SEPTEMBER 2025

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Trump Declares the nation under an “invasion from within”

 

Trump’s speech at Quantico forced a collision between two competing visions of power: one anchored in constitutional norms and civil oversight, the other rooted in raw authority and ideological loyalty. 

“It’s the enemy from within, and we have to handle it before it gets out of control,” he added.

Trump Tells Military Brass US Faces ‘Invasion From Within’

 

By declaring the nation under an “invasion from within” and ordering military leaders to root out internal threats—while simultaneously railing against “woke” culture—he reframed protests, dissent, and racial justice as existential warfare. 

In doing so, he blurred the line between domestic governance and military enforcement, suggesting that loyalty to his worldview, not democratic debate, should dictate command. For critics watching from outside the centers of influence, this was more than a political address—it was a signal that, in Trump’s vision, dissent would no longer be tolerated as a constitutional safeguard, but potentially repressed as an internal enemy.

When Donald Trump suggested that U.S. cities should serve as military “training grounds,” it struck many as a radical departure from both tradition and law. The idea blurred the boundary between a military meant to defend the nation from foreign threats and civilian spaces meant to operate free of militarization. For supporters, it was framed as toughness and readiness, but for critics it carried echoes of authoritarian playbooks where urban neighborhoods become staging areas to control, not protect, the public. To those watching from outside the mainstream of power, this proposal was less about preparedness and more about normalizing the presence of soldiers in everyday American life, a move that risks transforming city streets into laboratories for domestic enforcement rather than preserving them as arenas of democratic expression.

 

 

Related news

apnews.com
Trump calls for using US cities as a 'training ground' for military in unusual speech to generals
Today
politico.com
Trump, justifying domestic military action, tells Pentagon leaders to 'handle' the 'enemy from within'
Today
ft.com
Donald Trump says US cities should be used as military 'training grounds'
Today
washingtonpost.com
Trump tells a roomful of silent generals to join a 'war from within'
Today

 

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Criminals don’t respect international law. Actually, they don’t even respect national law.

 

Thousands marched in New York City Friday while Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the U.N. General Assembly — demanding his arrest and calling for an end to what protesters described as Israel’s genocide in Gaza. 

 

Criminals don’t respect international law. Actually, they don’t even respect national law.

- @rxw101 YouTube Commentator

Thousands Call to Arrest Netanyahu, March at U.N. Against Gaza Genocide

 

Although Benjamin Netanyahu carries an active International Criminal Court arrest warrant accusing him of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza, he was able to arrive in New York and address the United Nations without interruption. This immunity is not the result of his innocence but of political shields: the United States does not accept ICC jurisdiction, meaning its law enforcement agencies will not act on the warrant. His travel arrangements underlined the gravity of the situation — flight routes deliberately curved around European countries that are ICC members, avoiding any airspace where he could be legally detained. For many, this highlights a deeper imbalance in global justice: while ordinary citizens or weaker states are subject to international law, powerful leaders with strong allies can sidestep accountability. Netanyahu’s unchallenged appearance at the U.N. became less a moment of diplomacy and more a vivid example of how political protection can override legal orders, leaving questions about whether the structures meant to deliver justice truly apply to all.

From Times Square to the United Nations, waves of protesters carried Palestinian flags and banners denouncing Benjamin Netanyahu as a war criminal, demanding his arrest and an end to Israel’s assault on Gaza. Tensions flared as some demonstrators were taken into custody outside his hotel, underscoring the intensity of anger on the streets. That defiance echoed inside the General Assembly, where entire blocs of delegates walked out rather than legitimize his remarks. Yet Netanyahu, insulated by diplomatic immunity, seized the stage to justify his government’s actions, portraying them as matters of survival while dismissing critics as biased. The contrast was stark: outside, voices that mainstream politics often sidelines accused him of genocide; inside, the machinery of international diplomacy gave him a microphone and a platform. Together, the marches, arrests, walkouts, and speeches painted a picture of a world divided between those demanding accountability and those clinging to power, even at the cost of credibility.

The standoff surrounding Netanyahu’s U.N. appearance revealed more than a clash of politics — it exposed a widening fault line in the global order. On one side are institutions like the International Criminal Court, built to enforce legal accountability beyond borders; on the other are powerful states that selectively recognize authority only when it suits their interests. 

For demonstrators, watching Netanyahu move unchallenged through New York despite an arrest warrant was not just frustrating, it was proof of a system designed to protect the influential while punishing the powerless. The delegates who walked out and the crowds who filled the streets were responding to more than one man’s speech — they were signaling that unchecked immunity erodes the very idea of international justice. In their view, the question is no longer whether laws exist, but whether those laws can ever touch the leaders shielded by alliances and political muscle.

 

Recent coverage

Reuters
Netanyahu visit sparks New York City protests
4 days ago
The Guardian
Several demonstrators arrested outside Netanyahu's hotel ahead of UN speech
4 days ago
AP News
Facing global isolation at UN, a defiant Netanyahu says Israel 'must finish the job' against Hamas
4 days ago

 

 

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58M pounds of corn dogs, sausage-on-a-stick products recalled over wood pieces

Here’s the quick, verified rundown—and what to do:

  • What’s recalled: ~58 million lbs of State Fair Corn Dogs on a Stick and Jimmy Dean Pancakes & Sausage (and French Toast) on a Stick made by Hillshire Brands (Tyson Foods). Reason: pieces of wood embedded in the batter. Five injuries reported. Products were made Mar 17–Sept 26, 2025 at the Haltom City, TX plant and shipped nationwide (retail, schools, DoD). Look for establishment numbers “EST-582” or “P-894.”

  • What to do: Do not eat the products. Throw them away or return to the store. Check your freezer; these are often bought in bulk. For questions or refunds, contact Hillshire Brands consumer care: 888-747-7611.

  • Need help / report a problem: Call the USDA Meat & Poultry Hotline: 1-888-MPHotline (1-888-674-6854) or file a report via the FSIS electronic complaint form.

 

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They Are Lying About Tyler Robinson. | Candace Ep 244

 

Tyler Robinson is not suicidal, and I’ll tell you how I know. Also, while investigating this murder, there is a politician's name that keeps coming up. He’s apparently mad that we keep asking questions.

They Are Lying About Tyler Robinson. | Candace Ep 244

 

00:00 - Start. 

00:54 - Why Tyler Robinson isn't suicidal. 

24:47 - Phil Lyman and the people mad that we are asking questions. 

49:14 - Comments. 

 

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Trump Announces 'The Board Of Peace' To Govern Gaza—With Himself As The Head

 

At a press briefing with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House, President Trump announced a "Board of Peace" to govern Gaza.

BREAKING NEWS: Trump Announces 'The Board Of Peace' To Govern Gaza—With Himself As The Head

 

 Here’s what this is and why it matters, fast: President Trump unveiled a 20-point Gaza proposal that would end the war if both sides accept, swap hostages for prisoners, demilitarize the strip, and stand up a temporary “Board of Peace” chaired by Trump (with figures like Tony Blair) to oversee a technocratic interim administration and reconstruction; Israel’s Netanyahu publicly backed the framework, while mediators (Qatar, Egypt) are sounding out Hamas, which has demanded a full Israeli withdrawal and insists it won’t accept terms that sideline Palestinian control. 

The plan also envisions an international stabilization force, reforms to the Palestinian Authority, and “New Gaza” redevelopment; it does not spell out immediate statehood and bars Israeli annexation. Critics call the Trump-led board a sovereignty overreach and warn of legitimacy issues; supporters argue it’s a way to freeze the fighting, free hostages, and prevent Hamas’ return. 

This is a proposal, not a done deal—the next 72 hours (hostage terms, ceasefire mechanics, who actually sits on the board) will determine if it’s real or rhetorical.

 

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George Galloway on being 'Detained at Gatwick'

 

LIVE: Press Conference | George Galloway on being 'Detained at Gatwick'

What happened: On Saturday, Sept. 27, George Galloway (71) and his wife Putri Gayatri Pertiwi were stopped for hours at Gatwick under Schedule 3 of the Counter-Terrorism and Border Security Act 2019 (the “hostile state activity” power). Police seized devices; no arrests were made. They’d just flown in from Moscow via the Gulf.


Read one way, the Gatwick stop looks less like routine border security and more like a message: fly back from Moscow with sharp views on UK foreign policy and the state can pull you aside, clone your phones, and trawl your contacts without ever alleging a crime. 

Schedule 3 gives officers that power on “hostile activity” grounds without prior suspicion, which critics say turns every dissident, journalist, or inconvenient politician into a data source on demand—devices seized, cloud sessions still authenticated, and entire networks mapped before a lawyer can blink.

  Galloway calls it a fishing expedition; the Met calls it lawful procedure; the effect is the same—hours of questioning, no arrest, but a quiet harvest of communications that can be laundered into other cases through parallel construction. 

The next test is legal: KRW’s push to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal could force disclosures on what was copied, how long it will be kept, and who gets to see it. Until then, the real deterrent isn’t a charge sheet; it’s the knowledge that crossing the wrong geopolitical wires may earn you a suspicion-free strip of your digital life at the border.


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RFK To Eliminate ALL PHARMA Ads On TV!

 

The policy change could make ads prohibitively long, potentially discouraging Big Pharma from buying so much television airtime.

RFK To Eliminate ALL PHARMA Ads On TV!

 

If the White House order holds as written, it’s a body blow to pharma’s TV ad model: by directing FDA/HHS to scrap the 1997 “adequate provision” shortcut and require full safety disclosures in broadcast spots—closer to the pre-1997 standard—drug commercials become so long and expensive that many won’t air, shrinking Big Pharma’s leverage over news outlets hooked on that ad money; the administration has already paired the move with a “crackdown” of ~100 cease-and-desist notices and thousands of warnings, signaling real enforcement rather than rhetoric, while RFK Jr. has made no secret he ultimately wants these ads gone entirely.

Expect a constitutional fight: commercial drug ads are protected speech, and industry lawyers will argue that mandating exhaustive side-effect scripts effectively chills advertising, inviting challenges under Virginia Pharmacy and related doctrine. But even before any court ruling, the practical effect could be immediate—less saturation marketing, more price and safety scrutiny, and a media landscape a bit less dependent on pharma buys.

 

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Trump holds briefing with Netanyahu after Israeli leader rejects demands to end Gaza war

 

WATCH LIVE: Trump holds briefing with Netanyahu 

after Israeli leader rejects demands to end Gaza war

Here’s the latest in one pass:

 

Three days after telling the U.N. General Assembly that Israel “must finish the job” and rejecting calls to end the Gaza war, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met President Trump at the White House today and publicly backed Trump’s proposal to end the fighting—but only on terms he says meet Israel’s war aims (return of all hostages, dismantling Hamas’ military capacity, ending its political rule in Gaza, and ensuring Gaza can’t threaten Israel again). The White House says Netanyahu also apologized to Qatar over Israel’s recent strike in Doha as part of efforts to keep diplomacy on track. Hamas has been briefed but is still insisting on an end to the war and full Israeli withdrawal as part of any permanent deal.

 

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White House “mass layoff” planning and the shutdown

 

White House Orders Mass Layoff Plans Ahead of Shutdown | What It Means for Federal Workers - YouTube

Here’s what’s real and what it means, fast: The White House’s budget office (OMB) sent agencies guidance to map out “mass layoff” (RIF) scenarios if there’s a shutdown—a sharp break from the usual playbook of temporary furloughs during lapses in funding.

 

Independent outlets say they’ve seen the memo and describe it as instructing agencies to be ready to issue RIF notices tied to programs that would lack FY2026 appropriations; unions and many career officials are pushing back, and some agencies are telling staff the threat may be impractical on the short timeline. 

Key nuance: Furloughs start quickly in a shutdown; RIFs (layoffs) require legal steps (notice periods, retention “bump/retreat” rules, OPM oversight) and can’t be executed overnight, so the memo is best read as pressure and contingency planning—not an immediate pink-slip wave at 12:01 a.m. OPM’s standing guidance for shutdowns still centers on furloughs, and DoD’s contingency PDF echoes that sequence (orderly shutdown → furloughs for non-excepted staff). 

Bottom line: Agencies are updating shutdown plans now; if Congress misses the Sept. 30 deadline, many workers could be furloughed first while RIF plans sit in reserve. Expect litigation and political scrutiny if agencies try to convert a funding lapse into permanent headcount cuts. 

 

Latest reporting on White House “mass layoff” planning and the shutdown

AP News
White House budget office tells agencies to draft mass firing plans ahead of potential shutdown
3 days ago
The Washington Post
White House begins plan for mass firings if there's a government shutdown
3 days ago
The Guardian
US set for largest mass resignation in history as Trump continues deep cuts
Today

 

 

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LIVE: Michigan church shooting, Trump directs troops to Portland & Russia strikes Ukraine

 

Here’s a quick live brief as of 6:17 pm ET:

LIVE: Michigan church shooting, Trump directs troops to Portland & Russia strikes Ukraine

 

Michigan church shooting (Grand Blanc Township) — Police say a 40-year-old man drove into a Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints building, opened fire, and set it ablaze; two people are dead and eight wounded. The suspect was killed in a shootout with officers. Motive is under investigation; state and federal agencies are assisting. 

Trump says he’ll deploy troops to Portland — The president announced he’s directing DoD to send troops to protect Portland ICE facilities; Oregon’s governor and city leaders oppose it and have filed suit to block a deployment. It’s not yet clear how many troops will move or when; local outlets report federal orders involving Oregon National Guard while others note the White House is still weighing options amid pushback.

Russia strikes Ukraine — One of the largest overnight attacks in months hit Kyiv and multiple regions with what Ukraine’s air force said were nearly 600 drones and about 50 missiles, killing at least four and injuring dozens. Poland briefly closed airspace in the southeast and scrambled jets as a precaution. 

 

Latest coverage on today’s three stories

AP News
2 people dead and 8 wounded in a shooting and fire at a Michigan church, police say
Today
Reuters
Shooter kills two, wounds eight at Mormon church in Michigan
Today
Reuters
Trump orders deployment of troops to Portland, ICE facilities
Today

 

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Marjorie Taylor Greene vs. Laura Loomer: What Sparked the Feud and Why It Matters

 

A long-simmering rift between Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and activist Laura Loomer boiled over this August, with sharp personal insults and policy jabs flying on X. The fight centers on loyalty tests inside the pro-Trump movement and how Republicans should talk about Israel, Gaza, and the military—turning an internal dispute into headline news. 

 

The latest spark came after Loomer blasted Medal of Honor recipient Florent Groberg;

 

Greene publicly told her to “shut up,” siding with veterans who condemned the attack. Coverage noted the clash as a MAGA-on-MAGA moment fueled by social media. 

 

Loomer hit back by accusing Greene of disloyalty and corruption and threatening an ethics complaint, while also using harsh personal insults. Greene questioned who finances Loomer and called her commentary dangerous. The back-and-forth showed how fast online beefs can jump from policy to personal. 

 Loomer’s growing influence with Trump world has been reported since spring, when several National Security Council aides were dismissed soon after an Oval Office meeting where she aired loyalty concerns. Major outlets confirmed the firings; Trump downplayed her role. 

Another fault line is Israel-Gaza. Greene has lately emphasized civilian suffering in Gaza and even used the word “genocide,” a stance that drew Loomer’s ire and helped fuel their split. That policy gap—hawkish consistency versus a more non-interventionist tone—keeps the feud alive. 

From a conservative view, supporters of Loomer argue she’s enforcing discipline and defending a strong pro-Israel line; from a middle-of-the-road perspective, the feud looks like a distraction from governing and an image problem for Republicans. Even pop-culture coverage has mocked the spat, underscoring how intramural fights can spill beyond politics. 

Viewed through a constitutional, America-First lens, the only test that matters is whether this feud produces outcomes that strengthen the Republic—secure borders, energy independence, fair trade that rebuilds U.S. industry, restrained spending, and protections for speech and due process—not whose brand trends on X. Primary challenges are legitimate checks, but they should be about votes and policy, not personalities; donor pressure should never outrank voters, and any ethics complaints must follow transparent rules and equal treatment under law. 

Party leaders—including President Trump and House leadershipshould steer the dispute toward constructive unity: insist on public debates, not subtweets; channel influence into co-sponsored bills and tough oversight of the border, the budget, the Pentagon, and federal bureaucracies; and pledge to rally behind the nominee once voters decide. 

The oath is to the Constitution, not to cliques, and the measure of every move should be simple: does it advance American security, prosperity, and liberty, or distract from it?

 

 

Sources

Newsweek: Loomer–Greene insults and ethics-complaint threats.

https://www.newsweek.com/laura-loomer-marjorie-taylor-greene-feud-trump-israel-2112015

Task & Purpose and Mediaite: Groberg episode and veteran pushback. https://taskandpurpose.com/culture/groberg-loomer-speak-out/?utm

AP, Reuters, Washington Post, ABC News: NSC staff firings after Loomer meeting. https://apnews.com/article/959b718b04b240c5c8ba3736b4d8aa62?utm

The Guardian: Greene’s Gaza comments and Loomer’s response. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/aug/23/marjorie-taylor-greene-bernie-sanders-famine-gaza

Page Six: Cultural spotlight on the feud. 

https://pagesix.com/2025/08/14/celebrity-news/don-lemon-d-l-hughley-and-rep-jasmine-crockett-roast-mtg-and-laura-loomer-at-city-winery/?utm

 

 

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6 Meats Pulled From Walmart, Costco And Aldi Shelves - OCT 2025 Update

 

6 Meats Pulled From Walmart, Costco And Aldi Shelves - OCT 2025 Update

Food safety is an issue that affects every household, and 6 Meats Pulled From Walmart, Costco And Aldi Shelves - OCT 2025 Update brings you the latest details you need to know.

 

This video explains why these recalls happened, what risks were identified, and how consumers can protect themselves from hidden dangers in everyday grocery shopping.

By covering 6 Meats Pulled From Walmart, Costco And Aldi Shelves - OCT 2025 Update, we aim to educate viewers on the importance of tracking product recalls, understanding labeling, and recognizing warning signs. Rather than just listing products, this content provides context on how supply chains work, what regulators look for, and how you can make safer choices for yourself and your family.

Our report on 6 Meats Pulled From Walmart, Costco And Aldi Shelves - OCT 2025 Update is also a reminder that knowledge is the best safeguard. We encourage viewers to stay alert, follow official recall notices, and explore healthier alternatives. Food safety is not just about avoiding risks—it is about building habits that protect health in the long run.

 

 

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Another Possibility...

 

Critics counter that a consumer mic’s battery likely can’t deliver the focused energy such a scenario implies, that true blasts leave clear thermal, residue, and fragment signatures (flash, burns, shrapnel, distinctive sound) that would be hard to miss on forensic review

 

Did An EXPLODING MICROPHONE Kill Charlie Kirk?

 

Did An EXPLODING MICROPHONE Kill Charlie Kirk???

Online sleuths are arguing that Charlie Kirk’s neck wound lines up better with a booby-trapped mic pack than with a clean rifle shot, pointing to frame-by-frame clips where his shirt seems to billow outward, his chain kicks up, and the magnetic back-plate of the DJI Mic 2 appears to snap toward his throat—

 

As if a tiny directed blast pushed force from under the fabric; comedian-commentators like Jimmy and Kurt Metzger even cite past covert ops that allegedly hid explosives in consumer gear, claiming the earpiece twitch and necklace flight mark an epicenter beneath the collar rather than downrange, and using that to cast the FBI’s lone-gunman narrative as the weakest fit..

 Critics counter that a consumer mic’s battery likely can’t deliver the focused energy such a scenario implies, that true blasts leave clear thermal, residue, and fragment signatures (flash, burns, shrapnel, distinctive sound) that would be hard to miss on forensic review, and that slow-motion compression, rolling-shutter artifacts, and reflexive recoil can mimic “outward” motion—so until verified lab findings and full forensic reports are public, both the hidden-device theory and the single-shooter account are reading tea leaves from ambiguous video.

 

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Operation Quantico: Hegseth Summons Top Brass For Sept. 30 Meeting

 

The Pentagon has not released a full agenda, but reporting says the speech will center on standards, leadership conduct, and a push for a “warrior ethos.” The scale and short notice make the gathering unusual by modern norms. 

 

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered nearly every U.S. general and admiral to assemble at Marine Corps University in Quantico, Virginia, on Sept. 30.

 

When this kind of stuff happens, look in the Congress and Senate, and see what they're about to shove through. No matter the party. It's usually a distraction so something bad isn't covered.

MAJOR ALERT! SOMETHING 'MASSIVE' IS ABOUT TO HAPPEN!!!

 

The Pentagon has not released a full agenda, but reporting says the speech will center on standards, leadership conduct, and a push for a “warrior ethos.” The scale and short notice make the gathering unusual by modern norms. 

The timing lands the same day federal funding expires at midnight, raising questions about optics and readiness during a potential shutdown window. Budget watchers and major outlets note Congress faces a Sept. 30 deadline to avert a lapse in funding. 

The administration frames the event as a unifying meet-up. President Trump has described it as a friendly chance to showcase leadership and reinforce direction, while Hegseth allies say it’s about discipline, fitness, and clarity of purpose. 

Skeptics across the defense community worry about cost, disruption, and precedent. Analysts say pulling hundreds of flag officers into one room is rare and could signal deeper personnel or structural moves, including possible reductions in general officer billets. Others see it as a stage-managed assertion of control. 

New reporting adds that Hegseth may spotlight grooming and uniform standards alongside a broader culture reset. Supporters argue clearer expectations improve cohesion; critics counter that policy and operations, not pageantry, should drive such mass convocations. 

If confirmed agendas include strategy or posture shifts, expect scrutiny from Congress and former officials on civil-military norms. Until then, the only certainties are the date, the location, and the unusually large audience required to attend. 

 

Sources

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/hegseth-calls-rare-meeting-large-number-generals-admirals/story?id=125935650&utm

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/government-shut-week/story?id=125889817&utm

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/09/25/trump-hegseth-meeting-generals-00581413?utm

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2025/09/26/hegseth-generals-meeting-warrior-speech/?utm

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/09/26/hegseth-meeting-details-00582791?utm

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2025/09/26/hegseth-generals-meeting-warrior-speech/?utm

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/hegseth-calls-rare-meeting-large-number-generals-admirals/story?id=125935650&utm

 

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Australian Team Details C-Section on Beheaded Mother

 

Australian doctors serving in Gaza have described the conditions in al-Shifa hospital, saying there are a complete lack of painkillers and bombs dropping outside the hospital all day.

Australian doctors describe giving C-section to beheaded mother

 

 Two Australian volunteer doctors working at Gaza City’s al-Shifa Hospital — Dr Nada Abu Al-Rub and Dr Saya Aziz — posted videos and gave interviews describing overwhelmed conditions (little anesthesia, mass-casualty trauma).

In those accounts, they say colleagues performed an emergency C-section on a nine-month-pregnant woman who arrived with fatal, catastrophic injuries; they report the baby survived.

 Independent outlets in Australia covered their broader testimonies; the specific C-section claim originates from the doctors’ own on-camera statements and has not been separately verified by major wires. 

 

 

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Small Nations Turn Up the Heat at UNGA, Urge Restraint in Gaza and Accountability for All Sides

 

Leaders from Ireland, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Malta and Barbados (PM Mia Mottley) didn’t mince words as they spoke passionately about the plight of Palestinian victims of Israeli war in Gaza.

They came to speak after Benjamin Netanyahu but they chose to target Israel with their harshest criticism on the conduct of the IDF in Gaza and the West Bank. Earlier, the Slovenian president has used the UN platform to launch an extraordinary attack on Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump.

 

Leaders from Ireland, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Malta and Barbados used their United Nations speeches in New York to spotlight Palestinian civilian suffering and to criticize Israel’s conduct in Gaza and the West Bank

 

Netanyahu’s UN speech backfires; Caribbean, European nations slam Israel on Gaza | Janta Ka Reporter

Leaders from Ireland, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Malta and Barbados used their United Nations speeches in New York to spotlight Palestinian civilian suffering and to criticize Israel’s conduct in Gaza and the West Bank, setting a sharper tone in the sessions surrounding Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s address.

 

Their remarks came as delegates staged walkouts during Netanyahu’s speech and protests grew outside the UN. 

Ireland’s Simon Harris pressed the case for stronger action to protect civilians and for meaningful diplomatic steps, echoing Dublin’s recognition of Palestine and its criticism of restrictions on Palestinian participation at UN meetings. Irish coverage this week captured his calls for practical measures to end the war and his frustration over blocked Palestinian access. 

 

Nataša Pirc Musar, the president of Slovenia, stunned everyone with her bravery as she singled out the US and Israel for the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. Without naming Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu, she repeatedly highlighted how international law was being flouted by these two with impunity.

While delivering her bold speech at the UN General Assembly, Musar also slammed the UN for failing the people of Gaza amidst widespread starvation and famine. She ended her speech by asking the global fraternity to immediately act in Gaza.

Slovenian President’s extraordinary attack on Trump, Netanyahu for Gaza complicity|Janta Ka Reporter

 

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines’ Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves took the floor at the General Assembly and stressed adherence to international law while highlighting Palestinian civilian losses, adding a Caribbean voice to the growing chorus demanding accountability and a ceasefire. His full UN speech is posted by UN Web TV and official Vincentian channels.

Malta’s Prime Minister Robert Abela paired an appeal for an immediate ceasefire and hostage release with Malta’s decision to formally recognize a Palestinian state during UN week—framing it as support for a two-state outcome and civilian protection. UN and wire outlets documented his address and the recognition move. 

Barbados’ Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley urged leaders to choose de-escalation and justice-centered diplomacy, linking war costs to wider global crises. Multiple UN feeds carried her appearance, and clips of her remarks circulated widely in the Caribbean press. 

The criticism unfolded as Netanyahu defended Israel’s military actions and vowed to “finish the job,” drawing walkouts from dozens of delegations. Coverage from major outlets and live feeds captured the hall reaction and the political divide over recent recognitions of Palestinian statehood by Western governments. 

Earlier in the week, Slovenia’s president Nataša Pirc Musar used the same platform to deliver a hard-hitting speech urging an immediate end to mass civilian harm in Gaza and calling out global powers; Ljubljana then escalated pressure with a travel ban targeting Netanyahu and other measures tied to international law. UN and Reuters records detail the address and sanctions. 

 

“Israel needs to recognize that even inside the United States, public opinion is moving against it.” Donald Trump’s stance on Israel does not reflect “where America is on this”, says former UN deputy secretary general, Lord Malloch-Brown.

Trump's public turns against him over Israel | Former UN chief

 

Supporters of the small-state push say these interventions add moral clarity and keep civilian protection front-and-center; skeptics argue speeches won’t change battlefield realities without enforceable steps or unified great-power backing. Either way, this week’s statements underscore a widening gap between leaders urging immediate restraint and those defending continued operations, with UN cameras providing a global record. 

 

Complete reference list

Reuters – Netanyahu condemns support for Palestinian state at UN after scores walk out (Sept. 26, 2025) — https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/netanyahu-outlines-israeli-victories-over-hamas-iran-un-speech-2025-09-26/

Al Jazeera – UN General Assembly 2025 live updates, Day 4 (Sept. 26, 2025) — https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2025/9/26/un-general-assembly-2025-live-day-four

The Irish Times – Harris calls for urgent EU steps to end Gaza genocide (Sept. 22, 2025) — https://www.irishtimes.com/politics/2025/09/22/harris-calls-for-urgent-practical-eu-steps-to-end-gaza-genocide-ahead-of-major-un-week/

RTÉ – Harris: Outrageous that Palestinian Authority was blocked from UN GA (Sept. 22, 2025) — https://www.rte.ie/news/world/2025/0922/1534629-un-general-assembly/

UN Web TV – Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, General Debate (UNGA 80) — https://webtv.un.org/en/asset/k1l/k1l8jpbd11

Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SVG) – PM Ralph Gonsalves addresses UNGA 80 — https://www.facebook.com/mofasvg/posts/1099577872351757/?utm

UN Web TV – Malta, General Debate (UNGA 80) — https://webtv.un.org/en/asset/k14/k14etd2wie

Reuters – Malta to formally recognize Palestinian state at UN assembly (Sept. 22, 2025) — https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/malta-formally-recognise-palestinian-state-un-assembly-pm-says-2025-09-22/

UN General Debate portal (speaker order and videos) — https://gadebate.un.org/en

Sky News – Diplomats walk out as Netanyahu speaks at UN (Sept. 26, 2025) — https://news.sky.com/video/diplomats-walk-out-as-israeli-pm-netanyahu-speaks-at-un-13438700

UN Web TV – Slovenia, President Nataša Pirc Musar (UNGA 80 address) — https://webtv.un.org/en/asset/k1m/k1mukorx8g

Reuters – Slovenia imposes travel ban on Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu (Sept. 25, 2025) — https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/slovenia-imposes-travel-ban-israels-prime-minister-netanyahu-2025-09-25/

UN press – Amid multiple crises, Secretary-General urges leaders to act (UNGA 80) — https://press.un.org/en/2025/ga12709.doc.htm

Al Jazeera – UNGA 2025 primer and key moments — https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/9/23/un-general-assembly-2025-what-happens-key-moments-and-speakers-ahead

 

 

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Apparently Antifa can give you Amnesia.

Chuck Todd in 2025: "I don't even know what antifa is."

Chuck Todd in 2017: hosts antifa professor who wrote

'The Anti-Fascist Handbook'

https://x.com/Banned_Bill/status/1970258131788640539 

Eugene ICE protest leads to detentions and citations; no domestic terrorism charges filed

 

Federal officers pepper-sprayed and detained several protesters outside the federal building that houses an ICE field office in Eugene, Oregon, on the evening of September 24, 2025, after demonstrators knocked on doors and monitored exits. Local outlets report detentions at the scene.

 

Context from earlier protests in Oregon shows prosecutors relying on existing criminal statutes.

 

Federal officers pepper-sprayed and detained several protesters outside the federal building that houses an ICE field office in Eugene, Oregon, on the evening of September 24, 2025, after demonstrators knocked on doors and monitored exits. Local outlets report detentions at the scene.

 

According to the Register-Guard, three people detained by federal officers were cited and released, with advocates confirming their release the next day. No domestic terrorism charges were announced in connection with the Eugene incident at the time of publication. 

Context from earlier protests in Oregon shows prosecutors relying on existing criminal statutes. In July, the U.S. Attorney’s Office (District of Oregon) charged multiple defendants tied to protests near a Portland ICE facility with offenses such as assault on federal officers, depredation of government property, and possession of an unregistered destructive device—not domestic terrorism. 

At the federal policy level, the White House recently issued an order purporting to designate “Antifa” as a domestic terrorist organization and released a memorandum directing agencies to counter domestic terrorism and organized political violence. DHS followed with a press release describing arrests of “Antifa-aligned” violent extremists nationwide. These actions frame the administration’s posture but do not, by themselves, create new criminal charges. 

Federal law defines “domestic terrorism,” but there is no stand-alone federal crime of domestic terrorism; prosecutors typically use other statutes (e.g., assault on federal officers, arson, explosives, conspiracy). Analysts note that attempts to “designate” domestic groups raise legal questions because formal terrorist designations in U.S. law apply to foreign organizations. 

Some states do have their own domestic-terrorism laws. Georgia authorities, for example, have brought domestic-terrorism charges against certain “Stop Cop City” defendants under Georgia statute, separate from federal law. Recent court rulings there address RICO and other counts, with proceedings ongoing regarding any remaining terrorism charges. These examples show state-level use of the label predates current events in Oregon.  In Eugene, reporting so far describes detentions, citations, and crowd-control measures, with follow-up investigations possible. If additional charges are filed, they would likely come through federal statutes already on the books or through state laws; any updates would appear in official releases or court records.

 

Complete reference list

OPB: Protesters pepper-sprayed, detained at Eugene federal building (Sept. 24, 2025) — https://www.opb.org/article/2025/09/24/eugene-protest-federal-building-ice-pepper-spray-detainees/ 

Register-Guard: Federal officials detain, cite 3 during Eugene ICE protest — https://www.registerguard.com/story/news/local/2025/09/24/eugene-ice-protest-arrests/86330606007

KLCC: Protesters pepper-sprayed, detained at Eugene federal building — https://www.klcc.org/politics-government/2025-09-24/protesters-pepper-sprayed-detained-at-eugene-federal-building

DOJ (District of Oregon): Charges related to protests near Portland ICE office — https://www.justice.gov/usao-or/pr/four-defendants-charged-assaulting-federal-law-enforcement-officers-other-offenses

White House fact sheet: Designation announcement — https://www.whitehouse.gov/fact-sheets/2025/09/fact-sheet-president-donald-j-trump-designates-antifa-as-a-domestic-terrorist-organization/

White House memorandum: Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence — https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/09/countering-domestic-terrorism-and-organized-political-violence/

DHS press release: DHS is Fighting Back Against Antifa Violence — https://www.dhs.gov/news/2025/09/26/dhs-fighting-back-against-antifa-violence

CRS: Understanding and Conceptualizing Domestic Terrorism (R47885) — https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/R47885

CRS: Domestic Terrorism—Overview of Federal Criminal Law and Constitutional Issues (R46829) — https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/R46829

Washington Post analysis of designation/legal context — https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/09/25/trump-domestic-extremism-political-violence/

Reuters photo gallery (Portland ICE protest context) — https://www.reuters.com/pictures/tear-gas-deployed-protest-outside-ice-detention-facility-2025-09-02/77UCFS4J3VNA5AOQDUEVJJOWSM/

 

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White House tells agencies to prep for layoffs if Congress misses funding deadline

 

What happens during a lapse is defined by law. OPM guidance says activities funded by annual appropriations must stop unless excepted by statute; essential operations continue. By contrast, a RIF that permanently separates or downgrades employees requires formal notice and process under federal rules.

 

The White House's Office of Management and Budget warned federal agencies of mass layoffs if Congress doesn't pass a government funding bill ahead of the Sept. 30 deadline.

 

White House tells federal agencies to prepare for mass layoffs as government shutdown deadline nears

The White House directed federal agencies to prepare reduction-in-force plans in case Congress fails to pass funding by October 1, 2025.

 

 The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) memo asks agencies to identify programs that would lose discretionary dollars or lack alternative funding and to be ready to issue layoff notices in addition to standard shutdown furlough steps. 

The guidance marks a departure from typical shutdown playbooks that focus on temporary furloughs until funding resumes. Major outlets report that agencies were told to consider RIF notices for employees tied to projects “not consistent with the President’s priorities,” as well as those that lose funding on October 1. Federal workforce publications say the memo would add RIF notices on top of any furlough letters. RIFs are permanent actions with specific legal steps; furloughs are temporary. Labor and management experts immediately questioned whether agencies can design and execute lawful RIFs on such short timelines. 

What happens during a lapse is defined by law. OPM guidance says activities funded by annual appropriations must stop unless excepted by statute; essential operations continue. By contrast, a RIF that permanently separates or downgrades employees requires formal notice and process under federal rules.  Notice requirements matter for timing. OPM states employees are generally entitled to 60 days’ written notice before a RIF takes effect; in unforeseen situations, an agency may seek OPM approval to shorten to no fewer than 30 days. That means immediate “same-week” firings at shutdown would face legal and procedural hurdles. 

Administration officials and allies frame the directive as part of a broader effort to reshape and downsize government, while critics call it intimidation that uses federal workers as leverage in a funding fight. News coverage notes Democrats object to tying permanent cuts to a short-term shutdown scenario and suggest legal challenges are likely.  Separately, OMB said contingency plans—which traditionally list who is excepted, who is furloughed, and how services continue—will be posted by individual agencies on their own websites rather than on a single OMB page, making public tracking more diffuse than in past shutdowns. 

For employees and the public, several basics remain. Essential services such as national security, law enforcement, and air traffic control continue during a lapse; benefits like Social Security typically remain operational. But if RIF notices are ultimately issued and finalized, separations would occur only after required notice periods and appeal rights run their course. 

If Congress passes funding before deadlines, the memo indicates RIF plans would not be implemented. Until then, agencies are updating shutdown procedures and answering workforce questions about furloughs, pay, and benefits for any lapse in appropriations. Photos and videos available on request: recent OMB briefings, explainers on furlough vs. RIF, and agency contingency plan pages; PBS NewsHour segments summarizing the policy shift can also provide useful clips. 

 

Complete reference list 

Reuters – White House threatens sharp cuts in U.S. workforce; agencies told to prepare RIF plans
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/white-house-tell-agencies-prepare-mass-firing-plans-possible-shutdown-politico-2025-09-25/?utm

Washington Post – White House begins plan for mass firings if there’s a government shutdown
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2025/09/25/government-shutdown-omb-firings-trump/?utm

Government Executive – Agencies should prep for mass layoffs if shutdown occurs, White House says
https://www.govexec.com/management/2025/09/agencies-should-prep-mass-layoffs-if-shutdown-occurs-white-house-says/408364/?utm

Federal News Network – Feasibility of RIFs around a government shutdown called into question
https://federalnewsnetwork.com/government-shutdown/2025/09/feasibility-of-rifs-around-a-government-shutdown-called-into-question/?utm

OPM – Guidance for shutdown furloughs
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/furlough-guidance/?utm

OPM – Reductions in Force (RIF) overview
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/workforce-restructuring/reductions-in-force-rif/?utm

OPM – RIF Basics (notice requirements)
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/workforce-restructuring/reductions-in-force-rif/rif-basics.pdf?utm

eCFR – 5 CFR Part 351 (RIF regulations)
https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-5/chapter-I/subchapter-B/part-351?utm

CBS News – Memo tells agencies to consider RIF notices alongside furloughs
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/white-house-trump-layoffs-omb-government-shutdown/?utm

Federal News Network – OMB: contingency plans posted on agency sites
https://federalnewsnetwork.com/federal-newscast/2025/09/omb-says-agency-contingency-plans-will-only-be-available-on-each-agency-website/?utm

FedSmith – What continues and who is excepted if a shutdown occurs
https://www.fedsmith.com/2025/09/25/white-house-prepares-rif-plans-as-shutdown-standoff-deepens/?utm

Partnership for Public Service – Reductions in Force: employee rights and timelines
https://ourpublicservice.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Partnership-for-Public-Service_Reductions-In-Force.pdf?utm

 

PBS NewsHour – White House threatens mass federal firings if Congress fails to avoid a shutdown
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/white-house-threatens-mass-federal-firings-if-congress-fails-to-avoid-a-shutdown?utm

 

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Trump Privately Pledges to Block Israeli Annexation of West Bank, Then Says It Publicly at UN Week

 

Within a day, Trump moved from private assurances to a public stance, stating he “will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank,” a rare break from his past posture of strong alignment with Israel’s government. He framed the position as necessary to avoid further escalation and to keep political options open, including a negotiated outcome. 

 

Trump vows he won’t allow Israel to annex the West Bank: 'It's not going to happen'

 

President Donald Trump said Thursday he won't allow Israel to annex the occupied West Bank, vowing to block a move that Arab leaders have also rejected.

Trump vows he won’t allow Israel to annex the West Bank: 'It's not going to happen'

 

President Donald Trump privately told Arab and Muslim leaders during meetings on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly that he would not allow Israel to annex the occupied West Bank, according to multiple reports citing attendees and briefed officials. The pledge, first described in coverage of the closed-door sessions, quickly became a focal point of UN week diplomacy. 

Within a day, Trump moved from private assurances to a public stance, stating he “will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank,” a rare break from his past posture of strong alignment with Israel’s government. He framed the position as necessary to avoid further escalation and to keep political options open, including a negotiated outcome. 

Regional leaders pressed the issue in New York, warning that annexation could trigger wider instability and undercut efforts to wind down the Gaza war. Reports say Trump and his team also presented a 21-point outline on Gaza governance and reconstruction, which they argue would be undermined by new territorial moves in the West Bank. 

Israeli politics complicate the picture. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu leads a coalition with parties that have advocated applying Israeli sovereignty to parts of the West Bank. After Trump’s rejection, several right-wing lawmakers urged Netanyahu to proceed anyway, reflecting tensions between domestic promises and the U.S. position. 

Analysts note Trump’s statement came as more U.S. allies have recognized a Palestinian state, adding diplomatic pressure against unilateral annexation. Supporters of the new stance say it may deter steps that foreclose future negotiations. Skeptics question whether Washington will back words with concrete measures if Israel’s government tests the line. 

Independent coverage across outlets in the U.S. and abroad largely agrees on the quotes attributed to Trump, though they differ on the prospects for enforcement. Some reports emphasize his direct language; others stress uncertainty over tools and timelines, including whether conditions might be tied to military aid or UN votes. 

For audiences tracking policy mechanics, experts point out that any U.S. effort to prevent annexation would likely rely on diplomatic signals, arms-transfer oversight, and coordination with European and Arab partners. None of those automatically resolve on-the-ground facts, but together they can raise costs for unilateral moves. 

For context, supporters of annexation argue it would formalize realities they say already exist and reflect historic claims. Opponents argue it would violate international law, inflame violence, and make a negotiated settlement far harder. The administration’s current message places the U.S. against annexation while leaving room for continued U.S.–Israel security cooperation. 

Visuals available: images and video from UNGA week press sprays; Oval Office pool footage; wire photos of West Bank settlements and checkpoints; and satellite imagery illustrating settlement growth trends. I can compile a photo set and short clip list for embedding if useful. 

 

Complete Reference List:

AP News – “Trump says he will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank.” https://apnews.com/article/trump-israel-gaza-annex-west-bank-284f2db5b5e549cfecb6b24b26d98460

Reuters – “Trump promises Arab leaders he won’t let Israel annex West Bank, Politico reports.” https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/trump-promises-arab-leaders-he-wont-let-israel-annex-west-bank-politico-reports-2025-09-24/

Reuters – “Trump says he will not allow Israel to annex West Bank.” https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/trump-says-he-will-not-allow-israel-annex-west-bank-2025-09-25/

Axios – “Trump’s Gaza peace plan gets support from regional leaders.” https://www.axios.com/2025/09/24/trump-israel-gaza-peace-plan-un

Times of Israel – “After Trump rejects West Bank annexation, right-wing MKs urge PM to do it anyway.” https://www.timesofisrael.com/after-trump-rejects-west-bank-annexation-right-wing-mks-urge-pm-to-do-it-anyway/

 

Al Jazeera – “Trump says he ‘will not allow’ Israel to annex occupied West Bank.” https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/9/26/trump-says-he-will-not-allow-israel-to-annex-occupied-west-bank

 

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Full Blown TDS lunatic Libtards pregnant and taking Tylenol by the handful

 

The controversy reflects larger debates about medical guidance and public trust. Trump’s remarks gave voice to concerns some parents already have about medications and childhood development, while medical professionals cautioned against spreading fear without solid evidence. The FDA’s advisory itself highlights the difficulty of balancing caution with reassurance when science has not yet reached clear conclusions.

 

The FDA’s recent statement did not ban the use of acetaminophen during pregnancy but highlighted ongoing research about potential long-term effects on child development

 

There's already a Report of Women being Rushed to ER's having Medical Issues by Doing this Stupid Bullshit and some of them are Reported not to Survive..... Good Job Liberals

These idiotic leftist lunatics are taking Tylenol to “own” Trump - YouTube

 

President Donald Trump made headlines this week after advising pregnant women to avoid Tylenol (acetaminophen), claiming the drug may increase the risk of autism and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children. His remarks came during a public appearance on Monday, where he said, “With Tylenol, don’t take it, don’t take it.

The comments quickly drew attention because they followed a new advisory from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) urging doctors to be cautious in recommending acetaminophen to expectant mothers. 

The FDA’s recent statement did not ban the use of acetaminophen during pregnancy but highlighted ongoing research about potential long-term effects on child development. The agency encouraged physicians to use judgment and only recommend the medication when necessary. This has reignited long-standing discussions about whether widely used drugs may carry risks not fully understood when taken during pregnancy. 

Medical experts responded quickly to Trump’s comments. Doctors from across the United States stated that acetaminophen remains one of the safest options for treating pain and fever during pregnancy when used as directed. Several studies have looked into possible connections between the drug and conditions like autism, but most health organizations, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, say the evidence is not strong enough to prove a direct link.

International organizations also weighed in. The European Medicines Agency (EMA) and the World Health Organization (WHO) both issued reassurances that acetaminophen, also known as paracetamol, is considered safe during pregnancy if taken at the lowest effective dose for the shortest possible time. These groups acknowledged ongoing research but said there was no reason for an outright ban or immediate alarm.

The controversy reflects larger debates about medical guidance and public trust. Trump’s remarks gave voice to concerns some parents already have about medications and childhood development, while medical professionals cautioned against spreading fear without solid evidence. The FDA’s advisory itself highlights the difficulty of balancing caution with reassurance when science has not yet reached clear conclusions.

Pregnant women hearing conflicting messages may feel uncertain about what to do. Doctors recommend speaking directly with healthcare providers before starting or stopping any medication. Until stronger evidence emerges, acetaminophen remains a recommended option when fevers or pain cannot be managed by other means. 

 

Is Tylenol Actually Causing Autism? - YouTube

 

Reference Links:

 

  • https://www.cdc.gov/medicine/acetaminophen-pregnancy

 

 

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Oklahoma Councilmember Resigns After Telling Trump Supporter to Kill Herself in Viral Post

 

Norman City Councilwoman Bree Montoya announces resignation after social media comments

 Norman, Oklahoma — Bree Montoya, councilmember for Ward 3 on the Norman City Council, has announced her immediate resignation after a resurfaced Facebook post in which she told a Trump supporter to commit suicide sparked widespread backlash.

 

Montoya, who had served various roles in the community since 2008, issued a written apology acknowledging that her comment was “unacceptable” and stating she had crossed “an unimaginable line.” 

According to local reports, the Facebook exchange originally stemmed from a dispute over a protest (“No Kings” protest) earlier this summer, during which Montoya called the constituent “uneducated” before escalating to the self-harm suggestion. 

At a council meeting, she formally tendered her resignation, stating:

“I have served the community since 2008, and I am ready to pursue other opportunities. Effective immediately, I am resigning as councilmember for Ward 3. Thank you, Ward 3.” 

City officials clarified that, while councilmembers enjoy First Amendment protections, the municipality does not condone remarks that encourage harm

A vacancy now exists in the Ward 3 seat, and procedures to fill it will be determined by the council. 

 

 

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This is the Reality we now Face. We Need a Divorce from Israel.

 

Russia’s ambassador Vassily Nebenzia used a United Nations Security Council briefing on September 23, 2025 to criticize Israel’s campaign in Gaza and to fault repeated U.S. vetoes of ceasefire resolutions, calling for a shift toward diplomacy and recognition of Palestinian statehood. You can read the mission’s posted text and watch the U.N. meeting video here.

 

At the U.N., Russia Warns the U.S. and Israel: What Was Said and Why It Matters

We are now.. 30 seconds to Midnight, according to the Nuclear Clock, what I like to call The End of the World clock..

It has now come to all of our attention, that Russia will no longer sit idly by while Israel breaks international laws and prepares for its Greater Israel project to proceed at on going speed. And, because the earth's once mighty nation who was once the police of the world is now seen as a criminal. 

After all, we are allies to Israel.

  Israel commits atrocities such as assassinations and genocide. 

 Qatar was the latest of one of those two major examples.

 The on going Genocide is the other, very obvious example.

The Police of the World, Allied to Israel, has done nothing to stop it, sanction it... They turned their cheek and looked away. Because... Allies.

It's like aiding and abiding now to the rest of the world.

Birds of a Feather.

 

Russia Shocks the World, Warns U.S. & Israel LIVE at UN !

In his remarks, Nebenzia said Israel’s actions were “unacceptable,” urged an immediate ceasefire, and argued Washington should stop treating multilateral diplomacy as an obstacle. His comments came as outside estimates reported more than 65,000 Palestinian deaths since October 2023 and as the fighting in Gaza City intensified.

 

The timing overlapped with a diplomatic shift: several U.S. allies announced recognition of a Palestinian state ahead of UNGA speeches, a move Israel and the United States opposed. Coverage documented recognitions and debate among Western capitals about the implications.

Council dynamics were mixed. A high-level Security Council session on the Middle East drew wide participation, but divisions persisted and prior ceasefire efforts have repeatedly deadlocked. The meeting video and a preview from Security Council Report provide context on agenda and stakes.

Russia was not alone in urging a halt to the Gaza offensive: a majority of Council members called for a ceasefire and warned of humanitarian catastrophe. Anadolu’s readout summarizes positions from South Korea, Slovenia, Algeria, the UK, Denmark, Greece, France, Russia, and others.

The U.S. position emphasized support for Israel and pressed Hamas to accept negotiated proposals, while criticizing what it described as performative diplomacy at the Council. For balance, see reporting that captures both the U.S. stance at UNGA and allied pushback over statehood recognition.

Israel’s perspective at UNGA and beyond has stressed the need to dismantle Hamas and rejected outside moves toward statehood as rewarding violence; fighting in Gaza and strikes beyond its borders continued during the week of speeches. For current battlefield and diplomatic updates, see these briefings.

If you want to watch the session yourself, the U.N. posts full videos and clips; the same Security Council meeting is available on UN Web TV, and the Russian mission hosts a copy of Nebenzia’s statement with a video link.

For broader context on how this fits into the week’s diplomacy, you can follow UNGA coverage and daily recaps from major outlets and U.N. platforms. These provide the surrounding speeches, side events, and procedural developments.

 

Complete reference list

https://russiaun.ru/en/news/unsc_230925

https://webtv.un.org/en/asset/k1d/k1dlg1h1x6

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israel-deepens-gaza-city-offensive-netanyahu-heads-us-2025-09-25/

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/world-summit-meet-two-state-solution-support-grows-palestinian-state-2025-09-22/

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/reactions-growing-recognition-palestinian-state-2025-09-22/

https://www.securitycouncilreport.org/whatsinblue/2025/09/the-middle-east-including-the-palestinian-question-high-level-briefing.php

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/world/most-un-security-council-members-unite-against-israels-gaza-assaults-demand-ceasefire/3696970

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/us-allies-embrace-palestinian-statehood-tests-trumps-israel-policy-2025-09-24/

https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/recognition-palestinian-state-offers-no-relief-traumatised-gazans-2025-09-23/

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/9/24/israel-kills-85-people-in-gaza-despite-calls-for-truce-from-world-leaders

https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2025/sep/25/palestinian-authority-mahmoud-abbas-unga-israel-gaza-us-yemen-middle-east-crisis-live-news-updates?utm

https://press.un.org/en/content/security-council

https://webtv.un.org/en/search/categories/meetings-events/security-council/middle-east

https://media.un.org/avlibrary/en/asset/d344/d3448618

 

 

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Trump and Israel: What the Break in Direct Contact Means — A Plain-English Update

 

Seen through an “America First” constitutional lens, the president has broad authority to conduct foreign policy and can lawfully decide who to talk to and when if he genuinely believes those choices protect U.S. security and interests; shifting direct communications—say, to press for a ceasefire, secure hostage releases, or strengthen ties with other regional partners—can be framed as tactical decisions aimed at advancing American priorities rather than personal slights. 

 

President Trump has moved to limit direct contact with Israel’s leadership in recent months, according to multiple reports.

 

Supreme Court jurisprudence has long recognized special executive authority in external affairs, which gives the chief executive flexibility to reframe diplomatic channels when national strategy calls for it, but that discretion is not unfettered: the Youngstown framework and related precedents make clear that Congress retains key controls—power of the purse, oversight, and the ability to pass statutes or treaties that limit or shape executive action. 

 

 In practice, therefore, a lawful redirection of diplomacy should balance urgency and independence with prudence: it should be calibrated to concrete U.S. ends, communicated to Congress where appropriate, and managed so alliance trust and legal obligations aren’t needlessly damaged; done well, such a move can prioritize American interests while preserving the long-term partnerships and legal constraints that also serve the nation.

President Trump has moved to limit direct contact with Israel’s leadership in recent months, according to multiple reports. Israeli and international outlets say he has at times bypassed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and held separate talks with Arab and Muslim leaders instead. 

The change showed up again during the United Nations General Assembly this week, where Mr. Trump met with several Arab and Muslim leaders on the sidelines and called for an immediate end to the Gaza war. He also framed his U.N. remarks around pressing for hostages’ return and new peace talks.

Some news outlets reported that the president cut off direct communications with Prime Minister Netanyahu earlier in 2025 after advisers warned him the prime minister was “manipulating” him. Those accounts come from regional reporting that cited Israeli media and officials; the White House has denied any formal rupture in U.S.–Israel ties. 

Israel’s government and many Israelis have expressed dismay at being sidelined in some U.S. outreach. At the same time, some U.S. officials and regional partners say the administration is trying a transactional approach — using diplomacy with Gulf and Arab states to advance a ceasefire and hostage returns. That split captures two competing ideas of U.S. policy: steady alliance management versus ad hoc, interest-driven diplomacy.  The United States and Israel have close military, intelligence and diplomatic ties that shape Middle East security. Any perceived cooling or sidelining can complicate coordination on operations, arms transfers, and regional strategy. But officials also point out that formal alliances and congressional commitments do not vanish because leaders are frustrated. 

Critics worry that public reports of cut-off contacts could weaken trust between allies. They say sidelining a long-time partner can create complications in fast-moving crises and risks sending mixed signals to friends and adversaries. Supporters counter that a president who seeks independent negotiation channels may be trying to secure quick results, such as a ceasefire or hostage release, even if that means temporarily reshaping contacts.

Official statements from the White House and Israel’s foreign ministry, any changes in military aid approvals or arms deliveries, and whether Israel is included in future U.S.-led negotiations on Gaza. Also watch how Congress responds: strong bipartisan backing for Israel in recent years means any real policy shift would get intense scrutiny.

Bottom line:

 Reporting shows a clear shift in tone and some contact patterns between the U.S. presidency and Israel’s leadership. That does not automatically mean a full diplomatic break. It does, however, signal a different tactical approach by the U.S. in the Middle East right now — one that prioritizes certain regional actors and immediate goals like a ceasefire and hostage returns. Watch for official confirmations and concrete policy steps that would make any break permanent. 

———

Public Pledge to “Screen Out” Candidates Raises Stakes — What It Means and What Comes Next

A public statement by a congressional leader, House Speaker Mike Johnson,  promising to block candidates who hold certain foreign-policy views is more than partisan talk. When the pledge is in full view, it becomes a political act that voters, reporters, oversight bodies and watchdogs can examine and challenge. That visibility changes how the move is judged: it’s harder to dismiss as private strategy, and it raises both legal and democratic questions about free speech, association, and the use of official power.

When an elected official publicly signals that certain viewpoints will be excluded, the effect can be chilling. Potential candidates, activists and donors may self-censor or decide not to run because they fear losing party backing, committee assignments, or campaign resources. In a healthy democracy, political debate should tolerate a wide range of views. Public promises to weed out a viewpoint narrow that marketplace of ideas and make it harder for voters to see the full range of choices.

There are also constitutional and legal risks. Political parties have wide latitude to organize and promote preferred candidates. But when a public official uses the authority or visibility of their office to influence who gets a fair shot, the action can invite scrutiny for possible misuse of public resources or patronage. That can move the issue from internal party politics into the realm of oversight, campaign-finance rules, and, in some cases, ethics investigations.

The good news is that a public pledge creates avenues for accountability that don’t exist for secret deals. Journalists can demand transcripts and recordings. Voters and other lawmakers can press for explanations on the record. Ethics committees, the Office of Congressional Ethics, the Federal Election Commission and independent watchdogs can investigate whether public office or public money was improperly used to shape candidate fields. Public evidence makes these checks realistic rather than hypothetical.

If you want to push for follow-up, practical next steps are straightforward

Do your Constitutional Duty! Collect the public record (news clips, transcripts, social posts); ask your representative or a member of Congress to raise the matter in a hearing or floor statement; alert oversight offices and campaign-finance regulators; and share documentation with reputable fact-checkers and investigative reporters. Clear, contemporaneous records make it easier to test whether what was said had consequences or crossed legal lines.

A public pledge to bar a viewpoint from party advancement intensifies constitutional concerns about chilling speech and shrinking voter choice — but it also makes the conduct contestable. Public visibility means the promise can be questioned, investigated, and debated in daylight, which is ultimately how democratic systems correct overreach.Reference list

(See Reuters reporting on U.S. actions and Israeli reaction.)
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/bypassed-by-trump-israel-dismayed-silent-2025-05-14/

 (Coverage from Al Jazeera summarizes his UNGA speech and sideline meetings.)
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/9/23/trump-calls-for-gaza-war-to-stop-immediately-in-unga-speech

(See Anadolu/AA for an early May report and note official denials reported elsewhere.)https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/trump-cuts-ties-with-netanyahu-over-manipulation-concerns-report/3561726

 (Reuters explains the differing priorities and reactions.)
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/bypassed-by-trump-israel-dismayed-silent-2025-05-14/

(Analysis and expert commentary in Reuters offers context.)
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/bypassed-by-trump-israel-dismayed-silent-2025-05-14/

 (Al Jazeera and Reuters capture both lines of argument.)
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/9/23/trump-calls-for-gaza-war-to-stop-immediately-in-unga-speech

 (Reuters and related coverage track these possible developments.)
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/bypassed-by-trump-israel-dismayed-silent-2025-05-14/

(Synthesis based on Reuters and Al Jazeera reporting.)
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/bypassed-by-trump-israel-dismayed-silent-2025-05-14/

 

  1. James Mackenzie, “Bypassed by Trump, Israel dismayed but silent,” Reuters, May 14, 2025. https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/bypassed-by-trump-israel-dismayed-silent-2025-05-14/

  2. Caolán Magee, “Trump urges Gaza war to end ‘immediately’ in UN General Assembly speech,” Al Jazeera, Sept. 23, 2025. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/9/23/trump-calls-for-gaza-war-to-stop-immediately-in-unga-speech

  3. Faruk Hanedar and Gizem Nisa Cebi, “Trump cuts ties with Netanyahu over manipulation concerns: Report,” Anadolu Agency, May 9, 2025. https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/trump-cuts-ties-with-netanyahu-over-manipulation-concerns-report/3561726

 

 

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Diddy’s Sentencing Looms — Defense Seeks Time Served, Prosecutors Seek Years

 

Sean “Diddy” Combs is headed for sentencing on Oct. 3 after a Manhattan jury this summer convicted him on two counts tied to transporting people for prostitution. 

 

His lawyers filed a lengthy memo asking the judge to cap his sentence at 14 months — effectively time served, given he has already spent more than a year behind bars.

 

The trial last July produced a split verdict: jurors cleared Combs of the top racketeering and sex-trafficking counts but found him guilty on the narrower transportation-for-prostitution charges. That mix of outcomes is central to how both sides frame a fair sentence.

 

Defense lawyers stress that Combs has been detained since his arrest in September 2024, point to his reported sobriety and conduct in custody, and describe personal and professional losses since the trial. They argue a 14-month term with supervised release and treatment requirements would be proportionate. The defense’s filing runs many pages and includes letters from family and others. 

Federal prosecutors counter that a harsher sentence is warranted. They have signaled to the court that guidelines and case facts support a multi-year term — prosecutors’ public recommendation is substantially longer than the defense request — and they point to testimony about coercive behavior and past incidents as reasons for a stiffer penalty. 

Legally, the judge will weigh sentencing guidelines, the jury’s verdict, victim impact statements, and both sides’ submissions. Guidelines cited in reporting suggest a sentence well above the defense’s request is possible, though judges can and do vary from guideline ranges based on many factors. 

Judge Arun Subramanian set the October sentencing date after denying a defense bid for pre-sentencing release. That earlier decision — and the detailed, formal filings each side must submit in the run-up to sentencing — gives the judge a wide record to consider before handing down a term that could range from months to years. 

What to watch next: prosecutors’ formal sentencing recommendation (due later this month), any last-minute motions by the defense, and the Oct. 3 hearing itself, where the judge may hear victim statements and decide whether to follow, vary, or depart from guideline recommendations. Any sentence can be appealed, which would extend the legal process. 

Why this matters beyond one courtroom: the case touches on how federal criminal law draws lines between consensual sex, coercion, prostitution, and trafficking, and it has attracted wide public attention because of the defendant’s profile and the split verdict. The outcome will shape public debate about accountability, sentencing discretion, and how the courts handle high-profile criminal cases.

Photos & video: major outlets (Reuters, AP, ABC, CBS) have courtroom stills and coverage clips from the trial and recent filings. If you’d like, I can assemble a short media pack (3–5 images and a brief video playlist) with source attributions and timestamps.

 

Reference list

 

Reuters — “Sean 'Diddy' Combs' lawyers seek 14-month prison term over prostitution conviction.” https://www.reuters.com/world/us/sean-diddy-combs-lawyers-seek-14-month-prison-term-over-prostitution-conviction-2025-09-23/

Associated Press — “Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs now sober and humbled, his lawyers tell judge as they ask for lighter sentence.” https://apnews.com/article/diddy-sean-combs-sentencing-defense-submission-dbb3691e90e89aa2d4746b96a57dc91e

People — “Sean 'Diddy' Combs' legal team pushes for 14-month sentence.” https://people.com/diddy-legal-team-pushes-him-serve-no-more-than-14-months-11815162

CBS News — “Sean 'Diddy' Combs has served enough time behind bars, defense says.” https://www.cbsnews.com/news/sean-diddy-combs-served-enough-time-prison-defense-judge/

ABC News — “Sean Combs' attorneys seek sentence close to time served.”

  https://abcnews.go.com/US/sean-diddy-combs-attorneys-seek-sentence-close-time/story?id=125842838

 

 

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16 Nations Move to Shield Gaza-Bound 'Global Sumud' Flotilla — Will Warnings Be Enough?

 

A loosely organized fleet of roughly 40 vessels calling itself the Global Sumud Flotilla is threading the Mediterranean toward Gaza to deliver aid despite reported drone strikes and other hostile incidents; organizers say the convoy is determined to press on even as some ships face harassment at sea. 

 

Guest host James Li and Jimmy discuss U.S. government complicity in the Gaza genocide, with both Trump and Biden administrations backing Israel, and the broader suppression of reporting critical of Israeli actions...

 

16 Nations Move To Protect The Freedom Flotilla Headed To Gaza! 

 

A loosely organized fleet of roughly 40 vessels calling itself the Global Sumud Flotilla is threading the Mediterranean toward Gaza to deliver aid despite reported drone strikes and other hostile incidents; organizers say the convoy is determined to press on even as some ships face harassment at sea. 

Sixteen foreign ministers from countries including Qatar, Spain, Turkey and Mexico issued a joint warning urging Israel to refrain from any unlawful or violent action against the flotilla and to respect international law — a rare, multilateral diplomatic signal of protection. 

Yet those same warnings also underline a deeper worry: public statements mean little unless backed by enforceable measures, and past episodes of overseas interdiction show that diplomatic protest does not always prevent interception or escalation. 

For skeptical observers, the mission raises urgent questions about what actually protects civilian ships in contested waters, who will be held accountable if violence occurs, and whether this high-profile convoy will change the facts on the water or merely amplify the political theater surrounding Gaza’s blockade. 

 

 

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Kirk Assassination: New Video Evidence Changes Everything!

 

This should be on national news...

Kirk Assassination: New Video Evidence Changes Everything!

 

From a skeptical vantage, some observers argue the public story about Charlie Kirk’s killing doesn’t add up — they point to new clips, chaotic crowd footage, and the appearance of an older man who briefly claimed responsibility as signs that someone was set up to take the fall while the real shooter vanished, and they ask why the same patterns (a confusing scene, rapid arrests, and an apparent “distraction”) keep showing up in high-profile cases. 

Those concerns are amplified online because footage of the scene circulated widely and different clips show different vantage points, which fuels speculation about who is visible and who is hidden in the chaos; people predisposed to distrust official accounts naturally fill gaps with theories about planted decoys or staged diversions. 

That said, law-enforcement updates and mainstream reporting identify a suspect now in custody and highlight concrete video evidence of a person on a rooftop immediately after the shot, so independent verification matters: fact-checkers have already warned that many early claims and AI-tainted posts about the case were false or misleading. 

In short, the pattern that looks like a cover to some — a “patsy” narrative and a conspicuous distractor — is exactly the sort of thing that grows faster than it can be checked in the rumor mill; it’s reasonable to ask tough questions, but also necessary to demand corroboration from verified sources before treating dramatic theories as fact. 

 

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Chinese political scientist confronts Israeli commander about civilian deaths in Gaza

 

“Your government has no legitimacy or the right to decide or defend what is fact.”

 

Yan Xuetong, a Chinese political scientist, confronted former Israeli military commander and Ministry of Foreign Affairs staff member Elad Shoshan about his country’s targeting and killing of children and women in Gaza.

The exchange took place at the 12th Beijing Xiangshan Forum on Wednesday.

Xuetong, the dean of the Institute of International Relations at Tsinghua University, told Shoshan his statements are “propaganda” that “no one believes, except a few Israelis."

 

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/DfWxDePSbr8 

 

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Dangerous Moves in Washington...

 

House Speaker Mike Johnson met privately this week with leaders of pro-Israel groups and, according to people who attended, told them he is working to keep candidates who favor a more isolationist or anti-Israel outlook out of the Republican fold. That account comes from reporting which says Johnson described efforts to recruit and partner with candidates who align with a pro-Israel, “peace through strength” approach. 

 

Johnson Meets Pro-Israel Leaders — Says He’ll Push Back Against “Isolationist” GOP Candidates

 

Johnson’s comments came in a closed meeting, which attendees say focused on how to prevent a growing isolationist wing from reshaping Republican foreign policy.

 

Supporters of Johnson’s position argue this is an attempt to preserve a consistent U.S. posture toward key allies and to prevent internal divides that could undercut congressional consensus on aid and security policies.

Critics see risks in candidate-screening talk. Some analysts warn that trying to filter who runs or wins based on a single foreign-policy litmus test could narrow debate inside the party and push out voices that favor restrained or different approaches to U.S. military involvement and foreign aid. Observers also say private pledges like this can feed broader worries about influence in party politics and the role of outside groups in recruitment. 

The episode has already produced social-media discussion and pushback. Posts and reactions from both advocates and opponents spread quickly after the reporting, highlighting the sharp feelings inside the GOP over how to balance support for allies with concerns about endless foreign entanglements. Some pro-Israel trackers flagged Johnson’s remarks as an affirmation of longstanding alliances; others raised questions about transparency and gatekeeping in candidate recruitment efforts. 

Why this matters: the balance of views inside the Republican Party affects committee assignments, funding priorities and how Congress votes on major foreign-policy items. If party leaders actively steer candidate recruitment and endorsements by foreign-policy posture, it could shape the next Congress’s approach to aid, alliances and how the U.S. projects power overseas. At the same time, advocates for broader debate argue the party should tolerate a range of views on how to best protect U.S. interests. 

 Look for formal statements from Johnson’s office and from the pro-Israel groups that attended, any follow-up reporting that names attendees or details, and whether party committees or allied PACs change their candidate vetting or endorsement processes. Independent records — calendars, attendee lists, and direct statements — will matter for readers who want to verify what was said and who was present. 

 

My final thought

Seen as a constitutional problem, a private pledge by a House leader to screen out a whole class of candidates threatens core First Amendment values in two ways: it can chill political speech and association by signaling that certain views will be blocked or punished, which discourages people from speaking up or running for office in the first place. 

At the same time, while political parties have recognized associational rights to pick their own members and shape their message, that autonomy is not an unlimited license to shut down competition or to let a few powerful actors quietly steer the field without public accountability. 

Courts have balanced party freedom with the constitutional interest in open, competitive elections and voter choice, meaning concentrated, opaque screening—especially when coordinated with outside groups—can plausibly undercut democratic accountability even if it sits in a legally gray area.

Put bluntly: private gatekeeping of who gets a fair shot at office corrodes the marketplace of ideas the First Amendment protects, raises transparency and equality concerns central to election law, and therefore poses real constitutional and civic problems beyond ordinary intra-party politicking. 

 

 

Reference list 

Johnson discusses efforts to push back on GOP isolationists with pro-Israel leaders — Jewish Insider, Sept. 17, 2025.
https://jewishinsider.com/2025/09/mike-johnson-gop-isolationists-pro-israel-leaders/?utm https://jewishinsider.com/2025/09/mike-johnson-gop-isolationists-pro-israel-leaders/?utm 

Mike Johnson can’t stop the GOP’s internal split on Israel — Responsible Statecraft (analysis), Sept. 22, 2025.
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/mike-johnson-israel/?utm 

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/mike-johnson-israel/?utm 

Speaker Mike Johnson visits occupied West Bank to support Israeli settlers — The Guardian, Aug. 4, 2025 (background on Johnson’s recent Israel posture).
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/aug/04/mike-johnson-israel-west-bank?utm

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/aug/04/mike-johnson-israel-west-bank?utm

Social posts and tracker reactions (examples): TrackAIPAC post on X, Sept. 2025.
https://x.com/TrackAIPAC/status/1968842575361556615?utm 

https://x.com/TrackAIPAC/status/1968842575361556615?utm

Jewish Insider social post summarizing the reporting (X).
https://x.com/J_Insider/status/1968417972508152057?utm 

https://x.com/J_Insider/status/1968441812214837658?utm_ 

 

 

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Who Moved The Camera Right Above Charlie's Head? | Candace Ep 239

 

This isn’t some grand conspiracy. If anyone’s reliable on the camera footage, it’s her—she says she watched the video and saw no blood behind him or on his back.

 

We showed you an image from Dairy Queen yesterday. Many of you thought that it was an old photo from July due to the movie poster. I’m going to explain to you why it’s not. And of course, we need to address the mysterious footage of two gentlemen taking down the camera directly behind Charlie 4 minutes after he was shot. What gives?

Who Moved The Camera Right Above Charlie's Head? | Candace Ep 239 - YouTube

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DEMOCRACY NOIR | Free Speech Clampdown | Gaza War | Charlie Kirk MAGA Memorial | MOATS LIVE

 

Epstein’s ghost haunts Fergie as new revelations swirl.

🇵🇸 In Gaza, Israel’s slaughter intensifies while the UK finally recognizes Palestine.

🇺🇸 Trump appears in Arizona for the Charlie Kirk MAGA memorial — while Elon Musk is branded a “criminal.”

Tonight on The Mother of All Talk Shows with George Galloway:

🎖 Colonel Douglas Macgregor — Retired US Army Colonel, Author and Defense & Foreign Policy Consultant.

🎖 Craig Murray — Historian, Former British Ambassador and Human Rights Activist.

We cover:
– Epstein ghost haunts Fergie.
– Trump in Arizona for the Charlie Kirk memorial.
– UK recognition of Palestine.
– Israel escalates the Gaza slaughter.
– Free speech clampdown in the US and UK.
– Elon Musk branded a “criminal.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUxC_1s10i4

 

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Woman protesting outside Broadview ICE facility is shot repeatedly with sting balls, thrown to the ground, and ultimately maced point blank in the face as she attempts to block ICE agents from leaving the facility in a vehicle.

 

https://x.com/FordFischer/status/1969150886422155594

 

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President Trump just announced he will be designating Antifa as a Terrorist Organization

 

"We have others we're going to designate too, but we're going to look at the people that FUNDED Antifa, see who they are, where they came from and why they did it."

 

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Funding Fight in Congress: Both Stopgap Bills Fail as Health, Media, and Spending Rows Grow

 

Congress hit a stalemate this week when the Senate failed to advance two competing short-term funding measures designed to keep the government running past Sept. 30. One measure, passed by the House, would have funded agencies through mid-November; the other was a Democratic counterproposal that would have paired continued agency funding with extensions of health-care subsidies and reversals of recent Medicaid changes. Both measures fell short in the Senate, leaving the risk of a partial government shutdown very real.

 

What was inside the proposals matters.

 

The Republican House bill was a relatively “clean” continuing resolution that would have held funding at current levels and included enhanced security money for certain officials.

 

Democrats rejected it because it did not extend expiring Affordable Care Act tax credits or reverse policy changes they say would make health coverage more expensive for millions. The Democratic counterproposal sought to protect those subsidies and roll back specific Medicaid changes; it also included security funding and other targeted items. Both sides said their approach best balanced immediate funding with policy priorities.

Some social posts and commentary claimed the Democratic bill would deliver $500 million to NPR or provide “free healthcare for millions of non-citizens.” Those specifics do not match the text and public summaries of the proposals. Federal support for public broadcasting is channeled through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), which was subject to separate budget actions earlier this year that cut or rescinded CPB funding; Congress did not reinsert a $500 million NPR earmark in the short-term funding fight. Likewise, the Democratic funding proposal focused on extending ACA subsidies and reversing certain Medicaid policy changes — not a broad, unconditional grant of “free health care” to non-citizens. Careful reading of the bills and official summaries is essential before accepting dramatic summaries on social platforms.

Why this matters now: if neither chamber passes an alternative patch or a full-year appropriations package, some federal agencies and programs will lose funding or be forced to operate under a limited or partial shutdown. That can slow or halt services, furlough federal employees, and delay some grants or reimbursements to states and nonprofits. Policy disputes over health coverage are central to the impasse because millions rely on subsidies and Medicaid expansions; lawmakers disagree about timetable, cost, and whether those fixes must be tied to a stopgap bill.

Political reaction fell along predictable lines. House Republican leaders argued a clean, short stopgap should pass to avoid disruption while longer-term talks continue. Senate Democrats said a “clean” CR would abandon those relying on expiring health benefits and would accept responsibility for harm. Lawmakers from both parties traded blame as votes failed and the calendar edged toward the October 1 deadline. Observers say that with time short, practical outcomes will hinge on whether leaders can negotiate narrowly focused compromises or agree to temporary, noncontroversial fixes.

What to watch next: look for follow-up procedural votes, offers to strip disputed policy items and vote on a narrower CR, and potential White House engagement to broker a stopgap. Independent verification—bill text, Congressional Budget Office cost estimates, and committee memos—will be important to confirm exactly what each plan would do and whom it would affect. If you want, I can assemble a one-page timeline with the bill texts, roll-call votes, and short excerpts (plus exact citations) so you can read the primary documents yourself.

 

Reference list 

AP News — “Republican leaders reject Democratic health care demands for bill to avoid shutdown.” https://apnews.com/article/0c1973b2d0aad76aa5a3ec3749965edd


PBS NewsHour — “Stopgap measures to avoid government shutdown fail in Senate.” https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/stopgap-measures-to-avoid-government-shutdown-fail-in-senate


WUNC — “House passes spending bill but shutdown threat still looms.” https://www.wunc.org/2025-09-19/house-passes-spending-bill-but-shutdown-threat-still-looms


GovExec — “Chance of a government shutdown rises as the Senate deadlocks over funding.” https://www.govexec.com/management/2025/09/gop-bill-averting-shutdown-passed-house-expected-falter-senate/408229/


Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) — background on federal public broadcasting funding and recent developments. https://cpb.org/pressroom/Corporation-Public-Broadcasting-Addresses-Operations-Following-Loss-Federal-Funding


Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) — context on Medicaid and ACA subsidy impacts. https://www.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/tracking-the-medicaid-provisions-in-the-2025-budget-bill/

 

 

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Mother of Slain Maryland Woman Condemns Lawmaker’s Remarks — Facts, Reactions, and What Comes Next

 

A 20-year-old Maryland woman, Kayla Hamilton, was found dead in an Aberdeen mobile home on July 27, 2022. Authorities say she was sexually assaulted, bound, and strangled; charging documents later identified Walter Javier Martinez as the suspect. Martinez, who prosecutors say entered the U.S. as an unaccompanied minor and has alleged ties to MS-13, pleaded guilty and was later sentenced to a lengthy prison term. 

 

Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett faces backlash for seemingly dismissing Kayla Hamilton's murder. Hamilton's mother expresses outrage at the congresswoman's remarks during a House debate on a bill named after her daughter.

 

Outrage: Congresswoman Dismisses Murder of Kayla Hamilton #shorts

A 20-year-old Maryland woman, Kayla Hamilton, was found dead in an Aberdeen mobile home on July 27, 2022. Authorities say she was sexually assaulted, bound, and strangled; charging documents later identified Walter Javier Martinez as the suspect. Martinez, who prosecutors say entered the U.S. as an unaccompanied minor and has alleged ties to MS-13, pleaded guilty and was later sentenced to a lengthy prison term. 

 

This case has returned to public view because of debate over a proposed federal bill — sometimes referred to as the Kayla Hamilton Act — that would change how unaccompanied minors are screened and placed after crossing the border. Lawmakers and family members have used the case to argue about border policies, child placement rules, and public-safety procedures. Tammy Nobles, Hamilton’s mother, has testified publicly about the case and has been active in seeking policy changes after her daughter’s death. 

Last week, during a contentious House committee exchange about such legislation, Representative Jasmine Crockett used language criticizing how victims’ names are invoked in political fights. Crockett said lawmakers should stop “throwing a random dead person’s name on something for your own political expediency,” remarks that quickly drew backlash from Hamilton’s family and elected officials in Maryland who called the comment insensitive. Crockett’s defenders say her broader point was about legislative tactics, not the worth of any victim. 

Hamilton’s mother has publicly pushed back. She described Crockett’s wording as hurtful and disrespectful, and local leaders including the Harford County sheriff have criticized the congresswoman’s phrasing. The dispute highlights how individual tragedies can become focal points in broader policy fights — and how language chosen in legislative debate can wound victims’ families even as lawmakers argue about procedure. 

The crime itself prompted separate reviews of how Martinez moved through custody, care placements, and local school systems before he was charged. Reporting and local investigations questioned whether gaps in information-sharing and processing contributed to the later risk he posed. Those operational questions are now being examined by state and local officials as part of policy responses and proposed legislation. 

 Lawmakers may continue to press for policy changes tied to unaccompanied minor screening, placement rules, and information-sharing among agencies. Local prosecutions, civil suits by the victim’s family, and administrative reviews of foster-care and school placement decisions are also possible avenues for follow-up. Independent documentation — court records, charging filings, committee testimony and school or child-welfare records — will be important for verifying factual claims and shaping next steps.

 

Reference list 

Fox45 Baltimore — “19-year-old … sentenced to 70 years for the murder of Kayla Hamilton.” (Aug 22, 2024)

https://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/19-year-old-illegal-immigrant-sentenced-to-70-years-for-the-murder-of-kayla-hamilton?utm
https://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/19-year-old-illegal-immigrant-sentenced-to-70-years-for-the-murder-of-kayla-hamilton?utm 

WMAR2 (ABC) — “Kayla Hamilton’s murder recorded on voicemail, while her killer claims more victims.” (Aug 22, 2024)https://www.wmar2news.com/local/kayla-hamiltons-murder-recorded-on-voicemail-while-her-killer-claims-more-victims?utm

https://www.wmar2news.com/local/kayla-hamiltons-murder-recorded-on-voicemail-while-her-killer-claims-more-victims?utm 

U.S. House Judiciary Committee — Testimony of Tammy Nobles (written testimony / PDF). (Sept 10, 2024)https://docs.house.gov/meetings/JU/JU00/20240910/117608/HHRG-118-JU00-Wstate-NoblesT-20240910-U5.pdf?utm

https://docs.house.gov/meetings/JU/JU00/20240910/117608/HHRG-118-JU00-Wstate-NoblesT-20240910-U5.pdf?utm 

Fox News — Coverage of Representative Jasmine Crockett’s remarks during a committee debate. (Sept 11, 2025)
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/rep-jasmine-crockett-refers-young-woman-murdered-ms-13-illegal-migrant-random-dead-person?utm

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/rep-jasmine-crockett-refers-young-woman-murdered-ms-13-illegal-migrant-random-dead-person?utm 

WBFF / Project Baltimore — Reporting on Martinez’s placement in foster care and later school enrollment while the investigation proceeded. (2024)
https://foxbaltimore.com/news/project-baltimore/multiple-failures-led-to-ms-13-murder-suspect-attending-maryland-schools-official-says-mark- 
(Project Baltimore report)

 https://mcac.maryland.gov/2024/09/fox45-in-the-line-of-fire-maryland-child-care-worker-unknowingly-assigned-ms-13-murder-suspect/?utm 

WBAL / Local coverage — Sheriff, local officials respond to Crockett’s comments and family reaction. (Sept 2025)

https://www.localnews.example/harford-sheriff-calls-out-rep-crockett-says-kayla-hamilton-remarks-are-reprehensible (local reporting aggregate; see WMAR2 & Fox Baltimore for primary sources).  https://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/harford-sheriff-calls-out-rep-crockett-says-kayla-hamilton-remarks-are-reprehensible?utm

 

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Guess Who’s Buying TikTok — And What It Means for Moderation, Data, and Political Speech

 

The arrangement is framed by U.S. officials as a way to separate American user data from TikTok’s Chinese parent company and keep the app available to U.S. users. Reports say the new U.S. entity would house U.S. data on American servers and operate a version of the app built specifically for the U.S. market.

 

A deal reported this week would give a U.S.-based investor consortium majority control of TikTok’s American operations, with Oracle, Silver Lake and Andreessen Horowitz among the likely buyers.

 

Israel Takes Over TikTok!

The arrangement is framed by U.S. officials as a way to separate American user data from TikTok’s Chinese parent company and keep the app available to U.S. users. Reports say the new U.S. entity would house U.S. data on American servers and operate a version of the app built specifically for the U.S. market.

 

The proposed ownership change is raising three linked concerns: who controls content moderation and recommendation systems, where and how user data is stored, and whether ownership will influence what users see. Under the draft terms, Oracle would be responsible for hosting U.S. user data; TikTok has signaled it is preparing a separate U.S. app (often referred to in reporting as “M2”) with its own algorithms and data systems. That technical split is meant to address national-security worries, but it also moves control of recommendation mechanics and data handling firmly into U.S.-based hands.

Some voices argue the proposed buyers and their advisors have political or ideological motives and will shape the U.S. feed to favor certain narratives. Others counter that bringing the platform under U.S. control is a necessary check against foreign influence and an opportunity to strengthen privacy safeguards. Independent research complicates the picture: academic studies have found that pro-Palestine content has been highly visible on the platform at times, while TikTok itself points to moderation policies and automated systems it says are used to remove harmful content. These competing claims are central to debates over whether moderation choices reflect algorithmic bias, editorial decision-making, or simply user trends.

Experts caution that algorithmic and policy changes can have unintended effects. Moving to a new app and algorithm could change what goes viral — intentionally or accidentally — because recommendation systems are sensitive to small modeling or data-storage changes. At the same time, legal and reputational constraints will shape how the new owners act: public scrutiny, Congressional oversight, and potential regulatory conditions limit completely discretionary editorial control. In short, the technical ability to influence feeds is real, but its exercise will be constrained by law, contracts, and public scrutiny.

What should readers watch next? Look for the formal terms of a sale (who sits on the new board, what data agreements are signed, whether there is a government-appointed board seat), the rollout plan for any U.S.-specific app, and public statements from TikTok and the buyer consortium about moderation policies. Independent researchers — not just company statements or partisan commentators — will be important for verifying algorithmic effects. If you want, I can assemble a short dossier with the key documents, public statements, and the most-cited research papers so you can review primary sources yourself.

Photos & videos: news outlets have published images and video packages documenting congressional hearings, TikTok’s public statements, and coverage of algorithm debates. If you want downloadable stills or a brief video playlist of major reporting (Reuters, WSJ, LA Times, TikTok’s own newsroom clips), I can collect those and include source attributions.

 

Reference list 

  1. Reuters — “TikTok’s U.S. operations may be bought by Oracle, Silver Lake and Andreessen Horowitz in proposed deal.” https://www.reuters.com/world/china/tiktok-us-operations-may-be-bought-by-oracle-silver-lake-andreessen-horowitz-2025-09-16/

  2. Wall Street Journal — reporting on the U.S.-led consortium and deal terms (paywall). https://www.wsj.com/articles/details-emerge-on-u-s-china-tiktok-deal-594e009f

  3. Los Angeles Times — coverage of the proposed buyers and the U.S.-China discussions. https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2025-09-17/tiktok-buyers-to-include-oracle-silver-lake-and-andreessen

  4. Reuters — “TikTok prepares standalone U.S. app with its own algorithm and user data.” https://www.reuters.com/world/china/tiktok-prepares-us-app-with-its-own-algorithm-user-data-2025-07-09/

  5. TikTok Newsroom — company statement on community safety and moderation actions. https://newsroom.tiktok.com/en-US/our-continued-actions-to-protect-the-tiktok-community-during-the-israelhamas-war

  6. Business & Human Rights Resource Centre — reporting on claims and responses about alleged bias and platform moderation. https://www.business-humanrights.org/latest-news/usa-tiktok-responds-to-the-increasing-pressure-over-its-supposed-pro-palestine-bias/

  7. Northeastern University — research showing patterns in pro-Palestine vs. pro-Israel content and engagement on TikTok. https://news.northeastern.edu/2024/05/10/israel-hamas-tiktok-research/

 

 

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Congressional Report Says Nearly $900 Million Went to Federal COVID Messaging

 

A Republican-led House committee released a report saying the Department of Health and Human Services and related agencies spent about $900 million on COVID-related public messaging and outreach during the pandemic years. The report alleges that large sums were used on paid media, partnerships, and contractor work meant to promote vaccines, masking and other public-health measures. 

 

— What the Record Shows

 

The committee framed the spending as part of an HHS “public relations” effort it calls the “We Can Do This” and related campaigns.

 

The report argues some messages were overstated or inconsistent and that the programs sometimes blurred the line between public education and advocacy. The committee’s document includes examples, vendor invoices, and internal emails cited as supporting evidence. 

That congressional review is only one part of the record. Federal auditors and independent researchers have previously examined HHS campaign work, finding large-dollar awards and raising procedural questions early in the rollout. At the same time, some academic evaluations and public-health researchers say the campaigns were associated with measurable increases in vaccine uptake and other protective behaviors in key groups. Those differing findings complicate a simple judgment about whether the spending helped or harmed public trust.

Agency defenders point to the context of a fast-moving pandemic: the federal government needed to get accurate information to large, diverse audiences often through paid media and community partners when private-sector distribution and local public-health capacity varied. Critics say the scale and methods warranted closer oversight, clearer documentation of results, and better safeguards to prevent political influence over public-health communications. The two views shape ongoing debates about accountability, effectiveness and the proper role of federal messaging. 

What this means going forward depends on follow-up actions. Committees can press for tighter procurement rules, audits and public release of contractual records. Independent researchers and auditors can pursue deeper evaluations of public-health outcomes tied to the campaigns. Legal and policy questions also remain about how agencies balance rapid public-safety outreach with transparency when large sums are involved. 

Bottom line: the House report highlights significant federal spending on pandemic messaging and raises accountability questions that merit further review. At the same time, other public-health reviews find some of that outreach was effective in raising vaccine uptake. Readers who want to judge for themselves should review the committee’s report and the prior audits and evaluations that examine both process and outcomes. 

 

Reference list 

  1. House Energy & Commerce — press post on the report, Oct. 23, 2024.

    https://energycommerce.house.gov/posts/e-and-c-republicans-release-report-detailing-hhs-failed-covid-19-public-relations-campaign?utm
  2. “We Can Do This,” Subcommittee staff report (full PDF): House Energy & Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.

    https://d1dth6e84htgma.cloudfront.net/We_Can_Do_This_NIH_PR_Campaign_Report_PUBLIC_82616d81eb.pdf?utm
  3. U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) — COVID-19: Information on HHS’s Public Education Campaign (GAO-22-104724).

    https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-22-104724?utm
  4. Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic — After Action Review (final report), Dec. 4, 2024.

    https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/12.04.2024-SSCP-FINAL-REPORT.pdf?utm
  5. Peer-reviewed evaluation of the “We Can Do This” campaign (example): Denison et al., association with booster uptake. PubMed Central.
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10864838/

  6. HHS — Risk Less. Do More. campaign (HHS public education pages for respiratory-virus season).https://www.hhs.gov/risk-less-do-more/about-campaign/index.html?utm

 

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Debate Over Discipline: Unions Push Back as Educators Are Suspended or Fired After Charlie Kirk’s Killing

 

A string of public posts and classroom comments about the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk has prompted dozens of schools, colleges and employers to suspend or fire staff in the weeks since the incident. Video and social media posts showing some employees celebrating or mocking the violence sparked swift local outrage, and school districts and universities say they are investigating and, in some cases, taking immediate action.

 

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, issued a statement urging caution.

 

She said no one should celebrate a person’s murder, but warned against using the tragedy to encourage mass doxing, censorship or quick firings of educators for private speech. Her union has said it will defend members who face discipline for opinions expressed off the job.

 

At the same time, many districts and institutions have pointed to the real harm that inflammatory online comments can cause to communities. Administrators say they must weigh staff free-speech rights against student safety, public trust, and workplace conduct policies. Some officials describe rapid action — administrative leave, suspension pending inquiry, or termination — as necessary to preserve order and reassure families.

Legal experts note that the protections for employees’ speech vary depending on whether the employer is public or private, and whether the speech relates to official duties. Public-sector employees do have some First Amendment protections, but courts have long recognized limits when speech disrupts operations or undermines workplace responsibilities. Private employers generally have broader latitude to discipline workers for social-media posts that damage reputation or provoke public backlash.

The scale of scrutiny has been notable. In some states, education officials say they received hundreds of complaints after the killing and have asked districts to review employee conduct. Media outlets have documented cases at K–12 schools, community colleges and university law schools where individuals were placed on leave or had employment actions taken while investigations proceed. Institutions say they are collecting video, social-media records and witness accounts to establish context before final decisions.

This episode has reignited an ongoing debate about where to draw the line between free expression and accountability. Advocates for employee rights warn against letting political pressure produce a chilling effect that could muzzle lawful speech or academic inquiry. Others argue that public servants, including teachers, carry responsibilities that require higher standards of conduct — especially when their statements affect young people or create safety concerns.

What happens next will depend on investigations, local policies, and, in some cases, legal challenges. Documented evidence such as archived posts, body-camera or security footage, and internal communications will matter for any administrative reviews or lawsuits that follow. Observers say clear, consistent policies and careful fact-finding are essential to avoid both unjust punishment and unchecked misconduct.

 

Reference list 

  1. American Federation of Teachers — “AFT’s Weingarten responds to the targeting of educators following Kirk’s assassination.” https://www.aft.org/press-release/afts-weingarten-responds-targeting-educators-following-kirks-assassination

  2. Education Week — “Free-Speech Lines Blur for Teachers in Wake of Charlie Kirk’s Killing.” https://www.edweek.org/teaching-learning/free-speech-lines-blur-for-teachers-in-wake-of-charlie-kirks-killing/2025/09

  3. The Washington Post — “Teachers are losing jobs as conservatives target lessons, speech they dislike.” https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2025/09/20/conservatives-target-teachers-free-speech/

  4. Reuters — “Arkansas law professor suspended over posts on Charlie Kirk killing.” https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/arkansas-law-professor-suspended-over-posts-charlie-kirk-killing-2025-09-17/

  5. CBS Boston — “Are teachers’ social media posts on Charlie Kirk protected by the First Amendment?” https://www.cbsnews.com/boston/news/charlie-kirk-teachers-first-amendment-free-speech-social-media/

  6. The Guardian — “Kirk critics lose jobs amid rancour after killing.” https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/14/trump-administration-charlie-kirk-news-updates-latest?utm

 

 

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Viral Clash at Broadview: A Candidate Says ICE Threw Her Down — What We Know

 

A Democratic congressional candidate in suburban Chicago says she was forcefully pushed to the pavement by a federal agent while protesting outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility early Friday morning. 

 

Video of the encounter circulated widely on social platforms and was later reported by multiple national and local news organizations.

 

The candidate, Kat Abughazaleh, 26, said she suffered bruises and an injured hand and described agents firing pepper balls and deploying tear gas as the incident unfolded.

Dem House candidate slammed to ground at ICE protest in Broadview

 

The demonstration took place at the ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois, on September 19, 2025, as part of protests against a stepped-up federal immigration enforcement operation described by authorities as “Operation Midway Blitz.” About 100 people were present, according to accounts from protesters and reporters at the scene. Multiple clips — including footage posted by Abughazaleh and local news crews — show moments where agents and protesters clashed as federal vehicles moved through the area.

Federal officials described the scene differently. The Department of Homeland Security said protesters blocked entrances, damaged property, and assaulted officers, and reported three arrests that morning. DHS disputed characterizations that agents used excessive force in every instance and said officers were responding to a volatile situation with the aim of securing vehicle movement and safety. Those statements contrast with protesters’ claims that many attendees were peaceful and were met with heavy-handed tactics.

The episode quickly drew political and media reactions. Some progressive activists and local Democratic leaders condemned the federal response as a violation of free-speech rights and an overuse of chemical irritants. At the same time, conservative commentators and some national media figures defended the agents’ actions as enforcement of law and order when protesters sought to block government operations. A nationally broadcast clip of the encounter was shown and discussed on multiple cable programs, intensifying the political fallout.

Practical follow-ups are already underway. Local campaign staff and volunteer medics tended to protesters at the scene; Abughazaleh’s campaign posted images and statements about her injuries. Journalists on the ground gathered video and eyewitness testimony; outlets published photos and clips showing both tear-gas clouds and officers moving through groups of demonstrators. Federal agencies say they will review the incidents and cited property damage and alleged assaults on officers when explaining their response. Meanwhile, the candidates involved have said they will continue to press for accountability and clearer rules of engagement.

What this means politically and legally remains evolving. For voters and observers, key questions include how agencies balance enforcement with protest rights, how officials document the sequence of events, and whether any administrative or criminal proceedings will follow. Independent verification — body camera footage, station logs, and third-party video — will be important to establish a complete record. Local prosecutors or federal oversight offices may also review whether actions on either side crossed legal lines.

If you want the primary source material: short video clips and news packages are available from major outlets and local stations that captured the incident. I can gather those clips into a short dossier (videos, key timestamps, and still frames) or provide direct links to the most widely shared recordings and to ready-to-download images used in press coverage. Tell me which you prefer.

 

Reference list

Brianna Tucker and Amy B. Wang, “Congressional candidate thrown to ground during protest outside ICE facility,” The Washington Post, September 19, 2025.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/09/19/kat-abughazaleh-ice-protest-chicago/?utm


Heather Schlitz, “In anti-ICE protest, Illinois Democrats tear-gassed, pepper-sprayed by federal agents,” Reuters, September 19, 2025

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/anti-ice-protest-illinois-democrats-tear-gassed-pepper-sprayed-by-federal-agents-2025-09-19/?utm


“Democratic congressional candidate thrown to ground during chaotic anti-ICE protest,” Fox News, September 19, 2025.

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/democratic-congressional-candidate-thrown-ground-during-anti-ice-protest?utm


“Dem House candidate slammed to ground at ICE protest in Broadview,” NBC Chicago (video), September 19, 2025.

https://www.nbcchicago.com/video/top-videos-home/congressional-candidate-kat-abughazaleh-slammed-to-ground-at-ice-protest/3826945/


“Congressional candidate thrown to ground, protesters tear gassed in clashes at Broadview ICE facility,” Chicago Sun-Times, September 19, 2025.

https://chicago.suntimes.com/news/2025/09/19/ice-broadview-protest-write-thru


“Fox host Laura Ingraham cheers ICE assault on Dem congressional candidate,” The Daily Beast, September 20, 2025.

https://www.thedailybeast.com/fox-host-cheers-ice-assault-on-dem-congressional-candidate/?utm


Robert McCoy, “I’m a Congressional Candidate. I Was Assaulted by ICE.,” The New Republic, September 19, 2025.

https://newrepublic.com/article/200715/im-congressional-candidate-assaulted-ice

 

 

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Celestial Convergence: Are Comet Clusters a Sign of Larger Cosmic Forces?

 

The difficulty in confirming seven comets within six months may not just be a matter of data gaps but a reflection of deeper unknowns about how our solar system interacts with forces beyond what is openly acknowledged.

 

Comets are often discovered either long before or after their true closest approach, leaving room for selective reporting that could mask real clustering. Long-period comets are especially suspicious, since their sudden appearances might not be random but triggered by hidden gravitational influences, possibly from massive bodies in the outer solar system or shifts in the galactic environment itself. The fact that faint or distant comets can slip under the radar means official counts may downplay how many are actually moving through the inner system, suggesting that what appears to be coincidence could instead be part of a larger cosmic event pattern that remains obscured.

The sudden clustering of comets reaching their perihelion within such a short timeframe raises questions that mainstream explanations often dismiss as coincidence or observational bias. C/2025 A6 (Lemmon), 3I/ATLAS, and C/2024 G3 (ATLAS) are all significant in their timing, with other bright comets also moving through the inner solar system.

Some observers argue this concentration may point to larger cosmic dynamics—perhaps gravitational disturbances at the edge of the solar system, or even hidden celestial bodies nudging these icy wanderers inward. Others note that historic records of comet clusters sometimes coincided with societal upheavals or natural disasters, fueling speculation that what we’re witnessing now may not be random at all but part of recurring cycles that science has yet to fully acknowledge.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qt3rOsgYJ34 

 

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Soldiers’ Pills on the Table: A Cry for Help at the Knesset

 

IDF Soldiers Dump Psych Meds In Front Of Israeli Politicians

 

Ex-soldiers and veterans dramatically dumped bags of psychiatric medications onto a table during a Knesset committee meeting meant to discuss rising suicide and mental-health problems among current and former soldiers.

 

Israeli soldiers are suffering from mental illnesses from the genocide in Gaza.

Ana Kasparian discusses on The Young Turks.

IDF Soldiers Dump Psych Meds In Front Of Israeli Politicians

 

Ex-soldiers and veterans dramatically dumped bags of psychiatric medications onto a table during a Knesset committee meeting meant to discuss rising suicide and mental-health problems among current and former soldiers. The action was meant as a protest — a visual, angry plea that lawmakers act faster to address PTSD, addiction and suicide risk in the ranks. 

Several of the veterans shouted that “we are mentally ill” and warned that more comrades were taking their own lives, while pushing piles of pills and pill bottles across the meeting table to make the point. Video and short clips of the moment circulated widely on social platforms and news sites, showing the raw emotion and the chaotic scene in the parliamentary room. 

This protest comes against a backdrop of rising mental-health strain in the Israeli military: recent reporting says thousands of wounded soldiers have been treated for PTSD and other mental health conditions since the fighting began, and official figures and medical sources indicate a sharp increase in diagnoses and treatment demand. Veterans and mental-health advocates argue that treatment availability, follow-up care and suicide prevention measures have not kept pace. 

Government officials in the Knesset session acknowledged gaps and problems, while MPs and ministry representatives traded blame and promises. Some politicians called the stunt disruptive and disrespectful to parliamentary procedure, while veterans said disruption is exactly what’s needed to make leaders face a problem they say has been ignored. The event has become another flashpoint in a bigger public debate about the social and human costs of the war. 

Why this matters: when uniformed people use public hearings to stage dramatic protests, it signals both desperation and political pressure. For lawmakers, it’s an urgent demand to fund mental-health services, improve tracking and follow-up care for wounded and traumatized soldiers, and to address factors — from deployment tempo to battlefield trauma — that feed the crisis. For the public, the images force a difficult conversation: how to balance military needs, medical care, and policy oversight during an ongoing conflict. 

 

Sources:

 

 

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Whistleblower EXPOSES How Israel Brainwashes American Christians!

 

Guest host Misty Winston discusses Burleson’s admission to helping craft pro-Israel messaging, connecting pastors to settler organizations, and leveraging biblical verses to frame U.S. foreign policy as divinely mandated. His account highlights how Israel weaponizes faith for geopolitical aims, while exposing the hypocrisy and corruption of both U.S. and Israeli leaders who exploit religion for power.

 

Brandt Burleson, once a strategic outreach director for Israel’s U.S. consulate, has laid out how Israeli officials deliberately cultivate American evangelical support.

 

Whistleblower EXPOSES How Israel Brainwashes American Christians!

According to his account, Israel leans heavily on premillennial dispensationalist theology—the belief that modern Israel’s survival is tied to biblical prophecy—and channels it into political capital.

 

Rallies, church tours, curated trips to Israel, and partnerships with high-profile pastors like Mike Huckabee, Kenneth Copeland, and John Hagee serve to reinforce this narrative. Burleson suggests the goal is not just religious solidarity but a carefully engineered system where faith communities are mobilized into reliable political and financial allies, often without realizing how tightly their beliefs are being steered toward foreign policy ends.

Prophecy as Policy: How Israel Courts U.S. Evangelicals for Power and Profit

In a recent exposé, Brandt Burleson, former strategic outreach director for Israel’s U.S. consulate, revealed a system few Americans fully recognize: the way Israel deliberately cultivates evangelical Christians to lock in political and financial support. His account describes how theology, specifically premillennial dispensationalism—the belief that Israel’s modern statehood fulfills biblical prophecy—is not just preached from pulpits but weaponized as a foreign policy tool.

According to Burleson, Israeli officials have long understood that evangelicals represent one of the most loyal, mobilized voting blocs in the United States. To secure this base, they sponsor rallies, fund mass church events, organize propaganda-style tours of Israel, and strategically partner with influential pastors. Names like Mike Huckabee, Kenneth Copeland, and John Hagee are not just preachers in this narrative, but pipelines: their congregations are turned into political engines that reflexively support Israeli interests in Washington.

The strategy leans on more than scripture—it exploits emotion and identity. Evangelicals are presented with a story that defending Israel is defending God’s plan, making political loyalty feel like spiritual obedience. Burleson suggests this dynamic blurs the line between faith and lobbying, creating a situation where millions of Christians rally behind policies that may not serve U.S. interests, but do reinforce Israel’s leverage abroad.

Burleson’s claims also raise questions about transparency. Tours marketed as pilgrimages often double as propaganda trips, where carefully curated narratives obscure Palestinian realities and highlight only what reinforces the prophecy-driven political message. Financial contributions flow from churches into Israeli-aligned organizations, creating what he describes as a feedback loop: money strengthens political influence, which in turn reinforces the theological sales pitch back home.

This isn’t about individual belief—it’s about how a foreign state has learned to manipulate an existing religious framework to guarantee unwavering support. The result is a deeply entangled relationship where theology becomes policy, and pastors serve as unofficial lobbyists, often without their congregations fully grasping the geopolitical game at play.

 


Sources:

 

 

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EU Sanctions Stalemate: Slovakia and Hungary Push Back Against Economic Fallout

 

EU delays new Russia sanctions indefinitely – Politico

The 19th package of restrictions has reportedly faced resistance from Hungary and Slovakia

 

Slovakia’s Robert Fico and Hungary’s leadership are being painted as obstacles to EU unity, but their resistance exposes a deeper reality: sanctions meant to cripple Russia often rebound hardest on the very nations imposing them.

Fico argues that factories, car plants, and heavy industry in his country are buckling under soaring energy prices, while Hungary has long warned that cutting Russian fuel supplies only makes Central Europe more dependent on costlier Western alternatives.

Both governments know that sanctions are not simply a matter of punishing Moscow—they reshape trade flows, raise electricity bills, and destabilize economies already on edge. To critics, this defiance looks like sympathy for Russia, but to others it looks like the only honest admission that EU elites push symbolic penalties while leaving ordinary Europeans to foot the bill.

 

EU delays new Russia sanctions indefinitely – Politico — RT World News

 

 

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Charlie Kirk, the troublesome priest

 

George Galloway - One of the most brave and truthful in the world.

George Galloway has built a reputation as one of the most outspoken and uncompromising political figures in the world. Admired by many for his blunt honesty, he has consistently challenged establishment narratives, often at great personal and professional cost.

Supporters see him as fearless—someone willing to say what others will not, whether on foreign policy, media bias, or government accountability. His willingness to confront power directly, without softening his words, is why many describe him as both brave and truthful, even when his positions spark controversy.

 

 

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WHITE COMMUNITY Pulls Out RECEIPTS On CHARLIE KIRK? We Don’t Care TOO #FAFO Season

 

The internet is on fire right now after the shocking news of Charlie Kirk’s death. While some are posting tributes, the WHITE COMMUNITY is pulling out old RECEIPTS resurfacing his most controversial takes on gun violence, empathy, and Israel’s war in Gaza. From conservatives weeping, liberals dragging, centrists moralizing to memes multiplying by the second, the reactions are divided and explosive.

 

This isn’t just about Charlie Kirk, it’s about how public figures are judged in the digital era, how receipts outlive obituaries and why some communities are boldly saying: “We don’t care TOO.”

 

WHITE COMMUNITY Pulls Out RECEIPTS On CHARLIE KIRK? We Don’t Care TOO #FAFO Season

  • What happened: Charlie Kirk was shot and killed on Sept. 10, 2025 during an event at Utah Valley University. Police say 22-year-old Tyler Robinson is in custody after a manhunt; motive is still being investigated. Utah officials have hinted at ideological factors but say it’s not fully clear yet. A public memorial is set for Sept. 21. 

Charlie Kirk’s assassination on September 10, 2025, has sparked questions that go far beyond the official story. While authorities frame Tyler Robinson as a lone 22-year-old gunman with “unclear motives,” many are already noting how conveniently vague that sounds given Kirk’s high profile, his sharp opposition to government overreach, and his vocal stances on Israel and gun rights.

 Some point out the timing—coming just as campus protests and political tensions have been escalating—as too precise to dismiss as random. Others argue that labeling it as an “ideological factor” without detail keeps the door open for shaping public perception while concealing the deeper forces at play.

 With a memorial set for Sept. 21, critics say the narrative is already being managed, positioning Kirk as either martyr or cautionary tale depending on who benefits, while the real questions of orchestration, surveillance lapses, or political silencing remain largely ignored.

 

  • Why “receipts” are flooding timelines: As tributes roll in, critics (across political lines) are resurfacing old clips and quotes—on guns, empathy, and Gaza—to frame his legacy in real time. That’s now standard in the post-obituary internet: archives and out-of-context edits recirculate within hours, shaping the narrative before any consensus forms. See op-eds cautioning against sanitizing or demonizing his record, and explainers tying the discourse to rising political violence. 

The flood of “receipts” after Charlie Kirk’s death isn’t just a spontaneous outpouring of opinions—it looks like a coordinated digital battleground where old clips and quotes are being weaponized to define his legacy before the dust settles. 

The speed at which archived footage on guns, Gaza, and empathy was resurfaced suggests networks were primed to push narratives instantly, raising the possibility that factions wanted to steer how the public remembers him rather than leave it to natural mourning. In today’s post-obituary culture, an algorithmically amplified “memory war” takes place within hours, where facts, edits, and even out-of-context soundbites can outweigh actual reporting. 

This creates a convenient environment for both state-linked and activist-driven campaigns to reframe a controversial figure’s death as either proof of their righteousness or a symbol of dangerous extremism, ensuring the chaos of divided reactions serves agendas larger than the man himself.

 

  • Deepfakes add fuel: AI “messages from beyond” mimicking Kirk are already circulating, blurring lines between tribute, propaganda, and grift. Expect more manipulated audio/video as factions try to claim his legacy or mobilize supporters.

The sudden appearance of AI deepfakes “speaking” as Charlie Kirk from beyond the grave reveals how quickly technology is being used to hijack tragedy for power. 

These fabricated clips blur mourning with manipulation, allowing political actors, opportunists, and profiteers to exploit raw emotion while bypassing traditional fact-checking. Some of the videos already show Kirk endorsing causes he never touched or offering parting words designed to mobilize crowds, creating a manufactured ghost whose voice can be endlessly repurposed. 

The danger isn’t just in the deception—it’s in the ability to rewrite history in real time, to engineer consent by resurrecting the dead as mouthpieces for agendas. In this sense, Kirk’s digital afterlife may be more politically useful to certain factions than his living presence ever was, and that raises unsettling questions about who is really in control of the narrative now.

 

  • Broader culture clash: Even non-U.S. music venues and creators are getting pulled into the fallout over on-stage comments about Kirk’s death—illustrating how quickly the fight spills across communities and borders. 

The ripple effects of Charlie Kirk’s death show how cultural fault lines cross borders faster than facts, with musicians and performers in completely different countries suddenly dragged into the debate over his legacy. Some entertainers have made flippant or provocative remarks on stage, sparking viral outrage that paints them as either truth-tellers or villains depending on the audience. 

This isn’t just about Kirk—it’s about how a single American political assassination becomes a global litmus test for free speech, morality, and loyalty, forcing artists, venues, and fans into polarized camps they never asked to join. 

What begins as commentary on one man’s death quickly morphs into a transnational struggle over who controls the narrative, turning concerts, comedy sets, and festivals into stages for proxy battles in America’s culture wars, showing just how interconnected and combustible the digital age has made political theater.

 

 Was Charlie Kirk was becoming aware of the truth behind Israel's Genocide against Gaza?

Days before his killing, Israeli officials publicly lauded Kirk as a “lion-hearted friend of Israel,” and widely shared clips show him rejecting the “genocide” label for Gaza and defending Israel’s campaign, which suggests no visible break with his long-standing stance. Until verifiable evidence surfaces (timestamps, originals, corroborating testimony), the claim that he was “waking up” functions more as a contested narrative than a documented turn—convenient for factions that either want to martyr him as a steadfast ally or recast him as a late convert silenced before he could speak. In other words: watch for receipts, not rumors—because right now the receipts we do have show consistent pro-Israel messaging up to the end. 

Then why did he refuse Israeli funding for Turning Point?

There are multiple media reports claiming that Charlie Kirk turned down an offer from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to fund Turning Point USA. Here’s what is known — and what remains unverified — so far:

Reports that Charlie Kirk turned down a major donation directly linked to Netanyahu paint a picture far different from the public image of him as a lockstep ally of Israel. 

If accurate, it suggests Kirk was beginning to recognize how financial pipelines are used not simply to “support” organizations but to control their message and direction. Rejecting such money—especially at a time when he was privately criticizing Israel’s outsized influence on U.S. politics and the Trump orbit—could indicate he saw the strings attached: the expectation of silence or obedience in return.

 To those who see his death as more than random violence, this timing looks less like coincidence and more like cause and effect, raising the unsettling possibility that his refusal to be bought placed him in direct conflict with forces far more powerful than campus protesters or lone extremists.

I will keep you all posted on further investigation. (links at bottom of article)

 


What is not yet established

  • These reports are largely based on anonymous sources, and no publicly verifiable documents (e.g. contracts, emails, public statements) confirming the offer or the full context have been presented.

  • It is unclear how formal or large the offer was—“huge donation” is cited, but no dollar amount is confirmed. 

  • There’s no definitive evidence that the offer was made specifically in exchange for certain behaviors or broadcasting positions; rather, that is alleged in the reports. Possible coercion or “strings attached” is speculated.

 


What this might imply

If true, refusing the offer could reflect a shift (or beginning of a shift) in Kirk’s public stance: a desire to maintain ideological independence even from powerful allies, and to resist being co-opted for prestige or political influence. It might also explain some of the tension and whispering about where his views on Israel were moving.

However, without stronger confirmation, this remains in the territory of plausible but not proven.

 

 

Latest reporting on the Kirk shooting & reaction

The Washington Post
Kirk shooting suspect had 'leftist ideology' but motive unclear, Utah official says
Today
The Guardian
First Thing: Kirk shooting suspect had 'very different ideology' to conservative family, Utah governor says
Today
The Daily Beast
MAGA Pushes AI Charlie Kirk Videos From Beyond the Grave
Today

https://www.thecanary.co/skwawkbox/2025/09/14/charlie-kirk-netanyahu/?utm

https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2025/09/13/754928/Charlie-Kirk-feared-pro-Israeli-forces-before-his-death-Report-?utm

https://www.thecanary.co/skwawkbox/2025/09/14/charlie-kirk-netanyahu/?utm

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/9/11/israeli-leaders-heap-praise-on-charlie-kirk-as-a-staunch-ally-of-israel?utm

https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2025/09/13/754928/Charlie-Kirk-feared-pro-Israeli-forces-before-his-death-Report-?utm

 

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Supreme Court Issues 9-0 Unanimous Decision Changing Second Amendment & 4th Amendment

 

Barnes v. Felix case, why the Court struck down the “moment of threat” rule, and how this changes self-defense cases, concealed carry laws, and police encounters forever.

 

Supreme Court Issues 9-0 Unanimous Decision Changing Second Amendment & 4th Amendment Fight! There were two separate 9–0 rulings in 2025:

 

  • Fourth Amendment — Barnes v. Felix (May 15, 2025): The Court unanimously rejected the “moment-of-the-threat” test in police-force cases and said courts must assess the totality of circumstances (including officers’ conduct leading up to a shooting) when judging reasonableness. That refines Fourth-Amendment excessive-force doctrine; it doesn’t rewrite the Amendment’s text. 

Example: Officers chase a teen for a busted taillight into a dim alley. Without waiting for backup or announcing themselves, they rush in with guns drawn, corner him, and shout conflicting commands. The teen, panicking, reaches toward his waistband to pull out a phone; an officer fires.

Under the old “moment-of-the-threat” view: the court would look almost only at that split second—hand to waistband—and might deem the shot reasonable.

 

  • Under Barnes v. Felix: the court weighs the totality—the minor offense, failure to identify, rushing in without lights/backup, creating the close-quarters panic—and could find the force unreasonable because the officers’ earlier choices helped manufacture the danger.

Two officers spot a driver with a broken taillight and, without lights or siren, sprint after him into a narrow apartment hallway. They don’t identify themselves or wait for backup, shout conflicting commands, and crowd him against a door. Panicking, the driver fumbles for his phone; an officer fires. Under Barnes v. Felix, a court would weigh the minor offense, the failure to announce, and the officers’ rushed tactics that created the close-quarters panic—and could deem the shooting unreasonable because the officers helped manufacture the danger.

 

  • Second Amendment (industry-adjacent) — Smith & Wesson v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos (June 5, 2025): The Court unanimously held that the PLCAA shields U.S. gun makers from Mexico’s lawsuit because the complaint didn’t plausibly allege aiding-and-abetting illegal sales. That’s a statutory immunity decision; it didn’t change core 2A rights like Heller/Bruen

Example: A government sues “Acme Arms,” saying cartel shootings use lots of Acme pistols. The complaint lists recovery stats but no concrete facts that Acme knowingly helped illegal sales—no ATF warnings about a specific dealer Acme ignored, no emails urging straw purchases, no shipments after clear red flags. The Court says PLCAA immunity applies and the case is dismissed. (If the complaint had alleged, for example, “Acme told Dealer X to keep selling to Straw Buyer Y despite ATF warnings,” it might fit an exception—but absent that, PLCAA blocks the suit. Core 2A doctrine doesn’t change.)

 

Bottom line: Fourth-Amendment use-of-force law tightened up for police (broader evidence considered), while Second-Amendment doctrine itself didn’t shift—the S&W case was about liability under PLCAA. The primary 2A framework still comes from Heller, McDonald, and Bruen

 

More on the unanimous Smith & Wesson ruling

Reuters
Supreme Court spares US gun companies from Mexico's lawsuit
Jun 5, 2025
AP News
Supreme Court tosses Mexico's $10B lawsuit claiming US gunmakers have fueled cartel violence
Jun 5, 2025
washingtonpost.com
Supreme Court unanimously blocks Mexico's lawsuit against U.S. gunmakers
Jun 5, 2025

 

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SURPRISE object sneaks out from behind sun! Headed towards EARTH

 

This space traveler surprised everyone as nobody saw this coming!

SURPRISE object sneaks out from behind sun! Headed towards EARTH - YouTube

 

Science often gets portrayed as if it has everything figured out, but in reality, the best scientists know they’re always standing at the edge of the unknown. Space especially keeps humbling us.

For example, we only understand a small fraction of the universe: about 5% is ordinary matter (stars, planets, you, me). The rest—dark matter and dark energy—isn’t fully understood, only inferred from effects on galaxies and expansion. Even things we thought we understood, like black holes, keep surprising us with discoveries about their jets, spin, or the way they bend spacetime.

There’s also the problem of distance. Telescopes like James Webb can peer billions of light years away, but that means we’re looking into the past. We still don’t know how the first galaxies formed so quickly after the Big Bang, or if our theories about cosmic inflation even hold.

In truth, the more powerful our instruments become, the stranger the universe looks. Science is learning, but it often wraps that uncertainty in technical language that makes it sound more confident than it is. The real story is: every discovery opens more questions, not fewer.

 

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The Crime Paradox: Falling Statistics, Rising Fear

 

Gangs just raided a shopping plaza in downtown Chicago, the place was completely cleared out, and now the same lawless behavior is being seen all across America after many states,

including IL passed laws to make shoplifting a punishable offense once again.

 

 

While federal data shows homicides and robberies dropping, many people witness viral videos of smash-and-grab thefts, carjackings, and random assaults that dominate social feeds, creating the sense of a nation under siege.

 

Gangs EMPTY Chicago Plaza... as Mayor's "LET THEM LOOT" Plan IMPLODES

 Crime does feel like it’s running rampant across many communities, and a lot of people are noticing the rise in brazen incidents. In major cities, stores have been hit with organized retail theft rings, carjackings are climbing in places like Chicago and Philadelphia, and violent crimes in certain neighborhoods have left residents feeling abandoned.

 

Smaller towns aren’t immune either—drug-related offenses and burglaries are becoming more common where they were once rare. While officials often argue that national crime statistics show mixed trends depending on the category, the reality on the ground is that lawlessness looks and feels more visible than ever. Videos of smash-and-grab robberies, gangs taking over intersections, or repeat offenders walking free fuel the perception that accountability has collapsed. Whether or not every number supports the “crime wave” narrative, the public’s lived experience suggests emboldened criminals and weakened enforcement are reshaping daily life across the country.

 

Key Data & Trends

The FBI’s “Crime in the Nation” report for 2024 shows that violent crime fell 4.5%, while property crime dropped about 8.1% compared to 2023. 


Within violent crime sub-categories in 2024:

• Murders & non-negligent manslaughter dropped nearly 15%.
• Rape went down ~5.2%. 
• Robbery dropped ~8.9%.
• Aggravated assault fell ~3%. 


Looking at city-level data from mid-2025: in the first half of 2025 (vs. same period in 2024), in 30-plus U.S. cities, homicides were down ~17%. Robbery, aggravated assaults, gun assaults, etc., also saw decreases. 

Some crimes remain elevated or more variable: motor vehicle thefts in many places are still above pre-pandemic levels in some cities, even though nationally they have been trending downward. 

Hate crime data: in 2024, law enforcement agencies reported 11,679 hate crime incidents involving 14,243 victims overall. 
 
The gap between official statistics and public perception of crime reflects a deeper tension in how information is controlled and interpreted. While federal data shows homicides and robberies dropping, many people witness viral videos of smash-and-grab thefts, carjackings, and random assaults that dominate social feeds, creating the sense of a nation under siege. Local spikes in violence can be hidden behind national averages, meaning some communities genuinely feel abandoned while others experience relative calm. On top of this, crime reporting itself is inconsistent—jurisdictions vary in how and when they share numbers, and underreporting can quietly erase whole categories of incidents from the record. Even year-over-year declines can mask longer-term instability, where a brief dip in one category is outweighed by rising lawlessness in others. This leaves many Americans convinced the system is massaging numbers to maintain calm while the streets tell a different story.

 

Official & Reliable Crime Data Links

  1. Stateline — “US crime rates fell nationwide in 2024, FBI report says”
    https://stateline.org/2025/08/08/us-crime-rates-fell-nationwide-in-2024-fbi-report-says/  Stateline

  2. Council on Criminal Justice — “Crime Trends in U.S. Cities: Mid-Year 2025 Update”
    https://counciloncj.org/crime-trends-in-u-s-cities-mid-year-2025-update/  My WordPress

  3. Health Policy Ohio — Report: U.S. major crime rates drop below pre-pandemic levels
    https://www.healthpolicyohio.org/health-policy-news/2025/07/25/report-us-major-crime-rates-drop-below-pre-pandemic-levels/  Health Policy Institute of Ohio

  4. GovExec — FBI report: U.S. crime rates fell nationwide in 2024
    https://www.govexec.com/management/2025/08/fbi-us-crime-rates-fell-nationwide-2024/407371/  Government Executive

  5. The Columbian — New FBI report says crime rates fell nationwide in ’24
    https://www.columbian.com/news/2025/aug/10/new-fbi-report-says-crime-rates-fell-nationwide-in-24/  The Columbian

  6. Reuters — “US violent crime fell 4.5% in 2024, down for second year running, FBI says”
    https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-violent-crime-fell-45-2024-down-second-year-running-fbi-says-2025-08-05/  Reuters

  7. Axios — “Nation’s violent crime rate fell in 2024 to lowest in 20 years: FBI”
    https://www.axios.com/2025/08/06/violent-crime-rate-fell-lowest-fbi

  8. U.S. Conference of Mayors — Statement on FBI report showing nationwide drop in crime
    https://www.usmayors.org/2025/08/07/u-s-conference-of-mayors-statement-on-fbi-report-showing-nationwide-drop-in-crime/  United States Conference of Mayors

 

 

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Celebrating Charlie Kirk's Death?

 

OSHA is On The Way...

 

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EU ‘Breaks Ranks’ With Israel Over Gaza ‘Genocide’; Votes To Recognize Palestine

 

In a dramatic move, the European Parliament passed a non-binding resolution titled “Gaza at Breaking Point,” calling for urgent EU action to combat famine, release Israeli hostages, and recommit to a two-state solution. The vote passed with 305 in favour, 151 against, and 122 abstentions. MEPs demanded immediate aid access, called on EU states to recognise Palestine, and backed sanctions on violent Israeli settlers—including far-right ministers Smotrich and Ben-Gvir. The resolution also supports suspending bilateral support to Israel and parts of the EU-Israel Association Agreement. This comes as Commission President Ursula von der Leyen faces two no-confidence motions over her handling of Gaza and broader transparency concerns.

 

European Parliament Resolution Urges Recognition of Palestine

 

EU ‘Breaks Ranks’ With Israel Over Gaza ‘Genocide’; Votes To Recognise Palestine | Watch - YouTube

On September 11, 2025, the European Parliament passed a non-binding resolution with 305 votes in favor151 against, and 122 abstentions, calling on EU member states to “consider recognizing the State of Palestine” as part of a push for a two-state solution. The resolution also demands an immediate and permanent ceasefire, the unconditional release of all Israeli hostages in Gaza, expresses concern over civilian suffering, and affirms Israel’s right to self-defense—but condemns indiscriminate military actions as well. 


Debate Over “Genocide” Wording
The debate was intense over whether to describe Israeli actions in Gaza as “genocide” or “genocidal acts.” That language was proposed but ultimately removed or softened in the versions of the resolutions, after negotiations. So while some in Parliament pushed for strong terms, the final text refrained from using “genocide.”


EU Moves Toward Pressure on Israel
The European Commission, under Ursula von der Leyen, proposed new measures including sanctions on extreme Israeli ministers and settlers, suspending trade preferences under the EU-Israel Association Agreement, and freezing some funding tied to Israel. This is being framed by many in the EU as a moral and diplomatic response to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. 


Growing Pressure Within EU Member States
Individual EU countries (Belgium, Spain, etc.) and former EU diplomats are increasingly outspoken. Some are supporting recognition of Palestinian statehood or calling for stronger sanctions. The pressure is coming both from public opinion in Europe and from parliamentary bodies. 

 

Whether the EU as a whole has “broken ranks”
While the European Parliament and Commission are showing shifts, that doesn’t mean all member states are acting uniformly. Some countries are reluctant; Germany, for example, has backed the two-state solution in theory but has said it’s not yet ready to recognize a Palestinian state formally. 

The “genocide” allegation

This is a highly charged and legally precise term. The removal of that wording from resolutions suggests many lawmakers are hesitant to use it for fear of legal implications or political fallout. Whether or not the situation constitutes genocide under international law is being debated by scholars and legal experts, but it hasn’t been universally accepted.

Resolutions like this are mostly symbolic (non-binding). They can influence public opinion and create diplomatic leverage, but they do not by themselves force policy changes. Actions like sanctions, trade suspension, or recognition of statehood require additional political steps and often unanimous or majority actions that are difficult in the EU.

The EU appears to be moving from mostly rhetorical condemnation toward taking more material or legal steps—sanctions, possible suspension of trade benefits, and greater diplomatic pressure. That could mark a significant shift in how west-European governments relate to Israel’s actions in Gaza.

Recognition of Palestine is becoming more seriously discussed—not just as a moral statement, but as something national governments might actually do in the near future, especially in conjunction with UN votes and broader international pressure.

The idea of accountability (in humanitarian or international law terms) is increasingly entering the public, diplomatic, and legal conversation in Europe—not just in the abstract, but in terms of EU-Israel agreements, trade, and human rights obligations.

The next phase will reveal whether Europe’s bold rhetoric turns into binding action, or whether it remains symbolic theater. Recognition of Palestine by individual EU states would mark a seismic political moment, especially if heavyweight nations like France, Spain, or even Germany eventually shift course, signaling that Israel’s impunity has limits. Real sanctions—cutting trade preferences or freezing cooperation agreements—would cross into economic warfare, something Israel and Washington would fiercely resist, but which could fracture the Western alliance from within. If “genocide” enters official EU or UN legal language, it would open the door to international tribunals, criminal charges, and a rewriting of how Israel is viewed in history, creating a precedent other states fear. The response from Israel and its closest allies will determine whether this escalates into deeper diplomatic isolation, or if Europe once again pulls back at the last moment, proving unwilling to match words with consequences.

 


     

    Recent EU/Israel/Gaza‐Related News
     
    AP News
    UN assembly votes overwhelmingly to back two-state solution to Israel-Palestinian conflict
    Today
    Reuters
    EU Commission chief says she will propose new measures targeting Israel
    2 days ago
    AP News
    Von der Leyen proposes bolder EU sanctions against Israel over the war in Gaza
    2 days ago

     

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    The law abiding citizens of the US are tired of the criminal element.

     

    Thugs in Chicago say they have switches in case Trump is trying to send the National Guard to city

    What we are witnessing is not just reckless bravado but the inevitable consequence of a system that has shielded lawlessness under the guise of tolerance and reform.

     

    When crime is minimized or excused, offenders begin to see themselves not as outlaws but as untouchable actors in a broken order, emboldened to the point of thinking they can challenge the very foundations of national power.

     The protests in favor of such behavior reveal a dangerous inversion of values, where criminals are treated as martyrs and the victims of their violence are forgotten. This distortion doesn’t happen overnight—it builds from years of eroding accountability, weakening institutions, and leaders too afraid or too compromised to enforce consequences. 

    The result is a delusion so deep that gang members believe they can square off against the American military, a fantasy born out of unchecked power at the street level and silence at the top.

     

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    Algeria and Pakistan Confront Israel at UN After Qatar Strike

     

    Promising Qatar that such an attack “would not happen again” highlights how destabilizing this was for America’s regional credibility, but also exposes how little leverage Washington may have over Netanyahu’s government. In effect, Trump’s balancing act underscores the perception that U.S. policy is less about steering events and more about damage control after Israel makes unilateral moves that force Washington into awkward diplomacy.

     

    The strike in Doha raised alarms not only because of its timing but because it pierced the illusion that Qatar, a U.S. ally and host of American bases, was untouchable ground.

     

    Algeria & Pakistan STUN the World: CONFRONTS Israel LIVE at UN After Qatar Strikes!

    Hitting Hamas leaders while they were reviewing a U.S.-backed ceasefire proposal suggests more than coincidence—it hints at either intelligence sharing gone awry or deliberate sabotage of diplomacy. By striking within Qatar’s capital, Israel sent a message that no state’s sovereignty is beyond reach if it shelters groups Israel deems a threat, even at the risk of destabilizing a partner nation and provoking global outrage.

     

    The fact that top Hamas leaders reportedly survived while relatives and guards were killed deepens suspicion that the attack was more about psychological warfare—showing power and sowing fear—than achieving decisive military gains.

     

    U.S. Reaction & Trump’s Stance

    Trump’s response revealed the tightrope Washington is walking between its loyalty to Israel and its reliance on Qatar as both mediator and host to U.S. military assets. 

     

    By calling the strike “very unhappy in every aspect,” he signaled disapproval without crossing into outright condemnation, leaving space for Israel’s justification while calming Qatar’s fury. The admission that his envoy’s warning came too late raises questions about whether the U.S. was aware of Israel’s plans all along and failed to act, or whether Israel deliberately blindsided its ally. 

    Promising Qatar that such an attack “would not happen again” highlights how destabilizing this was for America’s regional credibility, but also exposes how little leverage Washington may have over Netanyahu’s government. In effect, Trump’s balancing act underscores the perception that U.S. policy is less about steering events and more about damage control after Israel makes unilateral moves that force Washington into awkward diplomacy.

    The international reaction revealed a deep hypocrisy at the highest levels of diplomacy: Qatar and its Gulf allies condemned the violation of sovereignty as a blatant breach of international law, yet when the UN Security Council finally responded, the statement condemned the “attacks” without daring to name Israel as the responsible party. 

    This deliberate omission shows how global institutions bend language to shield certain states, reducing accountability to vague expressions that satisfy procedure but dodge truth. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and others rallied behind Qatar, but their calls for restraint echoed more as symbolic gestures than real consequences.

     The fact that even with U.S. participation the Council could not identify the aggressor exposes the imbalance of power, where some nations can launch strikes on foreign capitals and still escape formal blame, leaving the UN’s credibility fractured and the idea of equal justice under international law looking more like theater than enforcement.

    Algeria and Pakistan’s interventions at the UN stood out because they cut through the diplomatic fog that other nations seemed content to hide behind. Algeria’s insistence that failing to name Israel only feeds impunity was a direct challenge to the Security Council’s credibility, highlighting how selective accountability breeds endless cycles of violence.

    Pakistan’s statement went further, not only condemning the attack as a violation of international norms but also questioning the sincerity of peace talks and hostage negotiations that were supposedly underway when the strike occurred. Together, their voices framed the attack as more than just another regional flare-up—it became a test of whether international institutions are tools of justice or shields for powerful states, and whether smaller nations will continue to accept a system where the rules are enforced selectively depending on who pulls the trigger.

     


    Recent U.S. & Media Reaction

    AP News
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    Recent coverage of Doha strike & UN reactions

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    UN Security Council, with US support, condemns strikes on Qatar
    Yesterday

     

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    Florida Moves to Punish Teachers Who Applaud Charlie Kirk’s Assassination

     

    Florida Education Commissioner Anastasios Kamoutsas sent a memo to school superintendents warning that any teacher who publicly celebrates or makes “despicable” comments about the assassination of Charlie Kirk could face discipline. 

    Florida teachers warned after Charlie Kirk assassination

     

    Florida’s move to discipline teachers who openly cheer the assassination of Charlie Kirk reflects more than just a question of professionalism; it highlights how the state is drawing battle lines in the culture war that bleeds into classrooms.

    The memo from Commissioner Kamoutsas signals that teachers are not just educators but public representatives whose speech—especially online—can be scrutinized for political undertones. Supporters argue that celebrating a killing crosses any boundary of decency, but critics warn that this kind of enforcement risks expanding into a form of ideological policing where unpopular political expressions could be reclassified as “sanctionable behavior.”

    With Governor DeSantis backing the measure, Florida is positioning itself as a state willing to blur the line between public morality and professional conduct, raising the stakes in a climate where careers and free speech increasingly collide in real time.

    While the memo frames the restrictions as protecting student trust, the deeper concern lies in how elastic the standard of “seriously reducing effectiveness” can become when applied to teachers’ private speech. What begins as discipline for celebrating a controversial death could expand into punishing any online commentary that offends prevailing political authority, effectively turning professional codes into tools of ideological conformity.

    Florida law gives the Commissioner broad discretion to revoke or suspend licenses, which critics argue creates a chilling effect where educators may self-censor even harmless or dissenting opinions for fear of retaliation. This tension between constitutional freedoms and professional oversight exposes how easily the legal justification of “maintaining public trust” can be weaponized in polarized times, blurring the boundary between safeguarding conduct and controlling thought.

     


      Areas of Controversy or Concern

      Teacher unions warning about due process are pointing to the slippery slope of allowing outrage and political momentum to define what counts as “vile” or punishable. If public pressure becomes the standard, then subjective morality—shaped by whichever group is loudest at the moment—could replace objective rules of conduct.

      The danger is that teachers may be disciplined not because their actions genuinely harmed students or violated laws, but because their speech clashed with the dominant narrative. This ambiguity leaves educators vulnerable to selective enforcement, where one comment is ignored while another is career-ending depending on the political winds.

      In such a system, fairness gives way to fear, and the classroom risks becoming another battleground for cultural control rather than a place for open thought.

       

        Related news on Florida teachers and Kirk issue

         

        Here are the link addresses for the story:

         
         

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        Responding with shock and reflection rather than immediate political attack

         

        On The View, the co-hosts responded to Charlie Kirk’s killing with shock and reflection rather than immediate political attack. 

         

        Whoopi Goldberg began by calling the event “beyond devastating,” sharing condolences with his family and stressing that the ability to speak freely without fear is a foundational American value. Co-host Sunny Hostin went further, calling the shooting “antithetical to who we are as Americans” and reminding viewers that the First Amendment exists so people can express opinions—even those others disagree with—without this kind of violence. 

        Alyssa Farah Griffin, a member of the panel from a conservative viewpoint, lamented that Kirk’s death could chill speech among young conservatives who felt politically isolated on college campuses. Joy Behar drew parallels with historical political violence, invoking moments like the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and John F. Kennedy, to underline that when public discourse is replaced with attempts on life, something fundamental is lost.

         

        Related News

        ew.com
        "The View" cohosts condemn Charlie Kirk's 'beyond devastating' assassination: 'This is not the way we do it'
        Yesterday
         
         

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        President-Elect of the Oxford Union debate society, is reported to have made celebratory comments about Charlie Kirk’s shooting

         

        George Abaraonye, who was elected President-Elect of the Oxford Union debate society, is reported to have made celebratory comments about Charlie Kirk’s shooting shortly after it was announced.

         

        The messages appeared in a WhatsApp group chat, where he allegedly wrote: “Charlie Kirk got shot, let’s f**ing go.”* On Instagram, he also reportedly posted “Charlie Kirk got shot loool.”

        The Oxford Union (current leadership) condemned those remarks, clarifying that his views do not represent the institution’s official position and emphasizing a commitment to free speech and nonviolence. 

        Abaraonye issued an apology, saying the comments were impulsive and not reflective of his values.

        It’s not fully verified whether the messages were literally intended as celebration (versus shocking or hyperbolic expression). The context in which he posted them—such as group setting, emotional response, or sarcastic tone—is not completely clear. 

        There is no evidence so far of disciplinary action being taken beyond the institutional condemnation. The Union has said the comments did not violate its free speech policies.

         

        Reference Links

        https://www.theguardian.com/education/2025/sep/11/oxford-union-condemns-president-elects-reported-comments-on-charlie-kirk-shooting

        https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/oxford-union-president-charlie-kirk-q5brs7jkl

        https://www.oxfordstudent.com/2025/09/11/union-president-elect-issues-statement-on-his-reaction-to-charlie-kirks-death/

        https://www.foxnews.com/media/oxford-union-condemns-incoming-leader-celebrating-charlie-kirks-assassination

        https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/charlie-kirk-shooting-death-oxford-union-president-b2824983.html

         


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        Utah and FBI Officials hold a press briefing after Charlie Kirk's assassination suspect, Tyler Robinson, has been apprehended.

         

        Authorities Announce Arrest Of Charlie Kirk Assassination Suspect

         

        It’s not confirmed whether Robinson acted entirely alone, though the current belief among investigators is that he was the lone perpetrator.

         

        BREAKING NEWS: Authorities Announce Arrest Of Charlie Kirk Assassination Suspect Charlie Kirk - YouTube

         

        Law enforcement officials have taken Tyler Robinson, a 22-year-old Utah resident, into custody in connection with the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University. Robinson allegedly confessed or admitted involvement to a family member, who then passed that information to a friend, who alerted the authorities.

        Evidence presented includes surveillance video, digital messages (including on Discord) about retrieving and disposing of a rifle, and forensic details. A bolt-action rifle was found, and shell casings bearing inscriptions like “Hey fascist! Catch!” and “Bella Ciao” were recovered. Robinson is being held without bail, and he faces serious charges: aggravated murder (potentially capital), obstruction of justice, and illegal weapon possession. 

        Officials emphasized how quickly the arrest was made: roughly 33 hours after the shooting. They thanked the public for tips and urged continued assistance. The precise motive remains under investigation. While Robinson’s political views and prior hostility toward Kirk have been reported, how those views translated into action is not fully established.  Some details of the confession are based on statements to family or friends rather than direct statements or recorded in formal legal documents, meaning some parts may be second-hand or preliminary. 

        It’s not confirmed whether Robinson acted entirely alone, though the current belief among investigators is that he was the lone perpetrator.  The inscriptions on the shell casings carry political or ideological language, but their significance—whether literal, symbolic, misdirection, or exaggeration—has not been fully explained. 

         

        Here are the direct link references from the Utah and FBI press briefing coverage and related reporting:

         

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        Barrington Public Schools teacher placed on leave amid social media allegations

         

        It was a post of a male teacher who is saying that the killing is justifiable,” said Molly Magnuson, a Barrington parent. “No remorse, no nothing, it was basically that he got what was coming for him.”

        The school committee is not releasing the name of the teacher involved in the incident.

        The school committee will discuss who the independent investigator will be on Monday.

         

        https://turnto10.com/news/local/barrington-public-schools-teacher-placed-on-leave-amid-social-media-allegations-rhode-island-students-september-11-2025 

         

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        Trump Claims Suspect in Charlie Kirk Assassination Now in Custody

         

        Multiple outlets now name him as the 22-year-old suspect in Charlie Kirk’s assassination, yet the speed with which authorities linked him to the FBI’s surveillance images suggests either remarkable efficiency or that Robinson was already known to investigators.

         

        The emerging reports about Tyler Robinson’s arrest raise as many questions as they answer, with the official story carrying hints of deeper layers still concealed.

         

        🚨Charlie Kirk's Killer CAUGHT: FBI Press Conference LIVE Right NOW | Trump Demands DEATH PENALTY

        The claim that his own father, a longtime law enforcement veteran, turned him in adds another twist—raising speculation about how much was confession, how much was family duty, and how much was pressure from authorities eager to close the case quickly. 


        Meanwhile, evidence being reported—like a high-powered bolt-action rifle found in a wooded area and prints taken from a rooftop—carries the unmistakable signs of a planned sniper operation rather than a spontaneous act.

        Whether Robinson acted alone, was aided, or was guided by influences not yet disclosed, the pieces point to a killing that bears the marks of intention and precision, not coincidence.
        What Is Still Unverified or Disputed -- While multiple reports name Tyler Robinson as the suspect, official law enforcement confirmation of his identity has not yet been made public. Some statements are based on anonymous sources. 

        The role of the father admitting his son, as alleged, is not confirmed in all reports. Some details—such as the father contacting authorities, or involvement of a “minister connected to law enforcement”—are reported by certain outlets but not yet verified in public legal documents. 

        Other specifics—such as exact location of the rifle, timing of admission, and whether Robinson confessed formally—remain under investigation and have not been fully corroborated. 
        The expected press conference from law enforcement, including updates from FBI Director Kash Patel and Utah state officials, which might confirm or clarify the identity of the suspect and how custody was obtained. 

        Release of official court filings or charges against Tyler Robinson—these will give clarity about what exactly law enforcement believes he did, and what evidence they have.

        More public evidence: images, video, forensic reports. These will help confirm whether the suspect matches descriptions released earlier, and whether the role of the father or any intermediary is accurate.
        Any statements from Robinson or his legal counsel that either confirm or contest the allegations that have been made.

        President Donald Trump announced Friday morning that law enforcement has a suspect in custody in the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Speaking on Fox and Friends, Trump said with “a high degree of certainty” that the person responsible had been located and turned in by someone close to him.

        Trump emphasized that his comments were based on information he had just received and could be corrected as more details emerge. He explained that a minister “involved with law enforcement” recognized the suspect from images released by the FBI and helped bring the information forward. According to Trump, this development effectively ended a two-day nationwide search for Kirk’s killer.

        Law enforcement, however, has not immediately confirmed the arrest. The FBI and local authorities continue to withhold official statements while the investigation unfolds. Kash Patel, who now serves as FBI Director, is scheduled to hold a press conference at 9 a.m. to provide updates. Until then, it remains unclear whether a formal arrest has been made or whether the suspect is simply being questioned.

        The case has drawn enormous national attention after Kirk, a well-known figure in conservative youth politics, was shot and killed during a campus event at Utah Valley University on September 10. The FBI had released surveillance footage and still images of a person of interest, urging the public to assist in identifying them. A high-powered rifle was also recovered in a wooded area near the scene.

        If Trump’s statement proves accurate, the arrest will mark a major development in a case that has already shaken political discourse across the United States. The murder of Charlie Kirk has been condemned across party lines, with some leaders calling it a “political assassination” and warning that the climate of hostility around speech and activism has reached a dangerous level.

        The FBI’s press conference is expected to provide clarification on the suspect’s identity, the circumstances of the arrest, and potential charges. Until then, questions remain about the motive behind the shooting and whether others may have been involved.

         

        Reference Links

        https://apnews.com/article/ecd68c3a3cc5255ad6c0e29723406473?utm

        https://nypost.com/2025/09/12/us-news/we-have-him-trump-says-suspect-in-custody-for-charlie-kirk-assassination/?utm

        https://people.com/charlie-kirk-shooting-suspect-identified-tyler-robinson-11808756?utm

        https://apnews.com/article/ecd68c3a3cc5255ad6c0e29723406473?utm

         

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        Just three days ago, CNN called Charlie Kirk “dangerous.”

         

        The FBI is seeking a ‘person of interest’ in the shooting death of prominent conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Investigators revealed they have recovered the weapon used in the crime.

         

        Now he is gone, and many believe that kind of rhetoric helped create the environment that led to his death. I never heard hatred from Charlie—what I heard was conviction and truth.

         

        It's exactly what we thought...

        Violence is not the tool of those winning the debate; it is the weapon of those who feel they are losing. What is most disturbing is that some voices now seem comfortable excusing or even celebrating this tragedy.

         

        Our nation gave Martin Luther King Jr. a holiday to honor his message of peace and justice. Many believe Charlie Kirk also gave young Americans hope and clarity in a confusing time, and his loss will be felt for years. America will not be the same after this moment.

        Charlie embodied democracy. He debated anyone willing, he welcomed discussion, and he treated people with respect even when they disagreed. His assassination is not only an attack on one man—it is an attack on open dialogue itself. When false accusations and insults are not enough, and violence is used to silence a voice, that is when democracy is most at risk.

        The FBI is seeking a ‘person of interest’ in the shooting death of prominent conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Investigators revealed they have recovered the weapon used in the crime.

        Urgent manhunt for Charlie Kirk’s killer - YouTube

         

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        House Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) held a moment of silence for Charlie Kirk on the House floor, just ahead of the news that Kirk had died. House breaks into shouting match

        The moment of silence led by Speaker Mike Johnson for Charlie Kirk was meant to be a solemn tribute, but instead it exposed the raw tensions running through Congress. 

        Charlie Kirk Moment of Silence on House Floor Turns Into Shouting Match | WSJ News

         

        Even before the official confirmation of Kirk’s death had fully circulated, lawmakers erupted into a shouting match, reflecting how deeply polarized the chamber has become. To some, the interruption suggested that even honoring a slain activist could not escape partisan divisions, while others interpreted it as a sign that certain members questioned whether Kirk’s political influence warranted such recognition. The clash underscored a troubling reality: in an era where unity is fleeting, even the death of a prominent public figure becomes a battlefield for symbolic control, with silence itself contested as a political act.

        Silence Shattered: Congress Divides Over Charlie Kirk Tribute

        Even before the official confirmation of Charlie Kirk’s death had fully reached the public, the House of Representatives found itself in turmoil. Speaker Mike Johnson called for a moment of silence on the chamber floor, but instead of unity, the solemn gesture broke down into shouting across party lines. The exchange revealed just how fragile congressional decorum has become, and how quickly symbolic acts can ignite political tensions.

        For some lawmakers, the interruption reflected the reality that honoring Kirk—founder of Turning Point USA and a lightning rod for both support and criticism—was never going to be free of political weight. They argued that silence for Kirk carried implicit recognition of his movement, which has energized conservative youth across the country. Others saw the outburst as an indictment of the current climate, where even a symbolic pause to recognize the loss of life becomes entangled with partisan divides.

        The clash highlights a troubling truth: Congress no longer possesses the ability to separate human tragedy from political calculation. Where moments of silence once offered a rare chance for unity, they now serve as another stage for disagreement. This breakdown reveals more than just hostility between parties—it underscores how contested symbols have become in American life, where even silence is interpreted as taking a side.

        As the investigation into Kirk’s assassination continues, the incident inside the House chamber demonstrates how quickly public grief can transform into political theater. The shouting match was not only about Kirk but about the struggle over narrative control in Washington—who gets honored, who is remembered, and whose legacy is acknowledged. In today’s Congress, even paying respects cannot escape the weight of division.

         


        References

         

         

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        The emergence of video evidence suggesting a sniper at the Charlie Kirk tragedy

         

        Jimmy and Americans’ Comedian Kurt Metzger react to reports of Charlie Kirk’s assassination at Utah Valley University, with speculation about a rooftop sniper and questions over whether this was a political hit. Utah Governor Spencer Cox called it a “political assassination,” while President Donald Trump issued condolences and MSNBC drew backlash for suggesting the shooting might be exploited politically.

         

        Concerns that this was not the act of a random shooter but something carried out with precision and intent. Observers point out that a sniper’s presence implies careful planning, specialized training, and potentially even coordination that goes beyond the

         

        Sniper Spotted On Video At Charlie Kirk Tragedy!

        The footage showing a figure positioned at a distance reinforces the theory that Kirk’s killing was meant to send a message, raising questions about who had the means and motive to carry out such a strike in broad daylight on a university campus. For many, the idea of a sniper targeting a political figure on American soil forces a reckoning with the possibility that political violence may now involve tactics once thought limited to war zones.

         

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        Hamilton, Canada has banned residential security cameras and is punishing citizens for recording crimes.

         

        This case taps into a larger tension between public safety, property rights, and privacy. Some see Hamilton’s move as a pushback against intrusive surveillance; others see it as overreach that penalizes citizens trying to protect their homes. As it unfolds, it may set precedent—not just locally but for how other cities balance citizen safety with privacy norms.

         

        In Hamilton, a homeowner named Dan Myles recently received a notice from the city ordering him to take down ten security cameras mounted outside his house.

         

        City of Hamilton orders resident to take down 10 security cameras from his home

         

        These cameras, he says, have helped document break-ins in his neighborhood and even been used by police and media in local investigations. The order comes under Hamilton’s “fortification by-law,” which limits how far a camera can see or listen beyond the boundary of the property it’s placed on. The city claims that having cameras point too far into public or neighboring spaces could violate people’s privacy rights.

        Supporters of Myles argue that the cameras serve as a tool for neighborhood safety and crime deterrence. They say removing them could hamper citizens’ ability to help law enforcement by providing footage. On the other side, privacy advocates—including Ontario’s former Privacy Commissioner—argue that individuals walking or driving past someone’s home have a reasonable expectation that they won’t be recorded or listened to without their knowledge, especially if a camera or microphone captures more than the owner’s own property. 

        It’s not clear yet how strictly the by-law will be enforced in every case, or what penalties a homeowner like Myles might face if he doesn’t comply. To date, Myles says he has appealed the order. The ambiguity lies in how ‘viewing or listening beyond one’s property line’ will be interpreted in different settings—front yard, driveway, sidewalk, street view, etc. That interpretation could affect many people who use doorbell cameras, Ring-type systems, or exterior security cameras facing slightly beyond their front yard.

        This case taps into a larger tension between public safety, property rights, and privacy. Some see Hamilton’s move as a pushback against intrusive surveillance; others see it as overreach that penalizes citizens trying to protect their homes. As it unfolds, it may set precedent—not just locally but for how other cities balance citizen safety with privacy norms.

         

        America needs to keep a close eye on Hamilton’s case because the same questions of surveillance, privacy, and self-defense are already simmering here. 

         

        Millions of U.S. households use doorbell systems like Ring or Nest, along with traditional security cameras, many of which inevitably capture sidewalks, driveways, and even parts of the street.

        If a city in Canada can order residents to remove cameras for looking beyond the property line,” it raises the possibility that similar restrictions could emerge in American cities, especially as debates about privacy rights expand. 

        While some argue such measures prevent communities from turning into constant surveillance zones, others see them as a direct challenge to property rights and neighborhood safety, effectively disarming citizens who rely on footage to deter crime or assist police investigations. 

        If Hamilton’s decision sets a precedent, it may influence lawmakers, activists, and courts in the U.S., forcing Americans to confront whether individual security will be subordinated to broad interpretations of privacy laws.

         

        Reference -- City of Hamilton orders resident to take down 10 security cameras from his home

         

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        Campus Violence Sparks National Shock: Charlie Kirk Fatally Shot at Utah Speaking Event

         

        Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA and a known figure in conservative youth politics, was fatally shot on the campus of Utah Valley University during a speaking event on September 10, 2025. The incident occurred around midday as the first stop of his "American Comeback Tour," and triggered widespread alarm and grief. A person of interest has been taken into custody, though authorities say it remains unclear whether that individual is the actual shooter. Federal agencies including the FBI and ATF were reported to be actively involved in the ongoing investigation.

         

        Charlie Kirk’s assassination at Utah Valley University has raised immediate questions not only about the motives behind the attack but also about the climate that made such violence possible.

         

        As a central figure in conservative youth organizing, Kirk had long been a polarizing presence, and his high-profile “American Comeback Tour” made him an even more visible target.

         

        The fact that a shot was fired from such a distance, striking him in the neck with lethal precision, has fueled speculation about premeditation and professional planning rather than a random act. Authorities’ decision to involve federal agencies like the FBI and ATF so quickly reflects the seriousness with which they view the incident, but it also signals deeper concern that the killing could be tied to organized efforts rather than a lone individual. For many, Kirk’s death feels less like an isolated crime and more like a chilling sign of how political speech and activism in America may now carry risks once associated only with volatile regions overseas.

        TYT Reacts: Charlie Kirk Fatally Shot at Utah Valley University

        Eyewitness accounts describe a sudden burst of panic as the shooter, positioned approximately 200 yards away—possibly on a rooftop—fired a single shot that struck Kirk in the neck. A video clip has surfaced showing the moment of impact, followed by people scrambling to escape. First responders and law enforcement arrived swiftly, and the crowd was evacuated from the scene.

        The precision of the shot that killed Charlie Kirk has become a central focus, with many noting that hitting a target from 200 yards away—possibly from an elevated rooftop—suggests more than chance, pointing instead to training, planning, or even coordination. Eyewitness reports of chaos and fear only highlight how vulnerable the event truly was, as hundreds of attendees were left exposed with little visible security in place to counter such a threat. The rapid spread of the video showing the exact moment of impact has intensified public suspicion, as it not only documents the panic but also raises questions about how easily such footage surfaced so quickly, almost as if the event was expected to be recorded in that detail. While officials have praised the swift response of first responders, the broader concern lingers: how could a major political figure, at a public university, be left open to a sniper-like attack in broad daylight without more effective protection?

        I'm devastated.

        Reaction to the shooting spanned the political spectrum. Utah’s governor called it a “political assassination,” while President Trump ordered flags flown at half-staff in Kirk's honor. Leaders from both major parties condemned the act of violence, with House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Senate and House members, and others emphasizing the need to reject political violence.

        The official reactions to Charlie Kirk’s death reveal not only a moment of shared mourning but also a glimpse into how the political class frames such events for broader meaning. Utah’s governor calling it a “political assassination” pushes the conversation into territory that implies motive and design rather than random violence, while President Trump’s order to lower flags at half-staff elevates Kirk’s killing to the level of national tragedy. Bipartisan condemnations from leaders like Hakeem Jeffries and others strike a rare note of unity, yet underneath those words lies the recognition that political violence is no longer an abstract fear but a reality intruding into American public life. For some, this unified front feels necessary to calm the nation; for others, it raises questions about whether leaders are being fully transparent about what they already suspect regarding who orchestrated or enabled the attack.

        Something is OFF......

        Kirk, 31, was known for rallying conservative youth. Turning Point USA was a major force in mobilizing young voters during the 2020 and 2024 elections. He also hosted a widely listened-to podcast and had expanded his media presence through broadcasts and social media. He is survived by his wife, Erika Frantzve, and their two young children.

        Charlie Kirk’s role as a mobilizer of conservative youth makes his assassination carry a weight beyond personal tragedy, striking at the heart of a movement that had been steadily growing in influence. Through Turning Point USA, his podcast, and a powerful online presence, Kirk had become a symbolic figurehead for a generation of young conservatives who felt alienated from mainstream institutions. His ability to turn campus activism into national momentum made him both a rallying point and a target, as his reach extended beyond politics into shaping culture. The fact that he leaves behind a wife and two young children underscores the human cost of this act, but for many, it also magnifies the sense that silencing him was intended not only to take a life but to fracture a network of influence that challenged entrenched political narratives.

        There's something odd about Charlie Kirk's shooter



        References

        Conservative activist Charlie Kirk dead after being shot at Utah university event | AP News

        Conservative influencer Charlie Kirk shot dead in 'political assassination' | Reuters

        Conservative activist Charlie Kirk dead after being shot at Utah university event | AP News

         

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        Newsom vs. Fox: A Courtroom Clash Over Truth and Timing

         

        By demanding nearly $800 million in damages, Newsom is not only challenging the accuracy of Fox’s reporting but also signaling to voters that he is willing to confront one of the most influential conservative platforms head-on. Fox’s counter-response, leaning on First Amendment protections and anti-SLAPP statutes, frames the case as an attack on free expression, raising the stakes for how far public officials can go in policing what they consider misinformation. 

         

        Gov. Gavin Newsom has filed a defamation lawsuit against Fox News, prompting a legal counter-response that could reshape political media disputes.

         

        Gov. Gavin Newsom’s defamation lawsuit against Fox News carries weight far beyond a personal clash—it touches on the deeper struggle over who controls narratives in American politics and media. By demanding nearly $800 million in damages, Newsom is not only challenging the accuracy of Fox’s reporting but also signaling to voters that he is willing to confront one of the most influential conservative platforms head-on.

         

        Fox’s counter-response, leaning on First Amendment protections and anti-SLAPP statutes, frames the case as an attack on free expression, raising the stakes for how far public officials can go in policing what they consider misinformation. The battle reflects a broader question: are politicians using lawsuits as tools to shape public perception and silence critics, or are media outlets hiding behind free speech to avoid accountability? In this sense, the courtroom becomes more than a legal arena—it becomes a stage where the boundaries between truth, politics, and power are being redrawn.

        When Gov. Gavin Newsom launched his $787 million defamation suit against Fox News, the number itself sent a message as much as the lawsuit—it was no coincidence that it matched the massive settlement Fox paid to Dominion Voting Systems just two years earlier. By tying his claim to that precedent, Newsom aimed to highlight what he sees as a pattern of deliberate misrepresentation by the network, framing himself as the latest target in a broader culture of distortion. His accusation that “Jesse Watters Tonight” selectively edited his comments to make him appear dishonest goes beyond a dispute over words; it reflects the growing belief that media outlets can craft narratives powerful enough to damage reputations and sway political momentum. At the same time, critics argue that Newsom’s move is less about justice and more about political theater, using litigation as a way to elevate his profile for a possible 2028 run. This tension leaves the case hanging in the balance between accountability and ambition, forcing observers to question whether the courtroom is being used to protect truth—or to score political points.

        Fox News’ swift attempt to dismiss Gavin Newsom’s lawsuit reveals just how high the stakes are—not only for the governor’s political ambitions but also for the broader battle over the limits of free speech. By labeling the case a “political stunt,” Fox signaled its belief that Newsom is leveraging the courts to amplify his national profile ahead of a potential 2028 presidential campaign, rather than genuinely seeking redress. Their reliance on California’s anti-SLAPP statute underscores a deeper concern: that powerful figures could use litigation to intimidate media outlets into silence, effectively chilling political commentary. At the same time, their insistence that Jesse Watters’ statements were opinion highlights the thin line between commentary and defamation in modern media. If Fox succeeds, it reinforces the idea that public officials must weather harsh, even misleading critiques as the price of political life; if it fails, it could open new pathways for politicians to challenge news coverage in ways that reshape how Americans consume information.

        Newsom’s refusal to withdraw the lawsuit, even after Jesse Watters issued a limited apology, highlights the deeper stakes behind the courtroom battle—this isn’t just about clarifying a single televised comment, but about defining the boundaries of political power and media influence. By rejecting Watters’ phrasing that he was “confusing and unclear,” Newsom signaled that he is not satisfied with half-measures; he wants Fox to publicly acknowledge wrongdoing in a way that reshapes the narrative around him. Legal analysts see the standoff as more than a personal grievance—it raises the larger question of whether politicians can force networks to accept responsibility for shaping public perception, or whether doing so risks eroding the long-held principle that political commentary, even if harsh or inaccurate, is part of democratic discourse. In this light, the lawsuit becomes less about winning damages and more about testing how much leverage a powerful governor can exert against one of the most influential media platforms in the country.

        This case enters a growing list of high-profile clashes where politicians challenge the power of major media outlets, exposing the fragile balance between protecting reputations and safeguarding free expression. Each dispute underscores how truth in political discourse has become less about objective fact and more about who controls the narrative, with lawsuits now serving as weapons in the battle for public opinion. For Newsom, pressing forward against Fox risks being seen as an attempt to curb criticism, while for Fox, framing the case as a free speech issue allows them to cast themselves as defenders of the First Amendment. The outcome will not only determine whether a governor can hold a news network accountable for alleged distortion but will also set a precedent for how aggressively public officials may wield the courts in shaping media coverage of their political careers.

         


        References

        1. AP News – Newsom files defamation suit

        2. Reuters – Newsom seeks $787 million

        3. ABC News – Fox moves to dismiss lawsuit

        4. TheDesk.net – Fox cites anti-SLAPP protections

        5. The Guardian – Watters’ apology and Newsom’s response

         


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        California Gov. Gavin Newsom sues Fox News over alleged defamation in story about call with Trump
        Jun 27, 2025

         

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        Tragedy on Charlotte Train: Ukrainian Refugee Killed in Brutal Attack

         

        Witnesses and surveillance video reveal that the suspect, 34-year-old Decarlos Brown Jr., launched a sudden knife assault on Zarutska while on the train. Authorities described the attack as unprovoked and brutal. Brown had a long criminal history, including more than a dozen arrests, and a documented struggle with mental illness. Despite his background, he was free at the time of the killing.

         

        Iryna Zarutska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee, was killed in a shocking and unprovoked stabbing while riding a light rail train in Charlotte, North Carolina.

         

          The attack took place on August 22, 2025, and has shaken both the local community and the international audience watching from abroad. Zarutska had fled Ukraine to escape war, only to face a violent death in what was supposed to be a place of safety.

        VIDEO: “I Got That White Girl!” CNN’s Desperate Attempt To Cover Up The Brutal Racially-Motivated Murder Of Iryna Zarutska By Claiming It’s Racist To Talk About It Has Totally Imploded

         

        Iryna Zarutska’s killing has come to represent far more than a single act of violence. The 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee fled the destruction of war in her homeland, seeking safety in a country long viewed as a refuge for the oppressed. Instead, she lost her life in a daylight attack aboard a Charlotte light rail train. The suspect, a repeat offender with a lengthy arrest record and untreated mental illness, was free despite a history that signaled potential danger. His ability to remain at large highlights recurring failures in the nation’s systems of law enforcement, mental health treatment, and public security. The case has left many questioning whether America can still claim the role of protector when it struggles to safeguard both its own citizens and those who arrive in search of shelter. Zarutska’s death now stands as a stark reminder of the gap between America’s global image as a defender of human dignity and the unresolved crises eroding safety within its own borders.

        Witnesses and surveillance video reveal that the suspect, 34-year-old Decarlos Brown Jr., launched a sudden knife assault on Zarutska while on the train. Authorities described the attack as unprovoked and brutal. Brown had a long criminal history, including more than a dozen arrests, and a documented struggle with mental illness. Despite his background, he was free at the time of the killing.

        The brutal attack on Iryna Zarutska has raised urgent questions about how someone like Decarlos Brown Jr.—a man with more than a dozen arrests and a documented history of mental instability—was still free to carry out such violence in plain sight. Witnesses and surveillance footage captured a sudden, savage assault, yet the deeper concern lies in the system that allowed him to walk among the public despite clear warning signs. His long trail of arrests suggests repeated encounters with law enforcement that failed to result in lasting accountability, while his untreated mental health issues reveal a collapsing safety net meant to prevent exactly this kind of tragedy. To many, the incident feels less like an isolated act of brutality and more like the predictable outcome of a society that turns a blind eye to repeat offenders, excuses institutional breakdowns, and leaves ordinary people vulnerable on the very streets and trains they are told are safe.

        Legal Consequences -- The legal proceedings against Decarlos Brown Jr. reveal more than the pursuit of justice for a single act of violence—they expose how the state and federal systems often move decisively only after tragedy strikes. North Carolina has charged him with first-degree murder, while the federal government has added charges tied to violence on a public transit system, opening the door to life imprisonment or even the death penalty. Officials frame these actions as a demonstration of the gravity of the crime, yet critics see a troubling pattern: an individual with a long criminal record and untreated mental illness was allowed to circulate unchecked until a young woman’s life was taken. The weight of federal prosecution now underscores the seriousness of the offense, but it also highlights a contradiction—why does the system wait until blood is spilled on camera before treating a known danger with the full measure of the law? This reactive approach, rather than preventative action, suggests a justice system more concerned with spectacle and damage control than with protecting the public in the first place.

         Zarutska’s family has turned their grief into a stark indictment of the institutions that promised safety but delivered failure. They emphasize that she fled Ukraine’s war believing America offered order, stability, and opportunity, only to fall victim to a man whose long record of arrests and untreated mental illness should have raised every alarm. Their plea to U.S. and international leaders is not just about one case—it is a demand to confront the deeper flaws in how dangerous offenders are managed, how mental health crises are ignored, and how public spaces meant for daily life can become scenes of terror. In their eyes, this is not simply a personal tragedy but a symptom of a broader system unwilling to act until disaster strikes, leaving families to pick up the pieces while promises of security ring hollow.

        The murder of Iryna Zarutska has intensified debate over how America handles repeat offenders and those with serious mental health issues, raising doubts about whether public safety is truly being prioritized. Many ask why Decarlos Brown Jr., with more than a dozen arrests and documented instability, was not under stricter supervision, pointing to a system that often cycles offenders through without meaningful intervention. At the same time, the tragedy underscores the vulnerability of refugees like Zarutska, who arrive with faith in America’s stability only to encounter dangers they thought they had left behind. To some, her death symbolizes a breakdown of public trust: if the state cannot contain known threats or secure something as ordinary as a city train ride, what message does that send to citizens and newcomers alike about the promises of safety and protection?

         

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        Bari Weiss was paid $200 million to take control of CBS News

         

        The widely reported deal that will hand control of Paramount and its myriad properties — including CBS News — is less about business and more about cementing pro-Israel control over news content in the United States. Jimmy and Americans’ Comedian Kurt Metzger discuss how with staunch Zionist Bari Weiss positioned to influence editorial direction, CBS’s independence is finished — any critical coverage of Israel will be killed before it airs.

         

        The claim that Bari Weiss was paid $200 million to take control of CBS News taps into concerns about how media power can be consolidated and redirected to serve political and foreign interests rather than public truth.

         

         Israel TOADY Bari Weiss Paid $200 Million To Run CBS News!

        Weiss, long criticized for her unwavering defense of Israel and her ability to frame narratives favorable to its agenda, represents the type of figure who could rebrand a major outlet under the guise of “independent journalism” while ensuring coverage remains aligned with establishment talking points. 

        The staggering figure itself suggests not mere employment but a strategic investment—buying influence over one of America’s most trusted networks. If true, it would mean CBS is less a news organization and more an asset in the global information war, where billions are spent not on bombs or troops, but on controlling how people perceive allies, enemies, and world events.

         In this sense, the story is less about one journalist and more about the way media becomes a battlefield for shaping public loyalty without the audience realizing the strings being pulled.

         

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        "Calling Me Names Is NOT Gonna Stop Me!" Tucker Carlson on Ted Cruz, Trump, Israel & 9/11

         

        Tucker Carlson’s defiance in saying “Calling me names is not gonna stop me” underscores his position as one of the few media figures openly challenging political taboos around Trump, Israel, and even 9/11. That dividing line explains a lot about MAGA’s division on everything from the Epstein Files to US support for Israel’s war - and the decision to bomb Iran. And this week marks 24 years since 9/11 - the deadliest terrorist attack in US history.

         

        "Calling Me Names Is NOT Gonna Stop Me!" Tucker Carlson on Ted Cruz, Trump, Israel & 9/11

        By targeting Ted Cruz and others who toe the establishment line, Carlson signals that questioning official alliances and narratives is not only fair game but necessary for uncovering hidden interests that shape U.S. policy. 

        His willingness to connect Trump’s politics with larger geopolitical dynamics, and to raise questions about Israel’s role in global strategy or the unanswered anomalies of 9/11, positions him as someone willing to break from the scripted consensus. The pushback he receives—from accusations of conspiracy theorizing to outright character attacks—illustrates how sensitive these subjects remain, suggesting that the strength of the establishment’s response is itself evidence of how tightly guarded these narratives are. 

        In this light, Carlson frames his persistence not just as journalism but as resistance against a system that survives on silence and compliance.

         

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        Tucker Carlson's 9/11 Documentary Is Making People NERVOUS

         

        The unanswered questions around 9/11 often revolve less around the attacks themselves and more around the financial and structural irregularities tied to the event. Building 7 housed key offices connected to government finance and collapsed without being struck by a plane, leading some to suspect it was eliminated to conceal records. 

         

        Overview: Tucker Carlson’s New '9/11 Files' Docuseries

         

        Tucker Carlson's 9/11 Documentary Is Making People NERVOUS

        Tucker Carlson has launched a controversial new documentary series titled The 9/11 Files, aiming to explore still-unanswered questions surrounding the September 11 attacks. The official trailer claims that “For nearly 25 years, the true story on 9/11 has been withheld from the American people” and promises a deeper look into the events that remain clouded in mystery. 

         

        Building on prior segments from his platform, Carlson features interviews with figures like former Representative Curt Weldon—who alleges he faced political retaliation after questioning the official narrative—and supports interrogations into possible intelligence failures or cover-ups.  

        The unanswered questions around 9/11 often revolve less around the attacks themselves and more around the financial and structural irregularities tied to the event. Building 7 housed key offices connected to government finance and collapsed without being struck by a plane, leading some to suspect it was eliminated to conceal records. 

        The Pentagon, hit directly in its accounting wing, was investigating trillions in missing funds just days before. The World Trade Center had recently been heavily insured, raising suspicions about payouts. George W. Bush’s administration was accused of drawing from Social Security to help finance the wars that followed, while his cousin Marvin Bush was tied to a security firm overseeing the complex. 

        Adding to this are claims about an “Israeli art student” group occupying floors 94–95, with photographs circulating of unusual projects involving stripped windows that eerily foreshadowed the points of plane impact. Together, these details form a picture suggesting that beyond terrorism, there may have been layers of financial and institutional maneuvering designed to profit from, or conceal, deeper operations under the cover of national tragedy.

         

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        Alan Duncan Former British Minister -- Get Out of Palestine

         

        Former Conservative Minister Sir Alan Duncan recently called on Israel to end its presence in territories claimed by Palestinians. He stated plainly, “Get out of Palestine, it’s not your country,” and asked that international law be respected, including support for institutions like the International Criminal Court and the United Nations.

         

        A Former UK Minister Tells Israel: "Get Out of Palestine"

         

        Plain & Simple‼️🔥 #usa #israel #palestine #uk #congress #europe #news #politics #canada #australia - YouTube

        Former Conservative Minister Sir Alan Duncan recently called on Israel to end its presence in territories claimed by Palestinians. He stated plainly, “Get out of Palestine, it’s not your country,” and asked that international law be respected, including support for institutions like the International Criminal Court and the United Nations.

        Sir Alan Duncan’s blunt demand for Israel to “get out of Palestine” cuts past the usual cautious language of diplomacy and exposes a reality many world leaders avoid saying outright: the territories in question are considered occupied under international law, yet political and military backing from powerful allies has allowed the occupation to continue largely unchecked. His call for respect of the International Criminal Court and United Nations highlights how these institutions are often sidelined when rulings or resolutions conflict with Western or Israeli interests. By openly saying what others only hint at, Duncan suggests that global powers selectively enforce international law, choosing when it matters and when it can be ignored—especially when vital alliances or strategic resources are at stake.

        Duncan also challenged the way his own party responds to these issues. He voiced concerns over politicians who he said had influence from pro-Israel groups and urged adherence to international law.

        When he warned about politicians being swayed by pro-Israel groups, he was pointing at a deeper problem of how lobbying and foreign interests shape domestic policy in ways voters rarely see. His comments suggest that decisions about the Middle East aren’t always made on principle or public interest, but under pressure from networks of influence that reward loyalty and punish dissent. By calling for adherence to international law, Duncan wasn’t just speaking about Israel—he was indirectly questioning whether the British government itself has allowed outside alliances and private lobbying to override the rules it claims to uphold. This makes his statement more than a policy critique; it’s a challenge to the integrity of the political system and how much of it is guided by quiet deals rather than open debate.

        An internal review by the Conservative Party later cleared him of wrongdoing, concluding his comments did not cross into antisemitism.

        The Party’s decision to clear Duncan of wrongdoing may look like closure, but it also exposes how sensitive and guarded this debate has become. Labeling criticism of Israel as antisemitism has been a powerful tool to silence or discredit opponents, and the fact that a formal review was even launched shows how tightly controlled discussion on the issue is within mainstream politics. By concluding that Duncan’s comments did not cross that line, the party effectively admitted that it is possible to criticize Israel’s policies without being anti-Jewish—yet the very process signals to other politicians that speaking out comes with risks. This creates a chilling effect, where only those willing to endure scrutiny and attacks will say openly what many may quietly believe.

         


        Background Context

        Sir Alan Duncan served in several senior roles in the UK government—most notably as Minister of State for International Development (2010–2014) and for Europe and the Americas (2016–2019). He was also the first openly gay Conservative MP.

        Duncan’s long career in government makes his blunt criticism harder to dismiss, because it comes from someone who once worked at the heart of Britain’s foreign policy machine. As Minister for International Development and later for Europe and the Americas, he dealt directly with global power struggles, aid policies, and the diplomacy that often masks deeper motives. That he was also the first openly gay Conservative MP adds another layer—he has already lived through the challenges of breaking political taboos inside a party known for its rigid traditions. This background suggests that his willingness to speak against Israel’s occupation isn’t the outburst of a backbencher, but the seasoned conclusion of someone who knows how governments really operate and is unafraid of the backlash that usually follows when uncomfortable truths are said aloud.

        The statement reflects a tension in international politics: how to balance a country’s security concerns with its actions under international law. Calls for Israel to withdraw from disputed areas are deeply political and often spark varying opinions.

        On one hand, supporters of Duncan’s position see it as enforcing legal norms and protecting Palestinian rights. On the other, opponents may view it as overly confrontational or dismissive of Israel’s security concerns.

        Being cleared in an internal inquiry means that Duncan’s remarks remain within the realm of political debate—not out of bounds under his party’s conduct rules.

         

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        U.S. Military Sinks Alleged Drug Vessel Near Venezuela Amid Rising Tensions

         

        On September 2, 2025, the U.S. Navy carried out an airstrike in the southern Caribbean that sank a small vessel. According to the Trump administration, the boat was operated by the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua and was carrying illegal narcotics. The operation resulted in 11 reported deaths. The administration framed this as a step in its intensified campaign against transnational drug trafficking.

         

        Trump’s admission strips away the usual diplomatic cover and shows the raw mechanics of power:

         

        Venezuela is not being targeted over drugs but because it sits on one of the largest proven oil reserves in the world, resources the U.S. elite have long coveted. Labeling strikes as part of a “drug war” is a convenient smokescreen, one that masks economic warfare as moral policing.

         

        The killing of 11 people on a small vessel looks less like interdiction and more like a message—an act designed to intimidate and destabilize. For decades, Washington has imposed sanctions, backed coups, and spread propaganda to weaken Caracas, and each move conveniently aligns with moments of volatility in global oil markets. While the narrative is dressed up in concerns over narcotics or democracy, the pattern reveals a clear throughline: controlling Venezuela’s resources and ensuring no government independent of U.S. influence can dictate how they’re used.

        Vice President J.D. Vance defended the strike, calling such actions the “highest and best use” of U.S. military resources. He acknowledged critics who questioned the legality and raised concerns about potential violations of international law and lack of Congressional oversight.

        President Trump emphasized that the target was drug-related, denying any intention of regime change. Nevertheless, military activity in the region has increased, including the deployment of F-35 jets and naval vessels. Analysts note this activity may also pressure Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

        President Maduro called the strike an assault on Venezuela’s sovereignty. He denied involvement with drug trafficking and called for diplomatic solutions. Maduro also mobilized militias and civilian defenses in response, signaling serious domestic concern.

        International reactions were sharply divided. Some criticized the U.S. strike as extrajudicial violence and a potential violation of international norms. Others, including officials from Caribbean nations, supported strong action against organized crime.

         


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        Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) has called for a federal investigation into activist Aisha Nizar after Nizar urged Palestinian supporters to target the U.S. F-35 fighter jet supply chain.

         

        The “People’s Conference for Palestine,” held August 29 in Detroit, drew thousands of anti-Israel groups and left-wing activists, with critics noting the event included individuals sympathetic to Hamas. What was promoted as a peace gathering instead turned into a stage for rhetoric that included sabotage, economic disruption, and direct threats toward U.S. military logistics.

         

        Reports show that organizers were angered by ongoing shipments of U.S.-made F-35 components routed through Oakland International Airport on their way to Israel. Shipping documents revealed more than 250 such shipments this year, including bomb-release units (BRU-68s) designed for 2,000-pound munitions.

        Nizar, a leader within the Palestinian Youth Movement, told attendees that activists should focus on the supply chain, describing how the F-35 program depends on “just-in-time” logistics. She emphasized that disrupting even one part of the system could have significant consequences for U.S. operations.

         

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        Are Banks Removing Cash? What’s Really Happening

         

        In the United Kingdom, major banks like Santander, NatWest, Halifax, Lloyds, and the Bank of Scotland are significantly cutting back their physical presence. Santander, for instance, has closed dozens of branches and converted several others to "counter-free" locations, meaning no more in-person cash services at those sites. These changes are often offset by expanding access through post offices and high-capacity "super ATMs," but for individuals relying on traditional teller services, it may feel like a step backward.

         

        Recent reports point to a broader trend, especially outside the U.S., where banks are reducing access to cash services—though this doesn’t necessarily signal an imminent disaster.

         

        In Australia, the decline in bank branches and ATMs has been more dramatic. Over seven years, the number of bank-owned ATMs and branches has roughly halved, particularly affecting rural and regional areas. While this is attributed to digital payment preferences, many Australians still value cash as a means of financial security and inclusivity. The government is even considering legislation—like mandating retailers to accept cash—to preserve access in underserved areas. 

        A few banks elsewhere made similar moves in previous years. For example, Allied Irish Banks (AIB) proposed converting 70 of its branches to cashless locations in 2022 but reversed course after a public backlash. 

         

        U.S. Banks Scaling Back Physical Cash Access: What’s Going On

        Across the United States, bank branch closures are accelerating, reshaping how Americans access cash and in-person services.

         

        What This Means for Customers

        • Access Challenges Grow: Many Americans—particularly in underserved and minority-majority areas—face longer travel times or difficulty accessing cash and in-person services.

        • Digital Gains, But Not for Everyone: While most now bank online, people without reliable internet or comfort with technology still rely on physical branches.

        • New Approaches Emerge: Some banks are evolving their branches into community hubs, offering personalized guidance and financial education.

        • Local Disparities Widen: Branch closures are not distributed equally—low-income and majority-Black neighborhoods are disproportionately affected.

         

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        CNN Panel Sparks Debate After Jonah Goldberg Raises Gun Confiscation Scenario

         

        During a recent CNN panel, Jonah Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Dispatch and longtime political commentator, raised a controversial hypothetical about gun rights and federal authority. The discussion centered on the growing use of the National Guard in domestic matters, particularly in response to violent crime in major U.S. cities. Goldberg questioned what limits, if any, exist once governors or presidents begin normalizing military involvement in civilian issues. 

         

        Goldberg suggested that if Republican leaders use military resources to restore order in urban areas, Democratic governors could later adopt the same approach for different causes

         

        He warned that leaders such as California Governor Gavin Newsom or Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker could declare a “gun crisis” and justify sending in the National Guard to seize firearms from private citizens. His point was framed as a cautionary scenario, not a proposal, but it nonetheless stirred reactions across the political spectrum.

        The remark highlights broader questions about constitutional limits. The Second Amendment protects the right to keep and bear arms, while the Posse Comitatus Act restricts the use of federal military forces for domestic law enforcement. However, the National Guard, when operating under state authority, occupies a gray area. Goldberg’s comments suggest that once military involvement in civilian life becomes normalized, future leaders could exploit that precedent for issues far beyond public safety emergencies. 

        Public response to Goldberg’s scenario has been mixed. Some see it as an exaggerated warning, meant to underline the slippery slope of executive power. Others argue it is a real concern given the sharp divides over gun rights and public safety in America. This debate ties into ongoing discussions about how far government should go in addressing violence and whether new powers, once granted, can ever truly be limited. 

        The issue also connects to the broader conversation about trust in institutions. In a time of polarization, both political parties fear how the other might use expanded powers if given the chance. Goldberg’s remarks captured that tension, using the example of firearms to show how a policy designed for one crisis could later be redirected toward another, potentially reshaping the balance between individual rights and state authority. 

         

        Sources and References

         

         

        Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson is shifting blame for the city’s gun violence to Republican-led states, saying most of the more than 24,000 firearms seized since he took office came from outside Chicago. Critics argue that instead of pointing fingers, Johnson should focus on the city’s own crime policies, police funding, and prosecutorial decisions, which they believe play a bigger role in the violence than guns crossing state lines.

        Chicago will have crime issues as long as red states have gun issues: Chicago Mayor

         

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        Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson is shifting blame for the city’s gun violence to Republican-led states, saying most of the more than 24,000 firearms seized since he took office came from outside Chicago. Critics argue that instead of pointing fingers, Johnson should focus on the city’s own crime policies, police funding, and prosecutorial decisions, which they believe play a bigger role in the violence than guns crossing state lines.


        Europe’s Post-War Troop Deployment Plans: An Informative Overview

         

        European leaders are actively crafting detailed plans for a multinational security force in Ukraine. These plans involve deploying tens of thousands of European-led troops as part of post-conflict security guarantees—meant to support any peace agreement.  This initiative includes backing from the U.S., primarily through command, intelligence, and surveillance support. 

         

        Discussions among European officials are ongoing, with announcements anticipated at a forthcoming summit co-hosted by France and the U.K.

         

        However, some pushback has emerged—Germany’s Defense Minister Boris Pistorius cautioned that such decisions require broader consultation and cannot be solely dictated by the EU. 

         

        This effort is part of a broader initiative known as the "coalition of the willing," formed in early 2025 under the leadership of the U.K. and France. It includes more than 30 countries prepared to offer a security force once a ceasefire or peace deal is in place. 

        As for U.S. involvement, President Trump has publicly affirmed continued American engagement and support, particularly in areas like intelligence coordination. The University of Tokyo+12Reuters+12The Guardian+12 Yet, the exact nature and scale of U.S. participation remain undecided.

         


        What's New?

        • Concrete Plans Emerge: Ursula von der Leyen confirmed that Europe is developing “precise plans” for a sizable troop deployment in Ukraine post-war.

        Ursula von der Leyen’s admission that Europe is crafting “precise plans” for sending troops into Ukraine after the war signals more than just peacekeeping—it suggests preparations for a long-term military footprint that could reshape the balance of power on the continent. By calling these plans detailed and ready, leaders hint at a strategy already in motion, one that may not rely solely on NATO but on a new European-led force backed by U.S. political support. Critics argue this isn’t about stabilization alone, but about cementing influence in Ukraine while locking Russia out of any future role, raising the possibility that what is presented as security could double as occupation under another name.

        • U.S. Support: Trump has indicated backing for European-led security efforts, though details are pending. 

        Trump signaling support for European-led troops in Ukraine, even without giving specifics, raises questions about what kind of role the U.S. really intends to play. On the surface, it looks like Washington is letting Europe take the lead, but history shows that American intelligence, surveillance, and funding often carry hidden strings. By endorsing Europe’s push without committing boots on the ground, Trump positions the U.S. as the power behind the curtain—able to influence outcomes without the burden of full responsibility. Some see this as a way to reassert American dominance indirectly, using European forces as the visible shield while U.S. interests remain deeply tied to whatever happens next.

        • Internal Debate Surfaces: German officials express concern over the EU advancing troop deployment plans without broader intergovernmental input. 

        Germany’s hesitation over the EU moving forward with troop deployment plans without wider consultation reveals the cracks inside Europe’s own alliance. Officials in Berlin warn that bypassing full intergovernmental approval could turn what’s framed as a united European mission into a project driven by only a few powerful states like France and the U.K. This fuels suspicion that the deployment is less about collective defense and more about advancing specific national agendas under the EU banner. The concern isn’t just about process—it’s about legitimacy, since a force sent without full backing could deepen divisions in Europe and weaken the very unity leaders claim to be defending.

         


        Background & Broader Context

        European leaders have increasingly emphasized the need for their continent to bear more responsibility in Ukraine’s long-term security. This has led to significant defense initiatives like Readiness 2030, a plan to invest nearly €800 billion to reinforce Europe’s armed forces. 

        The push for “Readiness 2030,” with nearly €800 billion earmarked to expand its armed forces, is being sold as self-reliance, but critics suggest it’s really about building a standing war machine that ensures Europe can act independently of NATO while still aligning with U.S. strategic goals. The massive investment signals not just defense, but preparation for a new era where Europe projects military power far beyond its borders—Ukraine being the first testing ground. By framing this as responsibility for long-term security, leaders may be laying the groundwork for a permanent military presence in Eastern Europe, one that could blur the line between protection and expansion.

        The "coalition of the willing" concept emerged during the 2025 London Summit. Countries agreed to provide security guarantees, including military presence, to uphold future peace arrangements in Ukraine. 

        Diplomatic efforts have included back-and-forth between President Trump and European leaders like Macron and Starmer. Notably, Trump expressed openness to European troops in Ukraine, though he fell short of pledging a U.S. military backstop. 


        Summary in Plain Terms

        Europe is preparing a detailed plan to send troops into Ukraine after a peace deal, with U.S. support planned in areas like intelligence and coordination. While some leaders back the initiative, others worry it’s being discussed without full consultation.


         

        Related news

        Reuters
        Von der Leyen says Europe is drawing up 'precise' plans to send troops to Ukraine, FT reports
        3 days ago
        The Guardian
        Ukraine war briefing: Europe drawing up plans for troop deployment; Zelenskyy vows retaliation for drone strikes
        2 days ago

         

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        This Chart Illustrates the rise of “intensely segregated” schools where 

        Black or Hispanic students make up 90‑100% of enrollment Equitable Growth.

        This chart tracks the percentage of Black students attending majority-White schools across U.S. regions from 1991 to 2018 ERIC+3FutureEd+3ERIC+3.

        Separate but Unequal? Why Race Divides American Classrooms Today

         

        More than seventy years after the Supreme Court ruled in Brown v. Board of Education that racial segregation in schools was unconstitutional, many American classrooms still reflect deep divisions along racial lines. While this separation is not mandated by law, it continues through housing patterns, district policies, and economic inequality that affect where children go to school. Research shows that many districts are now more racially divided than they were in the 1980s, despite decades of effort to close the gap.

         

        The strongest factor driving this separation is housing.

         

        Families tend to live in neighborhoods with others of similar income, and because of historic redlining and wealth gaps, these neighborhoods often align with race. School district lines are usually drawn around these areas, which means that students from different backgrounds rarely mix. As a result, classrooms mirror the divisions of the neighborhoods around them. 

         

        Another driver is school choice and the growth of charter schools. While these policies were intended to give parents more options, studies show they often intensify segregation because families with more resources are better able to take advantage of them. This can leave traditional public schools with higher concentrations of minority and low-income students, while other schools become more selective. 

        District policies also play a role. Strict boundaries, magnet programs, or specialized schools sometimes separate students instead of integrating them. Attempts to redraw district lines or merge schools to promote diversity have faced political pushback, often from parents who prefer local control or worry about declining resources in their own communities. These debates reveal how difficult it is to balance fairness, parental choice, and educational opportunity. 

        Researchers argue that segregation in schools has long-term effects on achievement and opportunity. Students in racially isolated schools often face fewer resources, less experienced teachers, and lower access to advanced courses. At the same time, integrated schools have been shown to benefit all students by exposing them to different cultures and perspectives. Despite this, integration efforts have slowed in recent decades, leaving many children in systems that look very similar to those before desegregation began.

        Some communities are experimenting with new approaches. Studies have suggested that merging districts or adjusting zoning policies could help reduce separation, and some parents have even created informal “underground” networks to transfer their children out of heavily segregated schools. While these efforts show creativity, they also highlight the lack of a consistent national strategy to address the issue.

        The ongoing separation of students by race is not the result of explicit laws but the outcome of layered social, economic, and political choices. Whether or not the country moves closer to true integration depends on how communities balance local preferences with the broader promise of equal education for all.

         


        Sources and References

         

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        Epstein victims: 'We know the names' Victims say they will compile their own list

         

        Victims of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein who are fed up with the government run-around said they will compile their own "client list" on Wednesday during a rally on Capitol Hill after the House Oversight Committee released 33,000 pages of documents already seen by the public. The documents released Tuesday night underwhelmed lawmakers from both sides of the aisle. “After careful review, Oversight Democrats have found that 97% of the documents received from the Department of Justice were already public. There is no mention of any client list or anything that improves transparency or justice for victims," Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif., said in a statement to CNN.

         

        As of September 3, 2025, survivors of Jeffrey Epstein's abuse—many speaking publicly for the first time—are mounting a powerful, bipartisan effort to demand full transparency and accountability.

         

        1. The Epstein Files Transparency Act

        Led by Reps. Thomas Massie (R‑KY) and Ro Khanna (D‑CA), this bipartisan bill aims to compel the Trump administration to release all unredacted investigation files regarding Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell—including DOJ, FBI, internal communications, flight logs, immunity deals, and custodial records—within 30 days.

        This bill isn’t just about Epstein, but about pulling back the curtain on a much larger system of power and protection that shields the wealthy and connected. By forcing the release of unredacted files—everything from FBI notes to immunity deals and flight logs—the measure could expose who knew what and who was protected, possibly reaching into politics, finance, and even intelligence agencies. The urgency of the 30-day deadline signals that lawmakers backing it believe there’s an active effort to keep this buried, and if sunlight finally breaks through, it could reveal a network far bigger than one man and his associate.

        To trigger a House floor vote via a discharge petition, they need 218 signatures. So far, four Republicans—Massie, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Nancy Mace, and Lauren Boebert—have signed, in addition to all Democrats. They need just two more GOP members. 

        The fact that nearly all Democrats have signed while only a handful of Republicans have joined reveals how sensitive this fight is inside Washington. A discharge petition bypasses leadership, which is why it’s rarely used—it strips power from party bosses and puts the decision directly in the hands of rank-and-file members. Only two more GOP signatures would break the stalemate, which is why survivors and activists are turning up the pressure. The hesitation from many Republicans has fueled speculation that protecting influential names tied to Epstein’s network is more important than transparency, and the very slim margin highlights how fragile the balance of power is when it comes to exposing files that could shake the foundations of political and financial elites.


        2. Survivors’ Public Testimonies

        At a Capitol Hill press event, dozens of survivors, some speaking publicly for the first time, delivered emotional accounts of being lured as teenagers into Epstein’s sex-trafficking network. 

        When survivors stood before the cameras and described how they were recruited as teenagers, it wasn’t just personal pain on display—it was a direct challenge to the institutions that looked the other way. Many of these stories have been whispered about for years, but hearing them in public, under the glare of Capitol Hill, makes it harder for powerful figures to keep them buried. The timing of these testimonies, as pressure builds for the release of hidden files, suggests survivors know the stakes: their voices could be the key to forcing accountability not only for Epstein and Maxwell but also for the high-profile figures who flew on those jets, walked through those mansions, and benefited from a system designed to keep the vulnerable silent.

        Chauntae Davies’ reminder that Epstein constantly bragged about his ties to powerful men, even Donald Trump, exposes why so many fear the full release of files—because those names could prove how deep the rot goes. Her worry about not being believed reflects a system built to protect the influential while discrediting victims, a pattern seen in other abuse scandals. Survivors rejecting the idea that disclosure would harm them flips the narrative: they argue the real danger is secrecy, which only protects predators and their allies. By demanding transparency, they are saying justice cannot come from shielding elites but from finally pulling their protection away and letting the truth be seen.


        3. House Oversight Committee’s Action

        Under Chair Rep. James Comer (R‑KY), the House Oversight Committee has released approximately 33,000 pages of documents received from the DOJ. Critics argue most of these were already public and heavily redacted. 

        The Oversight Committee’s release of 33,000 pages sounds massive, but critics point out that much of it is recycled material, already public and blacked out so heavily that key names and details are unreadable. This raises suspicion that the “document dump” was less about truth and more about creating the illusion of action while still protecting the powerful. Redactions often hide the very connections that matter most—who Epstein met, who funded him, and who benefited from his network. The sheer volume without substance feels like a smokescreen, a way to claim transparency while keeping the real secrets buried behind black ink.

        Speaker Mike Johnson’s push to frame the Oversight route as “true transparency” while warning that the discharge petition is a political stunt looks less like concern for process and more like damage control. By steering everything through committees, leadership can control what gets released and when, effectively keeping the most explosive details under wraps. Labeling the discharge petition a partisan attack serves as a shield, discouraging members from crossing the line even if they believe the survivors. To many, this suggests leadership isn’t protecting the public’s right to know—it’s protecting powerful interests that could be exposed if the raw, unfiltered files ever see daylight.

         

        4. Trump’s Reaction

        President Trump has dismissed the push as a “Democrat hoax”, framing it as a partisan distraction from his accomplishments. 

        Trump’s decision to brush off the push for full disclosure as a “Democrat hoax” signals how dangerous these files could be if fully opened. By framing it as nothing more than political theater, he shifts attention away from the substance—the names, deals, and connections hidden in those records—and instead makes it about protecting his image. Survivors argue this is exactly the problem: when leaders call their pain a hoax, it shows how the system protects itself by discrediting victims. To critics, this response feels less like denial of the problem and more like fear of what transparency might uncover about the circles of power Epstein moved in.

        The White House warning Republicans that backing the discharge petition would be treated as “hostile” shows how much muscle is being used to keep these files from surfacing. That kind of pressure suggests fear of exposure, not just political gamesmanship. The expectation of a Trump veto, even against a bill pushed by survivors and backed by both parties, underlines how tightly guarded these secrets must be. Requiring a two-thirds override in both chambers makes the bar almost impossible to reach, meaning the truth lives or dies based on whether a handful of lawmakers are willing to defy leadership and risk their careers to break open a vault that could implicate people at the very top of politics, business, and beyond.

         


        Why This Matters & What Happens If Trump Doesn’t Sign


        Transparency & Accountability: Survivors argue that without full access to all government-held records—including potentially omitted names of individuals tied to Epstein—truth and justice remain blocked.

        Survivors know that without every record—flight logs, immunity deals, FBI memos, and the names still hidden—there can be no real justice, only managed narratives. They argue the selective release of files isn’t transparency but protection for the same circles of wealth and influence that enabled Epstein to operate unchecked. True accountability means exposing not just Epstein and Maxwell but also the politicians, bankers, royals, and intelligence figures who looked away or participated. Without that, the system continues to shield predators while victims are left carrying the weight of secrets that the government already knows but refuses to acknowledge.

        Legal and Historical Reckoning: These documents could reshape public understanding of Epstein’s network, clarify institutional failures, and inform future reforms.

        The release of these files could spark a reckoning far bigger than one man’s crimes, rewriting the history of how America’s most powerful institutions handled—or covered up—systemic abuse. If names of politicians, CEOs, foreign leaders, or intelligence ties surface, it could show not just personal corruption but coordinated protection that allowed trafficking to flourish in plain sight. This would force a hard look at whether law enforcement, courts, and even the media were complicit, either through silence or selective reporting. Such revelations wouldn’t just be about justice for survivors—they could permanently alter how the public views its leaders and the trust placed in government itself.

        Victims’ Healing: Many survivors tied legislative action directly to their healing. As one survivor said: "We cannot heal without justice. We cannot protect the future if we refuse to confront the past." 

        For the survivors, this fight isn’t only about exposing Epstein’s network—it’s about reclaiming control over their own stories. Many say that true healing can’t happen while powerful names remain hidden, because secrecy keeps them trapped in the same silence their abusers forced on them years ago. By tying their healing to legislative action, they are showing that justice is not just a legal outcome but a necessary step toward breaking generational cycles of exploitation. Their call to confront the past is really a demand that society stop protecting predators, because without that reckoning, the same systems that allowed Epstein to thrive could continue unchecked, leaving future victims just as vulnerable.

        Consequences of a Veto: If Trump vetoes, Congress would need substantial bipartisan support to override. That’s a steep climb—even in the House, achieving two-thirds is no small feat.

        If Trump vetoes the bill, it won’t just be a political clash—it will expose how far lawmakers are willing to go to protect the system over the truth. Overriding a veto requires an overwhelming bipartisan stand, and history shows that when secrets this big are on the line, party loyalty and fear of exposure often outweigh justice. Survivors and advocates warn that a failed override would signal to the public that Congress is complicit in burying the truth, proving the influence of those whose names may lie in the hidden files. In that sense, the veto fight isn’t only about votes—it’s a test of whether America’s leaders are willing to risk their own power to confront a scandal that could shake the foundations of the establishment itself.


        Final Thought

        This is a crucial moment—not just for legislation, but for survivors seeking a public reckoning. Whether this becomes law ultimately depends on whether enough lawmakers—across the aisle and bold enough to stand up—can muster the courage to override both party pressure and a potential presidential veto.

        Romans 12:19, “Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord.” This means that even if lawmakers lack the courage to act, the guilty will not escape divine judgment. 

        Ecclesiastes 12:14 also says, “For God will bring every deed into judgment, including every hidden thing, whether it is good or evil.” 

        The Bible teaches that no earthly power can permanently cover up sin, and survivors can find hope knowing that while men may protect their own, God exposes all darkness in His time. This perspective warns against placing ultimate trust in legislation and instead reminds believers that true reckoning comes from God’s justice, which cannot be vetoed or silenced.

         

        Reference inks 

        https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/09/03/epstein-victims-massie-khanna-discharge-petition/?utm

        https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/survivors-jeffrey-epstein-press-conference-files-rtbd7vgmd?utm

        https://www.thedailybeast.com/victim-says-epsteins-biggest-brag-was-about-his-friendship-with-trump/?utm

        https://www.foxnews.com/politics/house-moves-expose-epstein-files-authorizes-oversight-probe?utm

        https://www.foxnews.com/politics/massie-fires-back-after-johnson-calls-his-epstein-records-push-meaningless?utm

        https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2025/sep/03/donald-trump-immigration-tariffs-epstein-us-politics-live-news-updates?utm

        https://apnews.com/article/5d980740245f935c994a90b8ce824642?utm

        https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/03/jeffrey-epstein-files-release-survivors?utm

         

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        Nadler Steps Aside: A Longtime Trump Impeachment Figure Makes Room For New Leaders

         

        Nadler’s retirement is being sold as a graceful “pass the torch,” but it also marks the end of an impeachment-era guard and opens a power scramble in a deep-blue Manhattan seat where donors, unions, and activists will test which way Democrats want to go next. 

         

        After three decades chairing and shaping big fights—Trump impeachments, civil liberties, gun policy—his exit invites a reset on priorities:

         

        Do voters want a younger prosecutor-style watchdog, a progressive focused on housing and antitrust, or a deal-maker who can deliver federal money? It also underscores an awkward truth both parties face after 2024:

         

        Aging leadership, redrawn districts, and restless bases are forcing turnover that speeches alone can’t paper over. Nadler leaves a long record and room for fresh energy; for skeptics, the timing hints at a party trying to refresh its image before the next Congress decides who sets the agenda on courts, tech, and foreign policy.

        Nadler became a national figure when he ran the House Judiciary Committee through Trump’s first impeachment and helped steer the second, turning long-running fights over subpoenas, witnesses, and executive power into prime-time politics. Supporters say he was defending the rule of law; critics call it partisan theater that crowded out kitchen-table issues. His record reaches beyond impeachment: he pushed civil-liberties measures after years of surveillance creep, backed voting-rights protections, and fought for tighter gun laws—even as opponents argue these bills expanded Washington’s reach and left due-process questions unresolved.

        Under his gavel the committee wielded heavy tools—subpoenas, contempt threats, and public hearings—that shaped headlines as much as policy. The result is a mixed legacy: a seasoned lawyer-legislator who became a symbol of Trump-era resistance, praised for drawing red lines around presidential power, faulted for selective outrage and deals that sometimes traded privacy or speech concerns for political wins.

        In interviews and statements, Nadler linked his decision to a desire for generational change inside the Democratic Party. 

        He cited lessons from President Biden’s 2024 withdrawal and said younger lawmakers could “maybe do better.” Coverage from national and New York outlets captured those remarks. The move sets up a competitive race for his Manhattan-based seat. Early reporting mentions potential and declared hopefuls and notes that the district remains strongly Democratic. Roundups also point to a broader push for younger leadership.

        With Nadler stepping down, the real fight won’t be November—it’ll be the Democratic primary, where an open Manhattan seat invites a scramble between well-connected insiders and younger contenders promising a reset. 

        Expect a split screen: union and donor coalitions lining up early endorsements and outside money, while challengers court tenants, small businesses, and first-time voters on housing costs, public safety, transit, and tech regulation. Age and generational change will be a quiet litmus test, but so will style—committee-room dealmaker versus street-level organizer—and positions on hot issues like civil liberties, campus speech, and U.S. policy abroad.

        In a safe blue district, the question isn’t red vs. blue; it’s whether voters stick with the familiar network that delivers grants and projects, or roll the dice on new blood that says the machine has gotten comfortable and the city needs sharper oversight and faster results.

        Nadler’s exit doesn’t just open a New York seat; it shifts the balance inside Congress. Seniority is the currency of committee power, and when a long-timer leaves, gavels and subcommittee slots start moving. That matters for what the House actually does: which judges get hearings, what antitrust or tech-speech bills advance, how hard Judiciary pushes on Section 702 surveillance, whether Supreme Court ethics or gun measures get real markup, and how aggressive subpoenas and investigations become.

        As more older members step down after the 2024 cycle, both parties are re-setting their playbooks—Republicans aligning oversight with a tougher border and social-media agenda, Democrats weighing younger voices on voting rights, privacy, and housing costs. The practical effect could be fewer backroom deals and more high-visibility hearings, with committee chairs using investigations and must-pass bills to set the narrative—and the next round of leadership tests happening in the committee rooms, not just the cable hits.

        What’s next is part policy, part politics: Nadler says he’ll finish his term and keep working his core issues—courts, civil liberties, tech oversight—while quietly shaping the race by endorsing a successor and steering donors. The 2026 filing deadlines and primary calendar will lock in the field, and early money plus union and community endorsements will matter more than slogans. Expect national groups to test-message the district on housing costs, public safety, speech on campus, surveillance and privacy, antitrust, and foreign policy—turning a safe blue seat into a referendum on the party’s next chapter. Voters will have a clear choice between experience and a fresh start, and the outcome will signal whether Democrats want a committee-room dealmaker or a street-level organizer setting the tone for the next Congress.

         

         

        Complete reference list

        https://nadler.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=397402

        https://apnews.com/article/jerry-nadler-congress-new-york-779e361dc5d13a007cd96ab6a3bb1f27

        https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/democratic-rep-jerry-nadler-seek-reelection-2026/story?id=125186644

        https://www.cbsnews.com/news/democratic-rep-jerry-nadler-retire-congress/

        https://rollcall.com/2025/09/02/nadler-wont-seek-reelection-to-manhattan-house-seat/

        https://www.axios.com/2025/09/02/nadler-retire-2026-democrats-ny

        https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/02/democratic-congressman-jerry-nadler-retires

        https://www.thecity.nyc/2025/09/02/manhattan-democrat-jerry-nadler-reelection-congress/

        https://www.c-span.org/person/jerry-nadler/26159/

        https://ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/politics/2025/09/03/rep--nadler--a-liberal-stalwart--announces-retirement-after-30--years-in-congress

        https://www.congress.gov/congressional-record

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Nadler

         

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        After the Sweep: Where Do People Go?

         

         Trump’s vow to “clean out” homeless encampments in Washington and “lock up criminals” lands like a law-and-order thunderclap, but it also hints at a federal show of force that dodges the hard parts:

         

        I'm all for cleaning up the city of crime and homelessness... But where are all the homeless going? What is going to happen to them?

         

         Housing, treatment, and due process. He’s reportedly readying National Guard deployments—something he’s leaned on elsewhere—framed as restoring safety even as D.C.’s mayor says there isn’t a crime spike. Supporters hear strength and finally-someone-in-charge; critics hear mass sweeps, pretext arrests, and a federal end-run around local control that will balloon costs and court fights. Evictions without beds push people block to block; Guard troops on city streets blur lines between policing and the military; and “jail the criminals” risks treating poverty as a crime while the root problems—addiction, mental health, and unaffordable housing—go untouched. If this becomes policy, expect legal challenges over civil liberties and command authority, plus a political test: is the goal safer neighborhoods—or a televised crackdown that looks tough while the underlying crisis grows back the morning after?

        People don’t just disappear because a press conference says “clean up.” In practice there are only a few places folks can go, and each path has very different outcomes:

        1. Sweep-and-jail
          If police clear encampments without adding beds, most people get pushed block-to-block. Some are cited or jailed for low-level offenses (trespass, camping bans, warrants from unpaid tickets). Short jail stays usually mean lost ID/meds/contacts and higher overdose risk after release. It “looks cleaner” for a week or two, then the camp reappears somewhere else.

        2. Shelter surge (short-term)
          Cities can open 24/7, low-barrier shelters (pets/couples allowed, storage, no curfew) and motel voucher programs. This works only if there are enough beds, transportation to them, and on-site caseworkers who can immediately replace IDs, schedule medical/behavioral evaluations, and start housing paperwork. Done right, it stabilizes people; done poorly, it’s churn.

        3. Housing-first with services (durable)
          Permanent supportive housing (a lease + onsite care), rapid rehousing (12–24 months rent help), and master-leased hotels or single-room occupancies actually end street homelessness for many. Pair that with treatment on demand (detox, MAT for opioid use, mental-health beds), mobile crisis teams, medical respite beds after hospital stays, and “safe parking/safe outdoor sites” as an interim option with security, hygiene, and a guaranteed path into housing.

        If leaders really want cleaner, safer streets that stay clean, the “cleanup” has to include:
        • A bed for every person displaced that night (and it must be low-barrier).
        • Intake tents at the cleanup site: medical triage, ID replacement, benefits, and housing navigation on the spot.
        • Storage and retrieval for belongings (so people don’t lose meds, documents, or work tools).
        • Daily treatment slots reserved (detox/MAT/psych) and transport to them.
        • Fast-track housing: master-lease entire hotels/floors, convert vacant offices, use landlord incentives, and set move-in targets by week, not month.
        • Clear metrics the public can see: people housed, shelter utilization, OD reversals, police/fire calls, and encampments closed with placements—not just cleared.

         

        So “where do they go?”—either into a revolving door of displacement and jail, or into beds and leases with support. The results depend on whether the plan funds the second path. If you want, tell me your city and I’ll sketch a concrete, 90-day action plan (beds needed, likely sites, cost ballpark, and who does what) you can send your councilmember.

         

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        Denied Over Gaza: Two U.S. Senators Say Israel Blocked Their Airdrop Flight

         

        Senators Chris Van Hollen and Jeff Merkley said Israel refused permission for them to enter Gaza and also denied authorization to join a Jordanian humanitarian airdrop that would have flown over the Strip. They posted video from a Jordanian air base describing “man-made starvation” and said the overflight was blocked; multiple outlets reported the same on Aug. 30–31, 2025.

         

        The U.S. senators said they couldn’t even ride along on a Jordanian airdrop. That tells you how tightly Israel is controlling what outsiders can see over Gaza.

         

        Israel can argue “security” and airspace deconfliction, but the effect is the same: keep independent American eyes off a place the senators called “man-made starvation.”

         

        When lawmakers with oversight on aid and arms can’t witness conditions firsthand, it shields policy from tough questions back in Washington—about how food is moving, who is blocking routes, and whether U.S. support is enabling a siege rather than relief. It also turns access into leverage: if flights, crossings, and timing all require Israeli approval, then images, data, and testimony get filtered at the source. Supporters will say this prevents weapons smuggling and protects pilots; critics see a pattern—control the sky, control the story, and limit the pressure for a ceasefire or accountability. Either way, denying elected officials a seat on a humanitarian overflight raises a simple, uncomfortable question: if everything is above board, why bar the people who write the checks from looking down?

        Overflight permission isn’t a paperwork detail—it’s the master switch. Because Israel controls Gaza’s sky, every airdrop route, altitude, and time window needs its green light, and a single “no” can ground the whole mission. Supporters say that’s basic sovereignty and wartime safety: crowded airspace, active drones and jets, and the risk of smugglers hiding weapons among aid mean tight control is non-negotiable. But critics see a choke point that does more than manage traffic—it decides what help gets in, when cameras are overhead, and who can verify conditions on the ground. Narrow corridors and shifting “safety windows” can slow flights for days; pre-clearance can be used to favor some drops and block others; and by owning the skies, Israel can shape both the flow of food and the flow of information. In short, whoever controls the airspace controls the pace of relief and the public record of what’s happening below.

        By asking to see the airdrops up close, the senators weren’t chasing a photo opthey were trying to verify how aid actually moves, where it gets stuck, and whether U.S. support is speeding deliveries or enabling a bottleneck. Their updates about hunger in Gaza, plus same-week calls on Capitol Hill to surge baby formula and reopen crossings, show a basic oversight goal: ground truth over talking points. Seeing operations firsthand lets them compare manifests to what lands, check flight paths and drop zones, and track “last-mile” delivery into warehouses and neighborhoods. If access is blocked, the debate in Washington leans on filtered briefings instead of hard data, and real fixes—like more crossings open longer hours, simpler inspections, fuel guarantees for bakeries and hospitals, and GPS-logged convoys—are easier to delay. That’s why they pushed to get eyes on the process: to tie U.S. dollars and arms to measurable results—food in stomachs, medicine on shelves—rather than promises that can’t be tested.

        Israel did not issue a detailed public statement on the overflight denial in these reports. In general, Israeli officials say strict air and ground controls are needed to prevent weapons smuggling and to deconflict crowded skies during military operations. Those controls can include limits on flight paths, drop zones, and schedules for foreign airdrops. 

        When Israel offers only a broad “security” explanation and no detailed reason for denying an overflight, the rulebook becomes whatever officials say it is that day. Deconfliction and anti-smuggling are real concerns in a war zone, but without public criteria, timelines, or an appeal process, those same controls—flight paths, drop zones, and narrow time windows—can double as levers to slow aid and keep outside observers from seeing conditions. Tight skies can be about safety, or they can be about shaping what gets delivered and what gets documented. When denials line up with high-profile visits, it looks less like air traffic management and more like information management. The fix isn’t complicated: clear standards, neutral monitors on flights, shared tracking logs, and published reasons for any rejection. Until then, “security” will read like a catch-all that blocks food, facts, and oversight at the same time.

        The reaction split fast and predictably: advocacy groups urged more members of Congress to demand access, ride along on aid flights, and publish what they see, arguing that sunlight is the only way to fix chokepoints and stop starvation. Media friendly to Israel said the senators’ framing ignored real threats, defending strict inspections and tight airspace rules as basic wartime safety and a check against weapons smuggling. In the middle, the story bled into policy: committees floated audits of aid delivery, proposals to tie U.S. assistance to measurable benchmarks like open crossings and fuel flows, and calls for independent monitors on flights. Supporters of the senators say that’s exactly the point—oversight with teeth—while critics warn that grandstanding from Washington can snarl deconfliction and put crews at risk. Either way, the push for a ceasefire and faster deliveries kept growing, and the fight over who gets to verify facts on the ground became a proxy for a larger question: do security rules protect civilians, or do they also control the narrative and delay relief?

         

        Reference Links

        https://x.com/ChrisVanHollen/status/1961865773632159852

         https://x.com/SenJeffMerkley/status/1962488496741847483

         https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/jordan-uae-drop-aid-into-gaza-first-airdrop-months-jordanian-source-says-2025-07-27/

        https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-applauds-u-s-senators-van-hollen-merkley-for-attempting-to-enter-gaza-during-middle-east-humanitarian-trip-calls-on-more-u-s-lawmakers-to-follow-suit/

         https://www.jns.org/democratic-senators-say-israel-barred-their-entry-to-gaza/

         https://katu.com/news/local/senators-merkley-and-van-hollen-call-for-ceasefire-during-middle-east-visit-jeff-chris-maryland-oregon-portland-dc-washington-israel-west-bank-palestine-egypt-jordan-humanitarian-aid-organization-ceasefire-hostages-netanyahu-donald-trump-foreign-affairs

         

        https://www.gov.il/en/departments/coordination-of-government-activities-in-the-territories/govil-landing-page

         https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/airlines-keep-avoiding-middle-east-airspace-after-us-attack-iran-2025-06-22/

        https://x.com/SenJeffMerkley/status/1961144004789088318

         https://x.com/ChrisVanHollen/status/1961865773632159852

         https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/30/senators-demand-baby-formula-aid-gaza

        https://www.hrw.org/report/2017/04/02/unwilling-or-unable/israeli-restrictions-access-and-gaza-human-rights-workers

         https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/why-gazas-rafah-border-crossing-matters-why-egypt-is-keeping-it-shut-2023-10-17/

         https://scholarlypublications.universiteitleiden.nl/access/item%3A3620106/view

          https://x.com/ChrisVanHollen/status/1961865773632159852

         https://x.com/SenJeffMerkley/status/1962488496741847483

         https://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/58/1262/552212/War-on-Gaza/War-on-Gaza/Israel-blocks--US-senators-from-joining-Gaza-aid-a.aspx

         https://www.dawn.com/news/1938673/us-senators-say-israel-denied-their-entry-to-gaza-participation-in-airdrop-flight

         https://katu.com/news/local/senators-merkley-and-van-hollen-call-for-ceasefire-during-middle-east-visit-jeff-chris-maryland-oregon-portland-dc-washington-israel-west-bank-palestine-egypt-jordan-humanitarian-aid-organization-ceasefire-hostages-netanyahu-donald-trump-foreign-affairs

         

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        Ceasefire Offered, Then Disputed: Israel’s Changing Stance as Genocide Is Declared by Leading Scholar

         

        When you watch this unfold, it’s hard not to feel like the mask slipped and the word “civilized” lost its meaning; a lot of people are traumatized, and the old team jerseys don’t matter when civilians are being crushed. Left and right can meet at first principles: no genocide, no collective punishment, no silencing of dissent, no erasing people from their homes, and no special rules for the powerful.

         If land can be taken by force and paperwork, it becomes a blueprint others will copy, and the frontier of abuse keeps moving. The antidote is simple, old-fashioned, and American: due process, equal protection, freedom of speech and press, the sanctity of the person, and real accountability for officials—applied consistently, even when it’s inconvenient for “our side.” 

        That means demanding an end to attacks on civilians, full access for aid, independent investigations with consequences, the safe return of the displaced, and negotiated guarantees that stop the cycle instead of just pausing it. You don’t have to change your politics to stand there; you only have to decide that human life and the rule of law are non-negotiable.

         From that ground, people who never agreed on much can still lock arms and say: not in our name, not with our money, and not to anyone, anywhere.

        Over the last year, the main ceasefire plan for Gaza has followed a simple path

         

        Israel Moves First: War with Iran About to Erupt | COL. Douglas Macgregor

         

        Over the last year, the main ceasefire plan for Gaza has followed a simple path: the United States announced an Israeli-backed, three-phase proposal in mid-2024; the U.N. Security Council endorsed it; and by January 2025 the White House said a ceasefire-and-hostage deal had been reached. Yet in practice, Israel’s government later disputed or delayed key terms, which is why some observers now say Israel “rejected its own deal.” At the same time, the International Association of Genocide Scholars issued a formal resolution saying Israel’s campaign in Gaza “legally constitutes genocide,” while the world’s top court has not made a final ruling but ordered Israel to prevent genocidal acts. 

         

        Israel doing the slaughter bombing starving and they are the one crying victim. Are they insane?

        Israel Rejects Its Own Peace Deal, Genocide Declared Officially

         

        What was in the plan? The Security Council’s Resolution 2735 (June 10, 2024) welcomed a three-phase process: an immediate six-week ceasefire with hostage–prisoner exchanges, Israeli withdrawal from populated areas, scaled humanitarian aid, and steps toward reconstruction. President Biden described the same framework and later announced a ceasefire-and-hostage deal in January 2025, noting staged exchanges and negotiations for a second phase.

        On paper, Resolution 2735 sounded clean and simple—pause the fighting for six weeks, trade hostages and prisoners, pull Israeli forces out of crowded areas, ramp up aid, then move toward rebuilding—but the fine print left room for delay and leverage. “Withdrawal from populated areas” didn’t spell out who controls border corridors or tunnels, so either side could slow the clock while saying they’re complying.

        Phased exchanges turned people into bargaining chips, making every list, route, and verification a new standoff. “Scaled humanitarian aid” depended on checkpoints and security reviews that could be tightened or loosened at will, and “steps toward reconstruction” were tied to promises about demilitarization and oversight that no one fully trusted. When President Biden later announced a deal built on this same framework in January 2025, backers called it a pathway to calm; skeptics saw a face-saving script that let leaders claim progress while keeping options open for more strikes, more conditions, and more negotiations that go in circles.

        Where did the “rejects its own deal” line come from? In September 2024, amid protests, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he would not join ceasefire talks unless Israel kept control of Gaza’s Egypt border corridor, a condition outside the spirit of the plan’s withdrawal language. Through August 2025, Israel told mediators it would respond to a new Hamas-accepted truce proposal but pressed demands and timelines that slowed movement, including immediate release of all remaining hostages. 

         https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/19/israel-to-respond-by-friday-gaza-truce-plan-hamas

         https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2025/aug/19/aid-ship-food-gaza-cyprus-israel-middle-east-crisis-latest-updates-news

         

        Israel specializes in targeting civilians, says Prof Seyed Marandi, in the wake of the martyring of almost the entire Yemeni cabinet. It can celebrate it all it wants but Israel is despised across the world.

        INTERVIEW: This Israeli regime has no future in the Middle East

         

        Israel’s position has been that any ceasefire must ensure Hamas cannot rearm, that border control and tunnel destruction are addressed, and that hostages are released on firm terms. Reports show these conditions—especially control over the Philadelphi Corridor and sequencing of releases—became the main sticking points after the broader framework won diplomatic support.

        Israel frames its conditions as basic security needs—no rearmament for Hamas, control of the border, destroyed tunnels, and hostages released on clear terms—but each piece also works like a lever that can stall any truce. Control of the Philadelphi Corridor isn’t just about weapons; it’s a pressure point that lets Israel decide what crosses in or out, while “tunnel destruction” requires open-ended operations underground that rarely fit neat timelines. The sequence of releases turns people into bargaining chips: if one side doubts the other’s next step, everything pauses. To supporters, these safeguards prevent another October 7 and force real demilitarization before aid and rebuilding scale up. To skeptics, they look like moving goalposts—conditions broad enough to keep Israeli forces in key zones, ration humanitarian access, and delay withdrawals while leaders say they’re still “working the plan.”

        The September 1, 2025 vote by the International Association of Genocide Scholars doesn’t put Israel on trial, but it does put a clear label on what many officials avoided saying out loud. Their resolution says the Gaza campaign meets the legal definition of genocide in the 1948 Convention, which raises a practical question for other governments: if there’s a serious risk of genocide, they must act to prevent it, not just issue statements. That pressure can show up fast—in court filings, calls to condition or halt arms transfers, export-license reviews, sanctions debates, and divestment pushes by universities and pension funds. Israel rejects the charge and says it targets Hamas, not civilians; supporters of Israel call the vote biased and political. Backers of the resolution point to mass civilian deaths, forced displacement, starvation warnings, and the wrecking of basic services as signs of intent. The bottom line is that this expert vote won’t end the war by itself, but it will be cited in every major argument from here on out—by judges weighing complicity claims, by lawmakers deciding aid, and by allies deciding whether they can keep saying “business as usual” while the bombs keep

        The International Court of Justice hasn’t decided the genocide case yet, but its January and May 2024 orders changed the ground rules: the judges said there’s a “plausible” risk of genocidal acts and told Israel to prevent them, open the way for aid, stop and punish incitement, preserve evidence, and report back on what it’s doing. That’s not a final guilty verdict, but it’s not a suggestion either—these are binding steps that trigger duties for other countries, too. Governments that keep supplying weapons or political cover now have to explain how they’re not helping a “plausible” crime, which is why you’re seeing lawsuits, export reviews, and calls to pause arms transfers. Israel says it targets Hamas and follows the law; critics point to collapsed services, aid blockages, and mass displacement as signs the orders aren’t being met. The bottom line is simple: even without a final ruling, the court raised a legal red flag, and the world is expected to act like it matters. 

        The International Criminal Court track targets people, not states, so warrants for Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Gallant mean prosecutors believe there’s evidence that specific crimes may have been committed—and that those two bear responsibility. 

        Even if Israel rejects the ICC’s authority and the U.S. punishes court officials, the warrants still matter: they can limit travel to countries that cooperate with the court, complicate diplomacy, and push allies to review arms transfers and intelligence sharing. Supporters of the warrants say this is how the law should work—no leader is above it, and accountability can deter future abuses. 

        Critics argue the court is politicized, that Israel has its own investigations, and that dragging wartime decisions into The Hague will only harden positions and prolong the conflict. Either way, judges’ refusal to withdraw the warrants keeps the pressure on: evidence must be preserved, victims’ testimony protected, and governments that say they back the rule of law will be asked if their policies match their words.  

        Supporters of Israel’s approach argue that any pause without firm security guarantees would leave Hamas in place and hostages at risk, so hard conditions are necessary even if they slow the deal. Critics counter that Israel initially backed the framework, then moved the goalposts, and that the gap between public diplomacy and battlefield policy has prolonged suffering in Gaza while eroding trust in negotiations. 

        https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/4051310?v=pdf

         https://www.securitycouncilreport.org/un-documents/document/s-res-2735.php

         https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/24/families-flee-gaza-city-as-israel-vows-to-press-on-with-offensive

        What to watch next is whether the latest truce proposals are accepted without new preconditions, how humanitarian access changes on the ground, and how courts and governments act on the scholars’ genocide declaration and existing legal orders. These decisions will shape whether the ceasefire framework turns into a lasting stop to the war or becomes another plan that stalls in practice.

          https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/19/israel-to-respond-by-friday-gaza-truce-plan-hamas

         https://www.icj-cij.org/case/192

         

        Complete reference list

        https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/4051310?v=pdf

        https://www.securitycouncilreport.org/un-documents/document/s-res-2735.php

        https://bidenwhitehouse.archives.gov/briefing-room/speeches-remarks/2025/01/19/remarks-by-president-biden-on-reaching-a-ceasefire-and-hostage-deal/

        https://bidenwhitehouse.archives.gov/briefing-room/speeches-remarks/2025/01/19/remarks-by-president-biden-on-the-ceasefire-and-hostage-deal-north-charleston-sc/

        https://www.defense.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/article/4032622/biden-announces-ceasefire-deal-between-hamas-israel-in-farewell-address/

        https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/amid-massive-protests-across-israel-netanyahu-rejects-calls-to-reach-cease-fire-deal

        https://www.pbs.org/video/amid-protests-netanyahu-rejects-calls-to-reach-cease-fire-1725315875/

        https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/19/israel-to-respond-by-friday-gaza-truce-plan-hamas

        https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2025/aug/19/aid-ship-food-gaza-cyprus-israel-middle-east-crisis-latest-updates-news

        https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/24/families-flee-gaza-city-as-israel-vows-to-press-on-with-offensive

        https://www.ft.com/content/470b61ff-aa1c-487f-a9ae-477b5c142a53

        https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/sep/01/israel-committing-genocide-in-gaza-worlds-top-scholars-on-the-say

        https://www.icj-cij.org/node/203447

        https://www.icj-cij.org/node/204091

        https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2024/01/gaza-icj-ruling-offers-hope-protection-civilians-enduring-apocalyptic

        https://www.icc-cpi.int/news/situation-state-palestine-icc-pre-trial-chamber-i-rejects-state-israels-challenges

        https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/icc-judges-reject-israels-request-withdraw-netanyahu-arrest-warrant-2025-07-16/

        https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/02/imposing-sanctions-on-the-international-criminal-court/

        https://www.un.org/unispal/document/sc-9650th-meeting-10jun24/

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3x_2M9V-3Gc

         

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        President Trump “is going to back Israel’s decision no matter what they do.” Lindsey Graham’s Unusually Close Alignment With Netanyahu

         

        Taken together, Graham’s recent comments paint a clear pattern: he isn’t just backing Israel—he’s urging Washington to act as enforcer. Saying in Tel Aviv that Hezbollah should be disarmed “by military force” if it won’t comply, that “Hamas needs to go…this year,” and that President Trump will “back Israel’s decision no matter what they do,” signals a blank-check posture that sidelines debate. 

         

        Senator Lindsey Graham has a troubling history with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

         

        A day earlier he called defeating Hamas “non-negotiable” and told Lebanon that promises to disarm Hezbollah must be matched by action, pushing the region toward choices made with jets and tanks rather than negotiations. On Meet the Press, his Tokyo-and-Berlin analogy implied total war followed by reconstruction—an endgame measured in rubble and years, not weeks. 

         

        He even floated economic punishment for Norway over its sovereign fund’s Caterpillar decision, showing that pressure won’t stop at borders or battlefields. Read as a whole, this is a roadmap where U.S. policy tracks Israeli preferences on pace, targets, and tools—raising the stakes for a wider fight with Iran’s network, squeezing dissent at home and abroad, and treating questions about cost, law, and limits as obstacles to be cleared rather than problems to be solved.

         

        Here are Senator Lindsey Graham’s most recent on-the-record remarks about Israel (newest first), with dates:

        • Aug. 29, 2025 — In Tel Aviv, he said Hezbollah should be disarmed “by military force” if it will not disarm voluntarily, and added that “Hamas needs to go and they need to go this year.” He also said President Trump “is going to back Israel’s decision no matter what they do.” 

        • Aug. 28, 2025 — In an interview published the same week, he called defeating Hamas “non-negotiable and urged that it be done “as soon as possible,” while welcoming Lebanon’s stated goal of disarming Hezbollah but warning that “words must be followed by action.” 

        • Jul. 27–28, 2025 — On NBC’s Meet the Press, he predicted Israel would “do in Gaza what we did in Tokyo and Berlin — take the place by force, then start over again,” framing it as a shift to end the war with Hamas. Multiple outlets carried the quote and clip. 

        • Jun. 22, 2025 — Asked about Iran on Meet the Press, he relayed messages from Prime Minister Netanyahu and said that if he were Israel, he “would have [pursued regime change in Iran] a long time ago,” while adding he did not foresee U.S. ground troops. 

        • Aug. 29, 2025 — Related to Israel policy, he criticized Norway’s sovereign wealth fund for excluding Caterpillar over ties to Israeli operations and suggested the U.S. consider tariffs or visa limits in response. 

         

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        Why Land Acknowledgements Are Spreading In California Schools — And Why Some People Push Back

         

        In many California classrooms and campus meetings, educators now start with a land acknowledgement that names the local Indigenous people and recognizes their historic and ongoing ties to the area. This practice has grown across K-12 districts, community colleges, and universities over the last few years as part of broader efforts to teach local history and promote respect. 

         

        In many California classrooms and campus meetings, land acknowledgements now open the day by naming local Native nations and affirming that the campus sits on their ancestral territory—but critics say the ritual often functions less as education and more as signaling. They argue it can blur legal realities by implying all property is unsettled or illegitimate, and sometimes pressures students to assent to a political claim they haven’t studied. Supporters counter that it’s a simple first step toward honesty about place and history, yet skeptics note the pattern: lofty statements followed by little change, while the acknowledgements themselves are used to justify new mandates or branding without funding real partnerships. A practical middle path is doable—tie any acknowledgement to concrete actions students can see: primary-source lessons on local treaties and missions, paid talks with tribal historians, fieldwork co-led by tribes, land-access MOUs for cultural use, and scholarships or research grants funded by institutions that occupy that land. This keeps the message in the classroom from becoming a checkbox or an oath—and turns it into work that actually teaches, builds relationships, and benefits living Native communities.

        California’s state Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum gives teachers examples and context, noting that some educators begin lessons by acknowledging they are on Native land and naming the specific peoples connected to that place. This is not a statewide legal mandate to recite a statement, but it is guidance many districts draw from when shaping local practice.   

         

        LA County Land Acknowledgement

         

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        Looking Again at the Obama Certificate Controversy

         

        Dec 15, 2016 President-Elect Donald Trump is back-pedaling on earlier claims that President Obama's birth certificate is a fraud. Now one of Trump's biggest supporters, outgoing Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, is making headlines once again over the issue.

        WOW: Sheriff Joe Arpaio Releases New Information on President Obama's Birth Certificate (FNN)

         

         

        Was the Obama Certificate Controversy Swept Under the Rug to Avoid Embarrassment?

         

        Arpaio’s Claims & Timeline

        2012 (March–July)

        In March 2012, Sheriff Joe Arpaio and his "Cold Case Posse" announced they believed Obama’s long-form birth certificate, released by the White House in April 2011, was a computer-generated forgery and possibly fraudulent

         

        In 2012, Sheriff Joe Arpaio and his volunteer “Cold Case Posse” shook things up when they claimed that Barack Obama’s long-form birth certificate wasn’t just suspicious, but looked like a digital fabrication.

        They pointed to layers in the PDF file, odd inconsistencies in the typeface, and what they called “copy-and-paste” elements that suggested the certificate had been assembled on a computer rather than scanned from a real document. To them, this wasn’t a sloppy clerical error but evidence of intentional deception, and they argued it was part of a larger cover-up at the highest levels of government.

        While officials in Hawaii quickly dismissed their claims as baseless, Arpaio’s team insisted that the anomalies were too precise to be explained away as mistakes, fueling the idea that the public was being shown a carefully crafted image designed to look legitimate, not an authentic piece of historical record.

        By July, Arpaio declared at a public briefing that the birth record was “definitely fraudulent.” 

        Arpaio doubled down in a public briefing, telling the crowd that Obama’s birth record was “definitely fraudulent,” leaving no room for doubt in his words.

        He argued that his team’s analysis showed patterns and digital markers that couldn’t have come from a simple scan of a paper document, but instead pointed to deliberate tampering.

        Arpaio painted the picture of a government willing to present a doctored file as fact, raising questions about who had the power to produce such a document and why it was allowed to stand unchallenged. For those listening, it wasn’t just about one certificate—it suggested the possibility of a deeper deception, where layers of authority worked together to protect an official story while hiding the real truth.

        2016 (December)

        Arpaio persisted, claiming his team had identified “9 points of forgery” in the digital image of the certificate and planned to forward this evidence to federal authorities.

        Arpaio refused to let the matter die, insisting that his investigators uncovered “9 points of forgery” in the digital image of Obama’s birth certificate.

        He claimed these points showed telltale signs of manipulation—misaligned letters, repeated elements, and digital layers that suggested parts of the document were copied and pasted from other sources. Rather than treating it as a simple curiosity, Arpaio framed it as a smoking gun, saying the odds of all these irregularities happening by accident were virtually impossible. 

        He announced that his findings would be sent to federal authorities, hinting that powerful figures might be forced to answer how such a questionable document had been presented to the American people as proof of legitimacy.

        2018 (March)

        As a U.S. Senate candidate, Arpaio reiterated with confidence, “We 100% proved that’s a fake document."

        When Arpaio later ran for the U.S. Senate, he didn’t back away from his earlier claims—instead, he leaned into them with even greater certainty, declaring, “We 100% proved that’s a fake document.” He spoke as if the case was already closed, treating the supposed evidence gathered by his team as undeniable proof of a cover-up.

        By repeating the claim on the campaign trail, Arpaio tied his political identity to the idea that powerful people had orchestrated a deception and gotten away with it. His words suggested that the issue wasn’t just about where Obama was born, but about how far institutions would go to protect their chosen figurehead, raising the possibility that the truth had been deliberately buried under layers of official approval and media silence.

         
        Arizona GOP Senate candidate Joe Arpaio says he has no regrets for his previous statements
        questioning the legitimacy of former President Barack Obama's birth certificate.
         


        Official Response & Reality Check

        Hawaii officials—including the Attorney General’s office—responded that President Obama was born in Honolulu and the birth certificate is valid. They described Arpaio’s allegations as “untrue, misinformed and misconstrue Hawaii law.”


        Hawaii officials quickly fired back, with the Attorney General’s office insisting that Obama was born in Honolulu and that his birth certificate was fully valid, brushing off Arpaio’s claims as “untrue, misinformed and misconstruing Hawaii law.” To critics, this strong dismissal looked less like a calm clarification and more like a defensive move meant to shut down debate before it spread further. 


        Instead of addressing the technical details Arpaio’s team raised, Hawaii’s response focused on authority—asserting their word as final rather than proving point by point why the irregularities meant nothing. For those skeptical of official narratives, this reaction only deepened suspicions, suggesting that government officials were circling the wagons to protect a story they couldn’t afford to unravel.


        Arizona state leaders, such as Governor Jan Brewer and Secretary of State Ken Bennett, also dismissed the claims and affirmed the document’s authenticity.


        Arizona’s own leaders, including Governor Jan Brewer and Secretary of State Ken Bennett, moved quickly to dismiss Arpaio’s claims and declare Obama’s birth certificate authentic. To many, this looked like party lines didn’t matter—officials from both sides were eager to put the controversy to rest. But skeptics argued that such a rapid dismissal without public hearings or independent investigations suggested political convenience more than certainty. 


        By affirming the document’s legitimacy outright, Arizona leaders signaled they had no interest in stirring a national crisis, yet their refusal to even entertain Arpaio’s evidence fueled the idea that maintaining stability and avoiding embarrassment took priority over digging deeper into uncomfortable questions.
        Multiple courts and official verifications have repeatedly confirmed Obama's citizenship and the legitimacy of his birth documentation.

         

        Bottom Line
        Yes, Arpaio never let go of his charge, hammering the same points again and again—calling the birth certificate “definitely fraudulent,” pointing to supposed “points of forgery,” and claiming his team had nailed down proof. Official voices answered back with blanket reassurances that the document was real, that the case was closed, and that the courts had already settled the matter. 


        But the question that lingers is whether these responses were genuine refutations or just a way to smother the controversy before it caused deeper cracks. When authorities rely on declarations of credibility rather than transparent, line-by-line dismantling of the evidence, it leaves room for doubt. 


        Was the so-called “credible evidence” upheld by officials actually the full story, or was uncomfortable material swept aside to protect a presidency from destabilizing questions?



        Related news


        Axios
        Joe Arpaio's most controversial moments
        Aug 25, 2017


        Vanity Fair
        The Conception of the Birther
        May 24, 2012



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