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This week in inexplicable crimes: police in Kushiro City, Hokkaido Prefecture announced the arrest of a woman suspected of puncturing 13 melons with her finger. However, rather than the simple greed that compelled a man to damage several Demon Slayer packages to get to the toy he wanted, her motives remain a mystery.
Read more →Christmas decorations at a Belgium town became a hot top of discussion on social media as the tall column structures started getting compared with male genitals, causing controversy for the local administration but peals of laughter around the world on the internet.
Read more →Canadians, officials have an important message for you: "Do not let moose lick your car."
Read more →On November 6, China successfully launched a Long March 6 rocket and sent a payload of 13 satellites into orbit. Among them was what has been described as "the world's first 6G satellite", according to BBC. The problem? The rest of the world is still several years away from agreeing what 6G will even be.
Read more →The University of Wisconsin-Madison plans to remove a large rock from campus after students complained that it is a symbol of racism because it was referred to in a local newspaper in 1925 using a word regarded as a racial slur.
Read more →A Portland politician pushing to defund the police, claiming that most calls are not real crimes, recently called 911 herself — over an argument with a Lyft driver who refused to close his window.
Read more →A man threatened to sue a technology magazine for using his image in a story about why all hipsters look the same, only to find out the picture was of a completely different guy.
Read more →Health Canada is recalling a toy fireman's helmet.
Read more →On Super Bowl Sunday, the Schwandt household was like many others. They made food, enjoyed each other's company and argued over who was going to win.
Read more →Japanese scientists may have discovered a cure for baldness—and it lies within a chemical used to make McDonald's fries.
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