(CNN) -- A series of about 5,200 holes stretching nearly a mile (1.5 kilometers) across the Pisco Valley in the southern Peruvian Andes has baffled researchers for nearly a century. But a fresh look at the site, called Monte Sierpe, or "serpent mountain," may help archaeologists to decipher why ancient people constructed it hundreds of years ago. The "band of holes," as it's informally called, first garnered attention when National Geographic published aerial photos of the site in 1933. But there are no written records relating to the formation, leaving its purpose open to interpretation " and there have been many. Hypotheses about the holes' use have included defense, accounting, storage, gardening, water collection, and fog capturing purposes. People who support ancient astronaut theory, a belief that aliens are real and shaped early civilizations on Earth, have also suggested extraterrestrial connections. Read more
A local veterinarian has become the second Connecticut resident this year to get charged hundreds of dollars for interstate tolls that belonged to a member of the General Assembly whose legislative license plate was misunderstood by E-Z Pass photo technology.
Remember the crazy girls that tried to kill a classmate because they believed it's what Slender Man wanted? Well one of the stabbers has gone missing
Fri 21 November 2025
"Nobody cares if you know how to play scales," Neil Young once said. "Nobody gives a shit if you have good technique or not. It's whether you have feelings that you want to express with music, that's what counts, really." Read more
The Liberty Counsel issued its 23rd annual Naughty and Nice List' that catalogs stores they want American consumers to waste their money at this Christmas season.
Social media platform X (formerly Twitter) has quietly introduced a feature in recent days that publicly displays key background information about user accounts. The revelations went far beyond a few isolated cases. Entire bot farms appeared to be operating for months. Users posing as "North Gaza survivors" were actually in Pakistan. Self-described "Rafah residents" were in Indonesia. Accounts claiming to be members of Hamas's Nukhba unit uploaded videos from Malaysia. Even fake profiles presenting themselves as IDF soldiers " "officers," "snipers" and "reservists" supposedly operating in Gaza " were traced to London. Read more
Some have said she was a made up character. However, she appears in the Epstein files released by the House committee. Katie Johnson (a pseudnym) withdrew in fear from a scheduled press conference 2 days after Trump's 2016 election. Read more
Katie Johnson's (a pseudonym) video description was captured before Trump became President and matches perfectly with what's described by 100's of other underage girls.
Fugees rapper Pras Michel sentenced to 14 years for illegal donations to Obama campaign
I may have asked this question here before, just with a different number of years, but...
Where were you 62 years ago today, November 22, 1963? Read more
A TikTok video went viral showing a worker slamming frozen ribs on the filthy pavement - next to a garbage bin and mop bucket. The stomach-churning clip, which has garnered 5 million views since it was posted Wednesday, shows the worker repeatedly smashing a giant rack of ribs on the dirty ground of an alleyway in an attempt to break them up. Read more
Do you really want tomorrow's Windows to be controlled from Redmond?
I so hope Karoline will appreciate MY frankness. Read more
If someone was very vocal on the internet and found and is in possession of a pinhole camera that was drilled into his wall from outside, what would be his best course of action? Should they contact the local police and risk the entire event "disappearing". Immediately go public by giving the device to local news channels? Lawyer up? Asking for a friend.
The Department of Justice subpoenaed the personal phone records of House Judiciary Committee chairman Jim Jordan in 2022, seeking the Ohio Republican's phone data covering a more than two-year period. The subpoena, obtained by Fox News Digital, shows a federal prosecutor who later worked on special counsel Jack Smith's Jan. 6 investigation ordered Verizon to hand over the phone data, also known as toll records, reaching back to Jan. 1, 2020. The request appears to be the most expansive yet of the publicly known subpoenas targeting senators and current and former House members during Arctic Frost, the investigation that led to Smith bringing election-related charges against President Donald Trump.
In 2019, Feeding Our Future received $3.4 million in federal funding disbursed by the state. In the months after the Covid-19 pandemic began, however, the nonprofit rapidly increased its number of sponsored sites. Using fake meal counts, doctored attendance records, and fabricated invoices, the perpetrators of the fraud ring claimed to be serving thousands of meals a day, seven days a week, to underprivileged children. In 2021, Feeding Our Future received nearly $200 million in funding. Read more