The Associated Press reported.Marlene LenthangMarlene Lenthang is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital.Meriam BouarroujMeriam Bouarrouj is an NBC News assignment editor.
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November 2, 2025
Savewith a NBCUniversal ProfileCreate your free profile or log in to save this articleNov. 2, 2025, 9:00 AM ESTBy Ben KamisarThe share of registered voters with positive views of capitalism has dropped under 50% for the first time in seven years of NBC News polling on the issue — a shift that comes as some democratic socialists, like New York mayoral hopeful Zohran Mamdani, gain prominence in the Democratic Party.Overall, 44% of registered voters say they have a positive view of capitalism, while 28% view it negatively. That’s a dip from how the economic system had been viewed in previous polls, which showed slim majorities viewing capitalism positively.There’s a stark partisan difference in views on capitalism, a trend that also plays out in various demographics more likely to identify with either party. Two-thirds of Republicans view capitalism positively, compared to 44% of independents and 25% of Democrats. Just 12% of Republicans view capitalism negatively, compared to 28% of independents and 45% of Democrats.Notably, 39% of Democrats viewed capitalism positively in September 2024, while 34% viewed it negatively then — a 5-point net-positive rating, compared to a 20-point net-negative rating among Democrats now.Voters under the age of 35 also swung heavily toward more negative views of capitalism over the last year, while Hispanic voters also swung in the same direction and are now effectively split on the economic system.Meanwhile, views of socialism have stayed more stable. Now, 49% of registered voters view it negatively — a slight decline from past measurements, which bounced between 50% and 55%. And 18% view socialism positively, right in line with how voters have felt each time the question has been asked since 2018.Under the hood, the trends look similar to the movement on capitalism, just in reverse.Last September, 34% of Democrats viewed socialism positively and 29% viewed it negatively. Now, a similar 35% of Democrats view socialism positively, but 20% view it negatively.While Hispanic voters soured a bit on capitalism in the poll, their views on socialism didn’t move in the same way. Hispanic voters viewed socialism negatively by a 29-point margin in 2024. Now, it’s a 24-point margin.Views on capitalism and socialism, particularly among Democrats, are evolving as Mamdani and other self-described democratic socialists like Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., have become increasingly powerful in their party, barnstorming the country and commanding a vocal constituency.Mamdani, having come up in politics as a democratic socialist and still leaning into that identity, could be on the precipice of winning arguably the largest office in the movement’s history.“I call myself a democratic socialist, in many ways inspired by the words of Dr. King from decades ago. ‘Call it democracy, or call it democratic socialism, there has to be a better distribution of wealth for all of God’s children in this country,’” Mamdani told NBC News’ “Meet the Press” this summer.Mamdani’s top opponent, Andrew Cuomo, the former Democratic governor of New York, has used that affiliation as a cudgel. Before and after Mamdani defeated him in the June Democratic primary, Cuomo has called Mamdani a socialist, not a Democrat, and warned that his policies will bankrupt the city.“I am the Democrat. He is a socialist. New York cannot survive as a socialist economy,” Cuomo told Fox News last week.Though Mamdani is running for a municipal post, the campaign’s national prominence in the nation’s largest city means that about two-thirds of registered voters nationally already feel they know enough about him to register an opinion on him.Overall, 22% of registered voters view Mamdani positively, while 32% view him negatively and 14% have a neutral view. Another 32% either aren’t sure or don’t know enough to rate him.Virtually every Republican who knows enough about Mamdani to rate him views him negatively, while Mamdani fares much better among Democrats: 44% view him positively and 10% view him negatively. Among independents, 16% view him positively and 25% view him negatively.The NBC News poll surveyed 1,000 registered voters from Oct. 24-28 via a mix of telephone interviews and an online survey sent via text message. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.Ben KamisarBen Kamisar is a national political reporter for NBC News
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