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‘Where are all the workers?’ BlazeTV’s Sara Gonzales exposes potential H-1B visa fraud in Texas

BlazeTV host Sara Gonzales appears to have uncovered a rash of possible H-1B visa fraud in the Lone Star State.

“If you thought Somalian day-care fraud was a problem, it turns out that’s just the tip of the iceberg,” said Gonzales. “There’s a whole new problem that it turns out is taking tens of thousands of jobs away from Americans and changing our communities forever that you probably haven’t even thought of. I’m talking about H-1B visas.”

The H-1B visa program enables U.S.-based employers to temporarily hire foreign workers into specialized positions that American citizens supposedly can’t do. H-1B specialty occupation workers are generally admitted for a period of up to three years, which can in most cases be extended for another three years.

‘I’m not buying it.’

While the H-1B is a nonimmigrant visa, it paves the way for foreigners to obtain permanent residency in the country.

Lawmakers from both parties have in recent years expressed concerns about H-1B visa fraud and abuse, proposing amendments to the Immigration and Nationality Act that would reform or even abolish the program.

Amid chatter online about serial abuse of the program in Texas, Gonzales began scrutinizing H-1B employers operating in her region, two of which didn’t pass the smell test.

One of the two companies, which appears in the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ H-1B Employer Datahub as Qubitz Tech Sysystems [sic] LLC, had 12 H-1B beneficiaries approved last year. The company, whose visa job contact is Hari Madiraju, has apparently been hiring “software developers” from abroad for years.

RELATED: Woke Whitmer appointee from Nigeria admits to day-care scam, stealing millions from Michigan taxpayers

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Gonzales went to the address listed for Qubitz in Frisco, Texas — a four-bedroom house in a residential neighborhood where a man responding to “Hari” answered the door.

In footage of the encounter, Hari appears greatly vexed by Gonzales’ presence and even more so when she asks about Qubitz and its H-1B visa workers.

The moment that Gonzales mentions Qubitz, Hari announces that he is calling the police.

“I would love for the cops to come out here,” says Gonzales.

“Are the workers in here? Are the 12 workers for your company in here? Do they work out of here?”

Hari indicates that the workers are located at his “company.” When Gonzales asks where his company is, Hari appears to tell the 911 operator, “Somebody is knocking on my door and then they are like threatening me. … Please, can you help me?”

Gonzales later paid a visit to the supposed Qubitz office Hari suggested was headquarters for his dozen or more workers only to find a prison-cell-sized room with a single chair and some folding tables.

“Pretty cramped working quarters for 12 H-1B workers,” said Gonzales. “I’m not buying it.”

3Bees Technologies Inc., which is listed as active on the Texas Comptroller website, similarly raised eyebrows.

According to the H-1B Employer Datahub, the company — whose agent, director, and president is Vamsi Krishna Vajinapally — had 27 H-1B beneficiaries approved in 2022 and 19 visa petitions apparently denied the following year.

While the visas approved in 2022 for Vajinapally’s foreign workforce — which at one time supposedly comprised software developers, software quality assurance analysts, and software engineers — are apparently no longer valid, Gonzales was nevertheless surprised to find little evidence the recipients had a legitimate workplace to leave behind.

The BlazeTV host visited the location listed as the company’s address in Irving, Texas. As with Qubitz, she found a house in a residential neighborhood.

After finding no discernible evidence of people working at the location during business hours and receiving passing insight from a neighbor that something shady was afoot on the block, Gonzales traveled to the recently updated Plano address on the 3Bees website.

At that location, Gonzales found a building under construction, devoid of signs of office workers and software development. Gonzales indicated that while the location is currently being transformed into a social club, the location was formerly a WeWork, a remote office space that anyone can rent.

Gonzales indicated that Vajinapally of 3Bees has attempted to hire H-1B workers for another supposed tech business whose alleged Texas-based office is another rentable virtual office in Lewisville.

Qubitz and 3Bees did not respond to Blaze News’ request for comment.

“Once you start scraping data from H-1B databases, you start seeing immediately all of these patterns,” said Gonzales.

“The biggest question I have right now is: If we were able to find this with just a little bit of Google-searching and follow-up, why hasn’t USCIS done anything to combat this?”

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​Fraud, Scam, Sara gonzales, Blazetv, Somalia, Fraudsters, India, Indian, Texas, Irving, Plano, Frisco, H-1b, H-1b visas, Visas, Immigration, Politics 

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Trump announces ‘framework’ of ‘great’ deal with NATO on Greenland

After months of threats and recriminations, President Donald Trump announced that he has reached a “framework” of a deal on Greenland with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

The president made the announcement on social media Wednesday after speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

‘This solution, if consummated, will be a great one for the United States of America, and all NATO Nations.’

“Based upon a very productive meeting that I have had with the Secretary General of NATO, Mark Rutte, we have formed the framework of a future deal with respect to Greenland and, in fact, the entire Arctic Region,” the president wrote. “This solution, if consummated, will be a great one for the United States of America, and all NATO Nations.”

He added that he would revoke the threat to impose tariffs on eight nations after reaching the deal. The tariffs had been scheduled to go into effect February 1.

“Additional discussions are being held concerning The Golden Dome as it pertains to Greenland,” he added, referring to a missile defense system proposal.

Earlier in the day, he argued that annexing Greenland was essential to U.S. security as well as that of the Western Hemisphere.

“Greenland is a vast, almost entirely uninhabited and undeveloped territory. It is sitting undefended in a key strategic location between the United States, Russia, and China,” he said in his speech.

“This enormous, unsecured island is actually part of North America — on the northern frontier of the Western Hemisphere,” he added. “That’s our territory. It is therefore a core national security interest of the United States of America — and in fact, it’s been our policy for hundreds of years to prevent outside threats from entering our hemisphere.”

RELATED: Bessent slaps down Newsom at Davos: ‘He’s here with his billionaire sugar daddy, Alex Soros’

The president said that Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and special envoy Steve Witkoff would lead the negotiations on the deal.

The president has also said he would focus less on peace in his tactics on Greenland after the Nobel Committee snubbed him for the Peace Prize.

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‘The Emperor vs. the Twink’: Joe Allen attacks the transhumanoids

“I gotta start out with a confession,” Joe Allen said. “Human beings get on my f**king nerves.”

He paused for effect. “I think the only creatures on earth more annoying are mosquitoes, AIs, and robots.”

It was an unexpected confession from a man who has spent the post-COVID years as a sort of John the Baptist for the cause of the human race. Joe Allen, a contributor to Steve Bannon’s War Room and author of “Dark Aeon,” has been on a speaking tour, warning against the machinations of tech titans and how they intend to turn the human race into a sort of human/machine hybrid, a mix of genetically optimized meat meshed with artificial intelligence.

A comprehensive worldview where humanity either upgrades or disappears.

Here’s the thing: They really believe in this stuff, and Joe has the receipts. Heady stuff for a Thursday night in Nashville.

The Emperor and the Twink

Allen frames the transhuman future around two figures he calls “the Emperor and the Twink”: Elon Musk and Sam Altman. Augustus and Hadrian. The productive empire-builder and the more, as Allen puts it, “degenerate” aesthete.

Both are building toward the same goal through different paths: a future where humanity merges with machines or gets left behind. Maybe eliminated entirely.

Altman’s funding a start-up called Conception that would let two men produce biological children together through synthetic ova. He’s backing Genomic Prediction for algorithmic eugenics. Scraping embryos for height, IQ, looks, then selecting the “best” ones. “Sanitized eugenics,” Allen calls it. “At scale, it would be an algorithmic filter for humanity.”

Then there’s the AI work itself. OpenAI and ChatGPT aren’t just productivity tools. They’re the foundation for what Altman believes will be artificial superintelligence. First the little-g gods, then maybe the big-G God. Artificial general intelligence self-improving into something that makes humanity obsolete.

RELATED: Cash-starved OpenAI BURNS $50M on ultra-woke causes — like world’s first ‘transgender district’

Photo by AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

To keep humans relevant in that future, Altman’s pushing World ID: biometric iris scans linking your eyeballs to a government ID and blockchain cryptocurrency. “One of the many tentacles,” Allen said, “of the vast digital beast system slowly strangling the life out of everything we once knew to be human.”

He’s also invested in Merge Labs, ultrasound systems to read brain waves and create higher-bandwidth communication with AI. A chance for some biological humans to keep up when the machines take over.

The South African car dealer

Musk presents himself as the alternative. The “based” option. xAI is the competitor to OpenAI’s “woke” ChatGPT, because when we’re all consulting chatbots to determine what’s racist or sexist, you’ll want “maximally truth-seeking” AI that hasn’t been neutered by progressive ideology.

Fair enough. But the destination’s the same.

Neuralink is the centerpiece. First sold as healing technology, helping the paralyzed walk and the blind see. But Musk’s open about the long-term plan: hundreds of millions of normal humans drilling holes in their skulls to install high-bandwidth interfaces with AI. “If I’m not to be emperor,” Allen said, “I’ll at least be cooler than the gaybies wielding drones and flamethrowers around me.”

Then there’s Optimus: the humanoid robots Musk promises will outnumber humans three or four to one within a decade or two. “Algorithmic immigrants,” Allen calls them, “coming across the border from the platonic realm of mathematical possibilities and swarming into reality.”

Right now, they can barely fold laundry. But if the vision succeeds, we’ll be surrounded by entities that can do everything we can do, only better. Which raises an obvious question: What are we for?

Race, robots, and religion

Allen organized his talk around three concepts: race, robots, and religion. Or as he rephrased it: bloodline, cultural transmission, and cosmic worldview. Genes, memes, and spirit.

The bloodline question is straightforward enough when it comes to Altman’s synthetic reproduction technology. But it applies more broadly. Who continues? What survives? The transhumanist vision explicitly embraces what Allen calls “cultural and perhaps even biological genocide”: the gradual or rapid replacement of biological humans by superior cyborgs and AI.

“First the coders, then white-collar workers, then blue-collar workers,” Allen said, echoing Musk and Altman’s own predictions. “We’re left completely economically unviable. Obsolete.”

The robots are the mechanism. They’ll do our work. They’ll fill our needs. They’ll provide “radical abundance.” A world where no one has to labor, where everything is taken care of, where we live as pets or preserve species while the AI spreads through the solar system and beyond.

Or we get turned into biofuel. “Better to reconfigure our atoms into robot components,” Allen notes, “than keep us around using up resources as pets.”

The religion part is where it gets really dark. This isn’t just technology. It’s theology. The conscious creation of artificial gods to rule over us or replace us entirely. A “sacred canopy” that fills the void in a godless universe.

Allen quotes Bryan Johnson, whom he describes as a vampire who injects his son’s blood to stay young, laying out the five goals every ambitious man should have: Found a company, found a country, found a religion, don’t die, become God.

“It’s a bold claim,” Allen said dryly. “I am somewhat skeptical.”

The war against humanity

Championing humanity doesn’t come naturally to Allen. He grew up in the hollers of Appalachia, developing “a keen sense of misanthropy and technophobia,” where he related better to the trees and streams than to people.

But we have to put that aside for what Allen sees as a war. “If we’re not going to be replaced by machines, if we are not to become robotic entities ourselves, it’s going to require a certain degree of tolerance for humanity.”

He means accepting human messiness. Human imperfection. The “dirtiness and nastiness of humanity” that makes us frustrating but also makes us us. Because the alternative is accepting that machines really are superior. That Silicon Valley’s wealthiest men, backed by the most powerful governments on earth, are right about where we should go.

“Everyone is going to have to make a choice,” Allen said. “Accept the status quo or reject it outright.”

The rejection requires something most of us aren’t good at: forgiving people we disagree with. Looking past differences. Banding together. “When you are fighting a hyper-cooperative superorganism,” Allen said, “you’re going to need a gang.”

Allen argued that human solidarity, even with people whose beliefs or lifestyles or sins we can’t stand, is the only viable resistance to algorithmic replacement.

“That person is a human being,” he said, “and you will have to put humans first.”

The prophets

At one point, Allen pitched a satirical product: transhumanist trading cards. Each card would feature a prominent figure in the movement (or occasionally an anti-transhumanist). Statistics like net worth, number of concubines, humans replaced. A small stick of gum “alternately dosed with LSD or nanobots.”

It was a bit. But like good satire, it made a point: These people have names. Sigmund Freud, who prophesied humanity becoming “a kind of prosthetic God.” Julian Huxley, who coined the term transhumanism to describe a human race taking control of its own evolution through technology. Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, the priest who saw technological civilization as the face of Christ incarnating on earth.

Then the modern saints: Ray Kurzweil and the singularity. Peter Thiel, the accused vampire with rumored interest in young-blood transfusions. Ben Goertzel with his leopard print cowboy hat, giving “dire prophecies of machines taking over with a kind of jolly glee.”

And of course, Yuval Noah Harari. “Looking like the demonic dark elf that he is,” Allen said. “So often quoted, almost never understood, but probably the greatest anti-tech propagandist of our time. Which goes to show you how stupid people are that they believe he’s a transhumanist himself.”

The point isn’t the cards. It’s that these aren’t random technologists tinkering in garages. They’re building toward a vision. A comprehensive worldview where humanity either upgrades or disappears.

We’re already transhuman

Allen’s message is bleak enough that you want to dismiss it as paranoia. Nobody’s actually going to drill holes in billions of skulls. Sam Altman’s not really going to create algorithmic master races. This is science fiction, not policy.

Except they’re building it right now. They’re funding it. They’re selling it. They’re openly stating these goals.

Allen compared it to communism. An insane vision that seems impossible until you realize people really believed it and acted on it and reshaped the world trying to achieve it. The reality that emerged wasn’t the utopian dream, but it killed tens of millions of people and enslaved hundreds of millions more.

“These futures that these guys are putting forward,” Allen said during the Q&A, “some approximation already exists. A greater degree of approximation will exist, and you just simply have to draw your lines where you will.”

Here’s the uncomfortable part: Most of us have already crossed some lines. We’re already cyborgs, as Allen admits. Smartphones, wearables, the constant digital interface with our brains. The question isn’t whether to engage with technology. It’s where the sacred boundary sits. How much is too much.

Allen compared it to having “a pristine, simple cyborg on one shoulder and a very smelly Amishman on the other. And you’re never going to be either of those things, but they’re always vying for your decisions, trying to steer you one way or the other.”

Fair enough. But the cyborg has enough cheerleaders. We need more people willing to LARP as armed Amishmen.

The middle path

Allen was asked: Is there a peaceful way to interface with these technologies? Some middle path between full rejection and full adoption?

“I’m no fundamentalist,” he said. “These sacred boundaries are really important, but they’re always going to be bound against.”

His line for himself: zero use for AI in creative work. Anyone using AI to write, compose music, or create images should list the model alongside their name “as a mark of shame for being a hack and basically a vessel for an algorithmic parasite.”

That’s harsh. But it’s a clear boundary. And it matters because the question isn’t just about capabilities. It’s about what makes us human and what makes work meaningful. Whether the polished precision of algorithmic output is worth losing the messy, opaque, human quality of actual creation.

Allen mentioned reading “Paradise Lost” and finding the confusing passages charming “because they’re self-evidently the personal creation of John Milton.” The alternative is flawless, efficient, and utterly dead.

Allen mentioned James Poulos, a tech thinker he respects, who takes a different approach. Poulos argues we need to “identify the tools that are of use to you to protect against this sort of nightmare future” while cultivating deeply religious life and communities. But crucially, “not to reject technology out of hand and see it as somehow inherently evil.” It’s a middle path that acknowledges we’re already compromised but still draws meaningful boundaries based on what actually serves human flourishing.

What happens next

Allen’s not optimistic about avoiding horror. “I don’t suspect maybe that won’t be the case,” he said when asked about preventing a high-tech repeat of 20th-century atrocities. He sees deepfakes and AI erosion of trust requiring “a hyper-vigilant posture in which we don’t trust anything at face value.”

His advice: Cultivate human relationships with people you trust. Develop channels where the person on the other end is verified. “Hope for the best. I’m not going to say all of us are going to make it. But enough of us are going to make it.”

But here’s the thing he said that stuck with me: “This war against humanity, this war in favor of machines and more particularly in favor of the men who own the machines — this isn’t something that will be solved or concluded in our lifetimes. This is something that began long before we were born, will continue long after we die.”

If you care about your children or other people’s children, you have to accept this isn’t ending anytime soon.

Allen closed by urging us to write our own futures. Not to accept the vision laid out by Musk, Altman, and the rest. “Write it boldly,” he said. “Write it without apology. Write it beautifully. And for God’s sake, write it in a way that is not cliché or irritating.”

Then he added, “Because I don’t think I can take any more.”

The question now is what we do about it. Whether we have the will to resist the most powerful technological and financial forces on earth. Whether we can tolerate each other enough to band together. Whether we can draw our sacred boundaries and hold them.

Allen’s asking us to make a choice. I don’t know what mine is yet. But I know that men like Altman and Musk aren’t waiting for us to decide.

They’re building the future right now. Whether we like it or not.

Memento mori

You might expect Joe to be an angry misanthrope, but nothing could be further from the truth. I’ve known Joe for a few years now, and he’s quite possibly the most upbeat, happy-go-lucky guy I know. Always the life of the party, always a joy to hear speak, and a walking encyclopedia of esoterica.

After his talk, I was talking to folks in the crowd who would ask, “How did he memorize all that?” The thing about Joe is that he is always “on.” What you see on stage is what you see in person: a happy warrior riding full bore into existential dread with a grin and a devil-may-care attitude.

I asked Joe how he’s able to retain such a sunny disposition in the face of seemingly insurmountable darkness. “Memento mori: In the end, it’s all a momentary drama,” he told me.

​Tech, Sam altman, Elon musk, Transhumanism 

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Texas female allegedly flies into rage at gym, throws 25-pound weight at another woman as possible love triangle boils over

Things allegedly got ugly at a Texas 24 Hour Fitness earlier this month when authorities said a 25-year-old female became enraged after spotting another women she believed was involved with her boyfriend.

Deputies with the Precinct 4 Constable’s Office said Aralyn Martinez grabbed a 25-pound weight plate and rushed toward the other woman who was working out on the floor of the gym in Spring, KHOU-TV reported. Spring is about 30 minutes north of Houston.

‘Now the boyfriend & the victim are enjoying date night while she’s in lockup. Do better.’

Cellphone video deputies reviewed reportedly shows Martinez threatening to drop the weight on the woman before throwing it toward her head, the station said.

The woman was able to move out of the way just in time, avoiding serious injury, KHOU reported.

Precinct 4 Capt. Juan Flores told the station that other gym users intervened and were able to calm the situation before it escalated further.

Martinez left the gym shortly after the confrontation but was later arrested, KHOU said.

RELATED: Texas yoga teacher who murdered love rival and fled country seeks retrial, pushing victimhood narrative

Image source: Harris County (Texas) Constable Precinct 4

Martinez is charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, a felony, the station said, adding that she has since been released on a $1,000 bond.

As part of her bond conditions, Martinez was ordered to stay at least 200 feet away from the home and workplace of the alleged victim, KHOU said.

Authorities added to the station that Martinez and the other woman did not know each other personally before the incident.

“Not very often with weights and not very often at a gym,” Flores remarked to KHOU regarding the unusual case.

“We do know a 25-pound weight, or any weight … can be a deadly weapon considering where you hit the person.”

RELATED: Deadly love triangle: Michigan woman accused of murdering ‘best friend,’ they had been brawling for days over the same man

Commenters under KHOU’s video report about the incident were incredulous over the bond amount — among other issues:

“That bond is ridiculously low,” one commenter said. “These courts don’t hold very much respect for human life. She tried to kill someone.””Hold up, she could’ve killed her, and she got a $1,000 bond?” another commenter inquired.”Only $1,000 to repeat it successfully next time,” another commenter observed. “How nice, always for the criminals.””There’s an epidemic of people [who] can’t control their emotions,” another commenter noted.”Goofy. Now the boyfriend & the victim are enjoying date night while she’s in lockup,” another commenter wrote. “Do better.”

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EXPOSED: First Muslim Texas lawmakers push Islamic values

Democrats Salman Bhojani and Dr. Suleman Lalani are the first-ever Muslims to be elected to the Texas legislature — and BlazeTV host Sara Gonzales is sounding the alarm that their presence is more insidious than Texans might think.

“They were both born in Pakistan. They were both, by the way, sworn in as Texas House representatives with the Quran, which, in my opinion, shouldn’t be allowed. And they’re both attempting to implement Islamic laws, values, morals, principles, honor into our state,” Gonzales explains.

“They’re both running again for re-election in the Democrat primaries. … I want to show you what they just did — both did and attempted to do in the last legislative session,” she continues.

Lalani has put forward several resolutions that concern Gonzales, like HR32, recognizing “Pakistan Day” at the Capitol.

“Now, again, it’s a resolution. It’s very informal. You know, you might say, ‘Well, it doesn’t really mean much.’ Well, actually it does. Actually it does — that the Republicans in the state of Texas would go along with this. Actually it does, because this is not about freedom of religion,” Gonzales explains.

“In Pakistan, sex outside of marriage is illegal. The punishment for that particular offense ranges from up to five years in prison for minors to 100 lashes for unmarried adults to — it could be as severe as stoning to death for married adults,” she says.

“And because the majority of citizens believe in Islam and Sharia law, including law enforcement, there’s actually a lot of things that happen that are technically illegal, but they just kind of cover their eyes and let it happen,” she continues, pointing out that this covers “honor killings.”

Honor killings occur usually when a woman or girl is perceived to have brought shame on her family by her actions. A male typically carries one out by murdering the girl or woman for her actions.

“By the way, child marriage? Fine in Pakistan,” Gonzales comments, disturbed.

“Data from the National Police Bureau indicates that at least 405 women fell victim to honor crimes during the year. Domestic violence accounted for at least 1,641 cases of murder and 3,385 cases of beating,” she reads from a report. “That’s what the culture is like over in Pakistan.”

Another piece of the report Gonzales refers to covers the story of a Christian man who was badly beaten by a mob after being accused of “blasphemy” and died from his injuries shortly after.

“Can’t be Christian there. You can’t say anything. You better not say anything bad about Allah or Muhammad, else you get killed in Pakistan. And acid attacks are also a thing there, of regular occurrence,” she explains.

“By the way, journalists are mysteriously killed. If you criticize the government, if you criticize any of the leaders, you might just mysteriously end up unalived. Also, you’re not allowed to protest the government. If you’re a citizen and you protest the government, you may actually just poof, disappear,” she continues.

“Hearing what the culture in Pakistan is all about, hearing what it’s like in this Islamic state, the Islamic state of Pakistan … are any of those values that you align with?” she asks. “I’m guessing the answer is no. So why did the Texas House honor Pakistanis on Pakistan Day?”

Want more from Sara Gonzales?

To enjoy more of Sara’s no-holds-barred takes on news and culture, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

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Islamic sports event tied to designated terrorist group prompts Gov. Abbott to put pressure on Texas school district

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) is taking action in response to a public school district’s alleged plan to use its facilities for an event sponsored by a designated foreign terrorist organization, according to a letter obtained by Blaze News.

The Islamic Games Houston 2026 is scheduled to be held in Cypress, Texas, in September or October, according to the event’s website. The event will feature several competitive sports, including basketball, soccer, a charity run, track, and swimming.

‘Texans expect immediate action to curb the spread of Islamic extremism, and public facilities funded by their tax dollars will not be utilized to benefit terrorist organizations.’

While the event webpage notes that the date and location of the games are still being determined, it features an aerial map of Sprague Middle School and Bridgeland High School, unified campuses in the Cypress Fairbanks Independent School District. The map of the schools’ properties indicates where attendees can enter, register, pray, grab food, and participate in the various sporting events.

According to an archived version of the Islamic Games Houston 2025, Bridgeland High School and Sprague Middle School hosted the games last year.

The website previously listed the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ New Jersey chapter as a sponsor but has since removed the organization’s logo. Abbott designated CAIR and the Muslim Brotherhood as foreign terrorist and transnational criminal organizations in November. CAIR has pushed back against the governor’s designation.

On Wednesday afternoon, Abbott’s office sent a letter to the Cypress Fairbanks Independent School District demanding it “immediately preserve all records and communications concerning this event.”

“You must confirm with my office within seven days of receiving this letter that any negotiations or agreements for this event have been terminated. If you fail to do so, I will direct the Texas Education Agency to immediately seize and uncover any communications direct employees may have regarding CAIR, any attempts to conceal CAIR’s involvement, and any agreements or financial statements related to the proposed event,” Abbott wrote.

He stated that he would also direct the Texas Education Agency to refer any of its findings to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton for possible legal action.

RELATED: ‘Total ban’ on Sharia law is on the horizon, Texas Gov. Abbott tells Glenn Beck: ‘That will pass overwhelmingly’

Photo by John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images

In the letter to the school district, Abbott accused CAIR-NJ of praising “Hamas’ slaughter of innocent civilians.”

“You cannot invite such dangers through the front doors of our schools. In fact, state law requires public schools to prohibit illegal activities from taking place on school property. It is obvious, then, that you may not use taxpayer-funded public facilities to host events sponsored by a designated terror organization. To do so would violate your duty to taxpayers and the safety of students. Radical Islamic extremism is not welcome in Texas — and certainly not in our schools,” Abbott wrote.

“Texans deserve immediate action to curb the spread of Islamic extremism, and public facilities funded by their tax dollars will not be utilized to host terrorist related groups,” he added.

The Islamic Games’ website also indicated that it was slated to host the 2026 Dallas event at a school within the Grapevine-Colleyville Independent School District on May 9 and 10. However, the district told Blaze News that the reservation for the facility “was still in negotiation review and not yet finalized.”

“On January 19, GCISD was made aware that an organization listed as a sponsor of the Islamic Games in North Texas has been declared a Terrorist Organization by the Governor of Texas. Texas Government Code § 2252.152 states that, ‘[a] governmental entity may not enter into a governmental contract with a company identified as a foreign terrorist organization,'” Nicole Lyons, GCISD’s executive director of communications, told Blaze News.

“Thus, GCISD provided notice that it is severing the negotiations for the use of District properties for the 2026 Islamic Games,” Lyons added.

Abbott’s letter to CFISD noted that GCISD “rightfully” announced it had severed negotiations and encouraged CFISD to do the same.

RELATED: Gov. Abbott talks redistricting victory, action against CAIR with Glenn Beck

Greg Abbott. Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images

A spokesperson with CAIR-NJ told Blaze News that its chapter “fully supports” the Islamic Games but noted that the group typically sponsors the events held in New Jersey.

“This one is outside of our state,” the spokesperson stated.

The Islamic Games have upcoming events outside Texas, including in New Jersey, Ontario, Illinois, Maryland, and Michigan.

CFISD and the Islamic Games did not respond to a request for comment.

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‘The kind of nerds that will save the union’: HHS’ very own ‘Bert and Ernie’ read online roasts about their work

While the Minnesota fraud scandal and ensuing investigation are nothing to joke about, two Health and Human Services officials took a moment out of their busy schedules to share some “unsolicited commentary” about their job performance.

On Wednesday morning, HHS Deputy Secretary Jim O’Neill and assistant secretary of the Administration for Children and Families Alex Adams stepped in front of the camera to respond to the humorous feedback they have received from those paying attention to their work.

“Protecting state and federal child care dollars and holding Governor Walz accountable, courtesy of Bert and Ernie,” read a caption to the video.

— (@)

‘This is what I want my government to be.’

The two officials took turns reading comments from viewers.

“Why does this feel like a late-night class-action lawsuit commercial? ‘Do you or a loved one have mesothelioma? Call 1-800 …'” O’Neill read.

RELATED: Trump administration sends Democrats into hysterics by freezing funding to 5 blue states over fraud concerns

Photographer: Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images

“They look like injury-claim lawyers that have the nickname ‘the Hammer’ on a billboard in rural Indiana,” Adams read out loud.

“These are the kind of nerds that will save the union,” O’Neill said.

“I’m getting strong Bert and Ernie energy,” Adams said.

“You’re Bert,” O’Neill joked.

A lengthier comment said, “These dorks are amazing. They found policies that enable the massive fraud, they’re stopping it, and they got in front of a camera to explain it to us. This is what I want my government to be.”

In a final comment, Adams read, “I love these guys. The vibe feels like ‘behind the camera’ people being told they need to wear a suit tomorrow.”

The fraud investigation was helped by the outpouring of information into HHS’ tip line at childcare.gov, where they said that they had quickly received more than 500 tips for their investigation.

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‘Stupid people’: Trump gives European allies tough love during Davos speech

President Donald Trump addressed the annual World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday and had a tough message for a rapidly transforming Europe.

Trump began his message by lamenting the direction Europe is going. Trump pointed out that by most metrics, Europe is shrinking where it should be growing.

‘That’s why issues like energy, trade, immigration, and economic growth must be central concerns to anyone who wants to see a strong and united West.’

“The consequences of such destructive policies have been stark, including lower economic growth, lower standards of living, lower birth rates, more socially disruptive migration, more vulnerability to hostile foreign adversaries, and much, much smaller militaries,” Trump said.

He also referred to European leaders as “stupid people” for buying Chinese-made windmills and other “Green New Scam” materials instead of investing in more efficient means of energy.

“You’re supposed to make money with energy, not lose money,” he quipped.

RELATED: ‘Have some godd**n balls’: Newsom posts bizarre meltdown video about Trump from Davos

Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Despite the jab, President Trump reminded these European leaders that the United States is deeply vested in the future and well-being of their countries.

“The United States cares greatly about the people of Europe. We really do. I mean, look, I am derived from Europe. Scotland and Germany. … We believe deeply in the bonds we share with Europe.”

“As a civilization, I want to see it do great. That’s why issues like energy, trade, immigration, and economic growth must be central concerns to anyone who wants to see a strong and united West.”

Trump called for a stark reversal of European decline: “Europe and those counties have to do their thing. They have to get out of the culture that they’ve created over the last 10 years. It’s horrible what they’re doing to themselves. They’re destroying themselves … these beautiful, beautiful places.”

“We want strong allies, not seriously weakened ones. We want Europe to be strong,” Trump concluded.

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​Politics, Trump, President trump, Davos, Wef, World economic forum, Donald trump, Europe, Davos switzerland, Immigration, Energy, Strong europe, West, Western civilization 

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Trump blasts mass migration from ‘failed’ foreign countries in fiery rebuke: ‘Minnesota reminds us’

President Donald Trump delivered a scathing rebuke of mass migration, pointing to Minnesota as a cautionary tale.

During his Wednesday speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Trump warned of the dangers and destabilization caused by mass migration. As in many European countries, whose leaders were in attendance, migrants have flooded the United States by the millions, many of them taking advantage of social programs, committing crimes, and failing to assimilate.

‘We have to defend that culture.’

Trump pointed to Minnesota as a prime example of the failures of mass migration, noting the immense fraud and cultural disruption brought about by Somalian immigrants.

“The situation in Minnesota reminds us that the West cannot mass-import foreign cultures which have failed to ever build a successful society of their own,” Trump said.

RELATED: Trump administration halts visas for 75 nations whose people gobble up American welfare

Michael Siluk/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

“We’re taking people from Somalia, and Somalia … it’s not a nation,” Trump said. “Got no government. Got no police. Got no military. Got no nothing.”

Trump went on to criticize Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, a Somalian immigrant.

“She comes from a country that’s not a country,” Trump said. “And she’s telling us how to run America. Not going to get away with it much longer.”

RELATED: Woke Whitmer appointee from Nigeria admits to day-care scam, stealing millions from Michigan taxpayers

Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg via Getty Images

“The explosion of prosperity, in conclusion, and progress that built the West did not come from our tax codes. It ultimately came from our very special culture,” Trump said. “This is the precious inheritance that America and Europe have in common. We share it. We share it, but we have to keep it strong.”

“We have to defend that culture and rediscover the spirit that lifted the West from the depths of the Dark Ages to the pinnacle of human achievement,” Trump said.

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Jimmy Kimmel and late-night hosts torch comedy with Epstein and anti-Trump rants

Whether it’s Jimmy Kimmel’s increasingly unhinged rhetoric or carbon-copy monologues from all the late-night hosts accusing President Trump of having a relationship with Epstein — comedy has taken a serious nose dive.

And BlazeTV host Stu Burguiere is among those getting a little tired of it.

“Late-night hosts have come to this place where now they seemingly, anytime Trump does anything, they just accuse it as being somehow tied to the Epstein files,” BlazeTV host Stu Burguiere tells film critic and reporter Christian Toto on “Stu Does America.”

“Jimmy Kimmel … he’s one of the smallest, and he obviously had this big back-and-forth with the president where he tried to be Mr. Tough Guy, and he was praised by Hollywood and the left for this,” he continues.

“He’s calling him a maniac for not only just killing people overseas but killing an unarmed 37-year-old woman during the ICE operation. He put a shirt on TV that said Donald Trump is going to come kill you. This is a man who’s almost been assassinated multiple times,” he adds.

“Yeah, squint all you want. You’re not going to see comedy,” Toto responds. “That’s not even the point at this point.”

“You know, the thing that makes me really sad about the culture at large is that I think it was 2017, Kathy Griffin put up that fake Trump head, you know, it was bloody, it was disgusting. And collectively, as a culture, we recoiled, and her career just vanished overnight,” he continues.

However, while Griffin’s move was career-ending, Toto points out that today no one would bat an eye.

“I think people on the right would blink for sure, and they’d be upset about it, but I think center-left people, people who just go about their day-to-day business, I don’t think anyone would bat an eye. … And Jimmy Kimmel is part of the reason why,” he says, adding, “And what he’s doing is wildly irresponsible.”

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​Blaze media, Blaze news, Blaze online, Blaze originals, Blaze podcast network, Blaze podcasts, Blazetv, Camera phone, Christian toto, Comedy, Epstein, Free, Hollywood, Jeffrey epstein, Jimmy kimmel, Kathy griffin, President trump, Sharing, Stu burguiere, Stu does america, The blaze, Upload, Video, Video phone, Youtube.com 

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Scott Bessent slaps down Newsom at Davos: ‘He’s here with his billionaire sugar daddy, Alex Soros’

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent issued a rhetorical beatdown against Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Newsom is trying to expand his national and global profile for the sake of a possible presidential campaign in 2028 and used the forum to criticize President Donald Trump. On Wednesday, Bessent issued a strong rebuke of the Democrat.

‘Shame on him. He is too smug, too self-absorbed, and too economically illiterate to know anything.’

“I think it’s very, very ironic that Governor Newsom — who strikes me as Patrick Bateman meets Sparkle Beach Ken — may be the only Californian who knows less about economics than Kamala Harris,” said Bessent.

“He’s here this week with his billionaire sugar daddy, Alex Soros. And Davos is the perfect place for a man who, when everyone else was on lockdown, when he was having people arrested for going to church, he was having thousand-dollar-a-night meals at the French Laundry [restaurant],” he added.

“My message to Governor Newsom,” Bessent said, “is the Trump administration is coming to California, we are going to crack down on waste, fraud, and abuse.”

He went on to list California’s problems, including homelessness, the mass exodus of residents, a massive budget deficit, and continued fallout from the devastating Palisades fire a year ago.

“Shame on him. He is too smug, too self-absorbed, and too economically illiterate to know anything,” he concluded.

“Let me know if you need any further clarification!” he added.

RELATED: Scott Bessent has joined the effort to uncover funders of Antifa violence, White House says

.@SecScottBessent in Davos: “I think it’s very, very ironic that Newsom — who strikes me as Patrick Bateman meets Sparkle Beach Ben — may be the only Californian who knows less about economics than Kamala Harris. He’s here this week with his billionaire sugar daddy, Alex Soros.” pic.twitter.com/9BmdpaebEd
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) January 21, 2026

President Donald Trump also spoke at Davos and defended his campaign to annex Greenland while touting the state of the economy under his leadership.

“Greenland is a vast, almost entirely uninhabited and undeveloped territory. It is sitting undefended in a key strategic location between the U.S., Russia, and China,” said the president.

“It is a core national security interest of the U.S. — and in fact, has been our policy for hundreds of years to prevent outside threats from entering our hemisphere,” Trump added.

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​Scott bessent, Bessent vs gavin newsom, Trump at davos, Newsom for president, Politics