Profile: AngelicaHoef

Your personal background.
An investigation by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) has revealed that Nigerians spend around N1.8 billion per day on sports betting.
This includes 60 million Nigerians between the ages of 18 and 40.
On average, each gamblers spends around N3,000 every
day on gambling. Sports betting is gaining popularity in Nigeria with many unemployed youths turning to sports betting to make a living.
According to Dotan Ajekigbe, a sports betting analyst, the total
betting of N1.8 billion on sports betting daily can be
attributed to the N3,000 each of these individuals bets on sports betting per day.
A representative from Betting World, a betting company,
stated that gamblers can borrow up to 10,000 daily to place as bets and while some
win, others lose, but return again the following day to place more bets.
The predictable nature of Nigerian matches encourages gamblers to bet on other matches.
While betting companies describe the volume of people coming into their offices to place bets each
day, the Lagos State Lottery Board says that a large percentage of the industry has not
been tapped into. In 2013 Gbajabiamila revealed that the board brought in around N1 million from the eleven sports betting operators in the state.
There are a number of illegal operators within the state and the board has reiterated its commitment
to put an end to this trend by eliminating these operators.



The news came just days after the same contractor, American Medical Collection Agency, notified Quest Diagnostics about the full scope
of a breach affecting 11.9 million of its patients.
That breach allowed an ‘‘unauthorized user’’ to gain access to
financial data, Social Security numbers, and medical data, but not lab results.
AMCA, which works primarily with health care companies, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Attorney General Maura Healey’s office is suing White’s Bakery
& Cafe in Brockton, its manager, and head pastry chef for allegedly discriminating against an employee
on the basis of his race and disability, officials said. The alleged victim was subjected to harassment and hateful language,
including the use of variations of the N-word by his supervisor" and was mocked for having a speech impediment, Healey’s office said in a statement.


White’s Bakery & Cafe said in a statement on Wednesday that the lawsuit is disappointing and confusing. "For more
than 30 years, we have maintained an unblemished track record as a responsible, progressive employer that embraces our workers for who they
are," they said in the statement. Republicans were pushing the bill merely to fire up their conservative base. She once worked for the Globe, and did you know the Office of Refugee Resettlement is on track to care for the largest number of minors in the program’s history? Globe says it is a a direct threat. Trump calls Bette Midler a ‘washed up psycho’ in 1 a.m. Globe deleted it from the web copy.


What does the VA have to say about it? I'm tired of excuses, aren't you? Also see: Marijuana in Mass. What is crazy is continuing to read this agenda-pushing shit. Yeah, where everybody knows your name and you can get sexually harassed. Globe is filled with liquor advertising while I have yet to see one for pot. Time to hit the beach! PORTSMOUTH, England — The world leaders arrived in helicopters and armored convoys surrounded by massive security. They gathered here Wednesday to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings, still the largest combined naval, air, and land assault in history.


When President Trump took the stage, he read from a prayer that President Franklin Roosevelt spoke over the radio to the country on the eve of D-Day. ‘‘Almighty God: Our sons, pride of our nation, this day have set upon a mighty endeavor, a struggle to preserve our republic, our religion, and our civilization, and to set free a suffering humanity,’’ he said. I'm tired of that lying war-monger (and Churchill) being lionized for the advancing Jewish interests. All this self-adulating self-adoration is enough to make one sick. It was a poignant affair, with military bands playing somber music as black-and-white film clips broadcast from the stage, showing the faces of young men running onto beaches and readying to jump out of planes.


Yeah, the war was fun. On June 6, 1944, about 7,000 naval vessels, including battleships, destroyers, and assault craft, attacked German positions on the Normandy coast and landed more than 132,000 ground troops on the beaches. Is there any war they didn't lie about? Roosevelt left Pearl Harbor exposed to draw the U.S. D-Day because by that time the war was already lost for Germany and the western allies had become bogged down in Italy (the alleged soft underbelly). Without D-Day, the Soviets would have taken all of Europe. That was the real reason for the globe-kickers to do it. Russia. Turns out it was a preemptive attack forestalling Operation Storm, the planned Russian invasion of Poland (I always wondered why so many Soviet troops were in the area to be taken as POWs).


Hitler's big mistake was making a deal with Russia after the western allies had set him up to go against Russia, with the taking of territory in Poland the cases belli for all the rest. A Dutch teenager who suffered from depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and anorexia after being raped as a child was allowed to die at her home, her sister confirmed on Sunday. In what she termed a ‘‘sad last post’’ on Instagram, Noa Pothoven, 17, wrote Saturday that she would be dead within 10 days. But it had been ‘‘so long,’’ she added, since she had ‘‘really been alive.’’ ‘‘After years of struggling and fighting, it’s over,’’ she reported. The teenager, from the city of Arnhem in the eastern part of the Netherlands, said she had stopped eating and drinking and would soon be ‘‘released because my suffering is unbearable.’’ Her decision was not ‘‘impulsive,’’ she emphasized.


Rather, it was the result of ‘‘many conversations and assessments.’’ Offering her own blunt review of her condition, she observed, ‘‘I breathe but no longer live.’’ Assisted suicide is legal in parts of Europe and the United States. For the backdrop to his first official visit to Ireland, President Trump wanted to promote his golf course on the nation’s rocky west coast. The Irish government countered with the grand staging of an ancient castle. SYDNEY — One journalist is being investigated for reporting that several boats filled with asylum-seekers recently tried to reach Australia from Sri Lanka. Another reporter had her home raided by authorities this week after reporting on a government plan to expand surveillance powers.


The aggressive approach — which Australia’s prime minister, Scott Morrison, has defended — fits with a global trend. "To be perfectly frank, this is
an absolute international embarrassment," said Johan Lidberg, an associate professor of journalism at Monash University in Melbourne who works with the United Nations on global press freedom. The symptoms of what Lidberg describes as a national illness go beyond the latest investigations, and the causes are rooted in Australia’s history, law, and public complacency. Assange (who is dying in custody) and bloggers. This all comes on the heels of a rigged election. Maybe it is time to get out of Australia.


That "secrecy foundation" — the law cited in the warrant against the Australian Broadcasting Corp.,
the target of Wednesday’s raids — essentially states that no one
in government can share information without a supervisor’s
permission. Pulling all this ancient shit out shows how desperate they are, and it's pathetic.
It also needs to be noted that Australia is one of the Five Eyes spying consortium, meaning all the data is being shared and then recycled back
for collection. That's in a "liberal democracy," -- whatevertf that means.

Just call them military tribunals and you're all set (the best part
is never having to hold them). Defamation law adds another hurdle.




Sexual assault cases are especially rare in Australia because
of the risks to accusers — and to journalists who cover such cases.
The journalists who report such accusations can easily be sued
(and lose), as Geoffrey Rush’s recent court victory in a defamation case clearly shows, but
none of this may be as significant as the squeeze around national security.
Since the 9/11 attacks, Australia has passed or amended more than 60 laws related to
secrecy, spying, and terrorism, according to independent studies.
And woe to those reporters who violate it. "That’s more than any other mature liberal democracy on the globe," Lidberg said.

And yet Australians, we are told, are more concerned about guns in the wake of the New Zealand crisis event.




The journalist
whose home was raided Tuesday, Annika Smethurst
of The Sunday Telegraph of Sydney, had authorities rifling through
her belongings for more than seven hours. At the Australian Broadcasting Corp.
Wednesday, police downloaded more than 9,000 documents based on a warrant giving them authority to examine phones and notebooks of many journalists that had nothing to do with the articles in question. At least they return the stuff here.
There you go. The West is so full of corruption these days,
these are the steps they must take to keep looting. Take the investigation into the revelation about boats with asylum-seekers trying
to reach Australia from Sri Lanka. You are going to wear out that last term like the
Jews have worn out the charge of anti-semitism.


They call it liberation! What type of "combat" we unarmed
men and children engaging in? Many of the journalists involved have asked why information from so long ago would be a threat to national security now when Australia has only a few hundred troops in Afghanistan playing more
minor roles. No wonder the paper reads like a piece of sh!
They have lost the narrative, and are now trying to get it back.
Of course, the Jewish supremacism that is in our faces every day will
still be allowed. A team of researchers inside Pfizer
made a startling find in 2015: The company’s blockbuster rheumatoid
arthritis therapy Enbrel, a powerful anti-inflammatory drug, appeared to reduce the risk of
Alzheimer’s disease by 64 percent.


The results were from an analysis of hundreds of thousands of insurance
claims. Seems to be a theme. The company told The Post that
it decided during its three years of internal reviews that Enbrel did not show promise
for Alzheimer’s prevention because the drug does not directly reach brain tissue.
It deemed the likelihood of a successful clinical trial to be
low. Science was the sole determining factor against
moving forward, company spokesman Ed Harnaga said. Likewise,
Pfizer said it opted against publication of its data because of its doubts about the results.
It said publishing the information might have led outside scientists down an invalid pathway.
Pfizer’s deliberations, which previously have not been disclosed, offer a rare window into the frustrating search
for Alzheimer’s treatments inside one of the world’s largest drug companies.




Despite billions spent on research, Alzheimer’s remains a stubbornly prevalent disease with no effective prevention or treatment.

Some outside scientists disagree with Pfizer’s assessment
that studying Enbrel’s potential in Alzheimer’s prevention is a scientific dead end.

Pfizer did share the data privately with at least one
prominent scientist, but outside researchers contacted by The Post believe Pfizer also should at least have published its data, making the findings broadly available to
researchers. ‘‘Of course they should. ’’ said
Rudolph Tanzi, a leading Alzheimer’s researcher and professor at Harvard Medical School
and Massachusetts General Hospital. If they can't make money of it,
neither will anyone else.


"It would benefit the scientific community to have that data out there,’’ said Keenan Walker, an assistant professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins who is studying how inflammation contributes to Alzheimer’s. Internal discussions about possible new uses of drugs are common in pharmaceutical companies. In this case, Pfizer’s deliberations show how decisions made by industry executives — who are ultimately accountable to shareholders — can have an impact well beyond corporate board rooms. Meanwhile, Enbrel has reached the end of its patent life. Profits are dwindling as generic competition emerges, diminishing financial incentives for further research into Enbrel and other drugs in its class. But they care about you and your health, yeah.


Maybe that is what you need to do. State officials have barred former House speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi from registering as a lobbyist, opening a potentially precedent-setting fight with the convicted felon over what he says is his "constitutional right" to peddle influence on Beacon Hill. Secretary of State William F. Galvin’s office rejected DiMasi’s application in late March, just days after the 73-year-old registered to lobby both the Legislature and executive branch, according to documents the Globe obtained through a public records request. DiMasi has since appealed and is due to appear before an administrative hearing officer June 13 in a public session. The former North End Democrat’s attempt at entering the lucrative industry came just months after he completed his federally supervised release following his 2011 conviction on public corruption charges.


DiMasi, who had received an eight-year sentence, suggested as recently as January he was weighing whether to register as a lobbyist. We were told he was sick and dying of cancer, so I was calling for his release and felt his treatment was to keep him quiet. Boy, was I ever fooled! Sal is as much of a scum as he ever was! The decision could be groundbreaking. Galvin’s office said it’s the first time it’s denied a lobbyist application based on federal convictions since the state rewrote the ethics and lobbyists laws a decade ago amid DiMasi’s criminal case.


That’s also because it’s never had an applicant with federal convictions "comparable to violations" in state law, said Debra O’Malley, a Galvin spokeswoman. I have been doing this too long because all I'm doing is writing the same comments over and over while chronicling the comings and going of the elite. DiMasi, who now lives in Melrose, formally appealed in April, arguing that because lawmakers did not include any of the federal statutes on which he was convicted into the law, he shouldn’t be prohibited from registering. She is some sort of role model now! Then-Governor Deval Patrick signed legislation strengthening the lobbying and conflict of interest laws that July, including creating the 10-year prohibition.


"Lobbying is a constitutional right," DiMasi wrote to Galvin’s office. "Between my knowledge,
my experience, my expertise in certain areas, I can be helpful," DiMasi told the Globe in January. 17.5 million in state contracts. The charge itself was peanuts, and it was to remove him because he stood in the way of casinos, and I'm so ashamed I felt sorry for the scum. DiMasi received an eight-year sentence, but within months was diagnosed with cancer. He eventually earned an early release shortly before Thanksgiving in 2016, and as of the end of last year, he said he was in remission for throat and prostate cancer.


DiMasi’s friend Richard McDonough, a lobbyist and codefendant, also was convicted and sentenced to seven years in prison. In 2008, Galvin moved to suspend McDonough’s right to lobby for allegedly failing to disclose all payments he received from Cognos, the software company at the center of DiMasi and McDonough’s federal corruption case. Galvin suspended his efforts after McDonough turned over the information. That DiMasi’s case was inextricably tied to the lobbying world is not lost on DiMasi himself. In his appeal letter, he said the 2009 bill that rewrote the state’s lobbying and ethics law was "widely heralded as a reaction to the lobbying efforts associated with my federal cases" and others.


He also argued that other federally convicted officials have since registered as lobbyists. 222,000 in the past year and a half, records show. The hires include the former head of the state Democratic Party, a former legislative aide, and a former state commissioner of environmental protection. The Massachusetts Senate is set to vote Thursday on a bill that would ban the use of hand-held devices while operating a vehicle, marking yet another step forward for the legislation that aims to prevent distracted driving. Senate President Karen E. Spilka said the bill will pass because similar legislation was OK’d in the Senate in each of its last two sessions.


Governor Charlie Baker has already indicated his support as well. "I do believe that this bill will be on the governor’s desk and will become law,
" Spilka said in an interview. The House held up the legislation in recent years because some lawmakers expressed concerns that such a law would increase racial profiling from law enforcement. The Senate bill requires recording the "perceived race and ethnicity" of each driver stopped, which lawmakers have said will help combat racial profiling. The provision slightly differs from the House bill, which requires police officers to record the race of drivers only when they are issued a warning or a citation. "We want
to try to make sure that this law does not lead to a disparate impact in certain communities or
any community for that matter," Spilka said.


I was told about it, but the Globe never followed up. The husband of a Lexington woman found dead in her SUV last week was arrested and charged with her murder Wednesday, according to the Middlesex district attorney’s office. Hongyan Sun, 50, of Lexington, is accused of killing Shen Cai, 49, in their home and then putting her body into their white Honda CRV and leaving the car on Worthen Road, prosecutors said in a statement. He is expected to be arraigned Thursday in Concord District Court, the statement said. Cai was found dead in the vehicle early on May 30. The state medical examiner’s office ruled her death a homicide "by mechanical asphyxiation," according to the district attorney’s statement. During the course of the investigation, officials learned that the couple were in the process of going through a divorce.


Cai, according to prosecutors, told her friend she feared for her safety. Authorities learned of an alleged physical altercation between Cai and Sun on May 28 "and
observed injuries on both the victim and the suspect consistent with
a violent struggle," according to the statement. "The investigation suggests that after
the struggle in their home, Ms. Cai’s body was allegedly staged and left in her vehicle on Worthen Road in an apparent attempt to mislead law enforcement," the district attorney’s statement said. Cai moved to the United States from China in 2015. She was last seen on the evening of May 28, according to authorities.


The following day her friends became concerned after she missed two scheduled appointments. They searched for Cai for several hours before finding her body on Worthen Road, which intersects the street where she and Sun have owned a home since 2016, according to town records. The grisly discovery shook people in the neighborhood where the couple lived as well as in the church where Cai worshipped. "It’s really very sad news," Yuegang Zhang, a minister at Chinese Bible Church of Greater Boston in Lexington, said Saturday. Sun had filed for divorce last September, citing an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage, court records show. The couple met through mutual friends in 2013 and married two years later, according to divorce records.


Cai left her job in Shanghai as marketing director for Danone, the international food and beverage company, to move to Massachusetts with her daughter and marry Sun, who lived in Waltham at the time, court records show. The marriage didn’t produce any children, but Sun has a son, Ryan said. Has the snow melted yet? Ori, the Boston-based maker of robotic furniture, is on track to get its technology in front of millions of new customers. The company this week announced that the home furnishings giant IKEA will begin offering products powered by Ori next year. IKEA said it will launch the collaboration in Hong Kong and Japan with an integration called ROGNAN. Renderings released by IKEA and Ori show a combination couch and bookshelf that pulls away from a wall with the touch of a finger to reveal space for a bed and closet.


As they cram us all together and gate their mansions. The product is similar to others that Ori has introduced on its own. The MIT-born company’s first offerings were combinations of sleeping, storage, and entertaining space that were sold directly to developers looking to add flexibility and appeal to studio apartments and other small spaces. Last year, the company launched its first product for sale directly to consumers — a convertible closet that also functions as a desk and entertainment center. 6,000 for the smallest model. IKEA and Ori haven’t said what they’ll charge for the products they’re making together.


The companies said they’ve been working together on the product integration for a few years. US companies added the fewest jobs in nine years, a private survey found, as manufacturers, construction firms, and mining companies cut workers. Stocks closed higher on Wall Street for a second straight day Wednesday, extending Tuesday’s strong gains as investors bet an interest rate cut could be ahead. Technology, industrial, and health care companies accounted for much of the broad gains, which were tempered by a slide in energy stocks following a 3.4 percent plunge in the price of US crude oil. Traders shrugged off a report showing private US companies added the fewest jobs in nine years last month.


Sports betting business in Nigeria is one of the biggest booming business platforms in the country. The world of sports betting business happens to be a multi-billion investment with it existing in practically every country you can think off. The young and the old alike have a lot to play in this as many are registered members of multiple sports betting companies and determine which to play with depending on odds comparisons. From statistics, sports betting business may have kicked off say five (5) years back or thereabout and now you could as much as see up to 5 sports betting outlets on every street in Nigeria. Could this be because of the excess revenue gotten from it?

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