Suspected provocateur specifically stated, ‘We’re here to storm the capitol. I’m not kidding.’ In a new mini-documentary diving into Jan. 6, investigative journalist Lara Logan [more…]
The first trillionaire: SpaceX goes public — and it’s not just Elon Musk who’s striking it rich
Both Elon Musk and his company SpaceX broke records on Friday, while bringing thousands of uplifting stories along with it.
Not only has SpaceX, founded in 2002, finally gone public with a massive opening on the NASDAQ, but with it, everyday employees’ lives are changed forever.
‘… from engineers to Cafeteria workers.’
SpaceX’s IPO has successfully raised $75 billion, making Musk the world’s first trillionaire, officially. Outlets including Reuters have reported that the company — now trading under SPCX — will boost Musk’s net worth to more than $1.1 trillion due to his controlling shares.
With him will come new millionaires in the thousands. More than 4,000 people will see a huge financial boost from the offering, which has been reported to include even cafeteria workers who have long held on to stock in the company.
Musk shared a post on X that stated the IPO will “create 4,400 new Millionaires, from engineers to cafeteria workers. God bless Capitalism.”
Although the SpaceX owner has already distributed the wealth in that sense, he has made more shares available than is typical of most IPOs; more than 20% of available shares are reserved for retail investors, according to Yahoo.
RELATED: Mamdani announces new city office that sounds just like DOGE — and gets nailed with mockery
Adam Gray/Bloomberg/Getty Images
SpaceX’s successful round of $75 billion more than doubles the previous highest market debut from 2019, from Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil company, that raised $29.4 billion.
The record-setting raise makes SpaceX the largest IPO launch in history with a valuation of $1.77 trillion, per Yahoo Finance.
Musk had been estimated to have a net worth of $782 billion as recently as Thursday, which still had him as the richest person in the world pre-trillionaire status. He has almost three times the wealth of Google co-founder Larry Page.
RELATED: America’s most powerful AI superchips may be in China’s hands
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP/Getty Images
Musk told JPMorgan Chase during a livestream last week that SpaceX had been cash-flow positive since around 2015; however, the company reported $18.67 billion in revenue in 2025 but incurred a $4.94 billion net loss.
The entrepreneur added that SpaceX is raising capital for “a significant growth phase” that includes plans to put over 100,000 satellites into orbit and build AI data centers in space.
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News, Spacex, Elon musk, Stock market, Tech
‘You called a guy a Nazi for years; then you elected one’: Stu and Dave react to Platner victory
Despite multiple controversies coming to light over the past few months, Maine Senate hopeful Graham Platner has secured the Democratic nomination in his state — winning a whopping 72% of the vote and defeating state governor Janet Mills.
Among those controversies was an account on an app known for sexual predators; a Nazi tattoo; and abuse and cheating allegations from women he has dated.
But on election night, Platner spun the recent controversies to a crowd of supporters by harping on “love and redemption.”
“Love and redemption. Redemption is not just some simple or easy destination. It’s a journey. I’ve made mistakes in my life. Mistakes that I regret, that I live with. That I continue to learn from. I’m still far from perfect,” Platner said.
“Every day I wake up, and I try to be a little bit better and a little bit kinder than I was the day before. And if you give me the chance, I will be a senator for the people who cannot afford to buy a senator,” he added.
“You called a guy a Nazi for years; then you elected one,” BlazeTV host Dave Landau tells co-host Stu Burguiere on “Stu and Dave Do America.” “It’s just ironic.”
Stu agrees, pointing out that the left even called Charlie Kirk a Nazi.
“So let’s get a guy with a Nazi tattoo,” he says, before recalling an article written by the Free Press on Platner, which he says catches Platner in “another pathological lie.”
Despite uncovered text messages showing that Platner had a romantic relationship with one of his accusers, Platner claimed they didn’t even date.
“Obviously not a casual relationship,” Stu says, explaining that many of the various resurfaced text messages were from 2025 — which was “approximately six weeks before he launched his senatorial campaign.”
“The last message he sent was right before he launched his campaign. Could there be anything more transparent? … It’s like Jeffrey Epstein coming off of his first, you know, arrest, and saying, ‘Well, he’s saying he’s a better guy and there’s not much more going on,’” he continues.
“You don’t run that guy for office,” he says. “There’s something going on, and we’re going to learn more about it, I’m sure.”
Want more from Stu and Dave?
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Dave landau, Free press, Graham platner, Janet mills, Jeffrey epstein, Maine, Nazi, Sexual predators, Stu burguiere, Stu and dave do america
Clinton judge brazenly gives White House ultimatum over Trump’s anti-weaponization fund
U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema has told the Trump administration that unless it provides statements denying the establishment of the “anti-weaponization” fund, a lawsuit would continue against the president.
The lawsuit against the fund was filed by the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, which has argued that the billion-dollar fund was just another mechanism for the president to pay off his friends and allies.
‘This is about seeking accountability for all Americans who were victims of lawfare and weaponization.’
President Donald Trump has touted the need for the $1.8 billion anti-weaponization fund to compensate Americans who have been unfairly prosecuted by the government, including J6ers.
The fund was created in a settlement after the president dropped his lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service over the leak of his tax documents.
Administration lawyers argued that the issue was moot, citing testimony from acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, who told members of the U.S. House that it would not go through. However, he would not provide a written statement saying the same.
“We are not moving forward with the fund. Period,” Blanche said.
Brinkema cited statements from the president to cast doubt on that argument and called on both Blanche and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to provide concrete statements against the fund’s creation. She gave the administration a week to provide her with a declarations under penalty of perjury that the fund would not be established.
Democrats in the Senate also tried to pass a provision against the anti-weaponization fund in an ICE funding bill but were denied by Republicans.
“This is about seeking accountability for all Americans who were victims of lawfare and weaponization: millions of Americans whose online speech was censored at the behest of the government, parents silenced at school boards, Senators whose records were secretly subpoenaed, churchgoers targeted by the FBI, and so on,” reads a description of the fund from the Justice Department.
RELATED: Video shows Nancy Pelosi exploding with fury at reporter over Jan. 6 claims: ‘SHUT UP!’
The Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington excoriated the fund in a statement accusing the president of “brazen” corruption.
“By settling his absurd $10 billion lawsuit against his own administration, Trump and the Justice Department just engaged in the most brazen act of self-dealing in the history of the presidency, and did so quickly in order to avoid the scrutiny of the judicial process, while quite likely violating the Constitution’s Domestic Emoluments Clause in the process,” a CREW statement reads.
“This is one of the single most corrupt acts in American history,” the group concluded.
Brinkema is 81 years old and was nominated to the court by former President Bill Clinton.
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Anti-weaponization fund, President donald trump, Federal judge, Politics
‘Government shouldn’t subsidize poor journalism’: Politico axes key news brand after losing millions in federal subscriptions
Just over a year after President Donald Trump’s administration instructed the federal government to cancel several media outlet subscriptions, Politico announced that it is sunsetting one of its news brands.
The federal government spent over $8 million in 2024 on Politico-related subscriptions.
‘The government shouldn’t subsidize poor journalism.’
In Feb. 2025, the White House directed the General Services Administration to “pull all contracts” for Politico and its stand-alone energy and environment brand, E&E News. Other government agencies, including the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of Veterans Affairs, also canceled their subscriptions to Politico’s services.
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin announced last year that he had terminated over $1 million in annual media subscriptions, including nearly $460,000 for the EPA’s membership to Politico and E&E News.
“Best $458,919 we ever saved on behalf of taxpayers,” an EPA spokesperson told Blaze News. “The government shouldn’t subsidize poor journalism, and it’s a stinging indictment of the previous administration that they wasted so many hard-earned American tax dollars keeping this outlet afloat.”
Robert Alexander/Getty Images
Politico pushed back against criticism that the federal government was subsidizing the media through subscriptions. The outlet released a statement in 2025 insisting that it has “never received any government funding” in the form of subsidies, grants, or “handouts.” It noted that “most” of Politico Pro and E&E News subscribers are in the private sector.
Despite insisting that Politico has “no financial dependence on the government,” the outlet laid off 3% of its staff, including E&E News journalists, in Jan. 2026, according to Semafor.
Politico acquired E&E News in Dec. 2020, aiming to “reach a large new audience of subscribers.” Yet, approximately 16 months after the Trump administration began canceling media subscriptions, Politico announced it is closing the stand-alone brand.
RELATED: Trump orders another federal agency to axe media contracts amid Politico controversy: Report
KENZO TRIBOUILLARD/AFP/Getty Images
Politico framed the sunsetting of E&E News as a strategic restructuring move that consolidated its U.S. Politico Energy and E&E teams “into a single powerhouse.” The announcement did not mention any revenue pressure, but framed the changes as a “new chapter.”
“Beginning in September, we are modernizing how we deliver our energy and environmental policy journalism and launching a more focused, high-impact portfolio of daily news and intelligence products,” Politico wrote.
“As part of this shift, E&E News will no longer operate as a separate brand. Its journalism and expertise will be fully integrated into POLITICO’s energy and environment portfolio of stories, briefs, analysis, and newsletters,” it continued.
Politico did not respond to a request for comment.
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News, Politico, Donald trump, Environmental protection agency, Epa, General services administration, Gsa, Usda, Department of veterans affairs, Lee zeldin, Energy, Politics
Child Well-Being Declines in 29 States Post-Pandemic, Report Says
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A Catholic company was using AI — but a message from the pope made the company change course
A Catholic company with an “extremely popular” product said it has decided turn away from using artificial intelligence, no matter the cost.
A well-known Catholic retailer called the Little Catholic Box said the company’s decision to use AI received passionate opposition from its consumer base.
‘AI can be a valuable tool that requires vigilance.’
The company took out a Facebook ad on Tuesday that discussed its extremely popular Saint Trading Cards and said they “were prototyped using AI.”
After using AI-generated images for the cards, the company’s leaders said the backlash inspired them to do more research and even reach out to real, human artists for their input.
However, what truly seemed to change the company’s mind was words from the pope on AI and the direction of humanity in the face of emerging technologies.
Referring to the pope’s May 15 encyclical entitled “Magnifica Humanitas,” Little Catholic Box wrote that while “AI can be a valuable tool that requires vigilance” it can “never replace the human person.”
From that point forward, the company decided not to use AI for its art and vowed to start commissioning original art from “human artists.”
In the face of a longer timeline and higher costs, the leaders of the Catholic company — founded by parents of seven — said they believed the change would actually result in a better product and “stronger Catholic community overall.”
RELATED: A real nation knows who is in and who is out
AI-generated art previously used by the Little Catholic Box. Image courtesy the Little Catholic Box
Pope Leo XIV’s letter thoroughly discussed the rapid increase and digitalization of the world through AI and robotics. However, he left room for grace, even for AI, and said technology should not be considered, “in itself, as a force antagonistic to humanity.”
“On the contrary, it has formed part of our history since the beginning as ‘a profoundly human reality, linked to the autonomy and freedom of man,'” he added.
The pope stressed being “profoundly human” in an era of AI and called on Catholics to “safeguard the grandeur of humanity bestowed upon us.”
“Let us not be afraid to get our hands dirty,” Leo continued, “on the ‘construction site’ of our time.”
This included placing the human person “at the center of our choices,” while making the “rejected stones” of society the cornerstone, which he listed as including “the poor, the sick, the migrants, and the least among us.”
RELATED: Brazil sends off its World Cup team in the most Catholic way possible
Human-created art now used by the Little Catholic Box. Image courtesy the Little Catholic Box
The Little Catholic Box said the company is still going to sell through its original set of AI works, but has now paid out human artist commissions for the new products.
“We feel really good about the direction these products are headed, but it honestly bothers us that Set 1 is still for sale,” the company claimed.
In a comment to Blaze News, owner Greg Johnson said AI was initially used to generate images of the saints because the company “believed it was the fastest and cheapest way to bring them into existence with extremely limited resources.”
Johnson said they immediately discovered that a large segment of their market was “adamantly opposed to the use of AI” for this purpose, and when further research was conducted into AI ethics, they “concluded that we could no longer use it.”
“While our initial decision to use AI seemed to make sense at the time, we did not fully understand how its use would alienate a significant portion of our audience, some of whom we will never win back,” he added.
At first, Johnson also explained, he did not fully understand the arguments against the use of AI around sacred images.
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News, Catholic, Pope, Art, Artificial intelligence, Tech
China’s gaudy, graceless Maextro S800 is no Rolls-Royce
The Maextro S800 wants very badly to be a Rolls-Royce.
At 18 feet long, painted two-tone, lined with soft leather, backed by Huawei and built by a thousand robots in Hefei, it has the size and the price tag of ambition. What it lacks is the one thing Rolls-Royce has spent a century perfecting: restraint.
A car that can park itself is a clever feat of engineering; most Rolls-Royce owners employ a driver for that.
The Maextro comes with a 40-inch screen, roughly 40 speakers, and a party trick that lets it park itself while you film it for social media. Rolls-Royce sells the absence of gimmicks. The Maextro sells gimmicks as a feature.
Treat what follows as a cultural diagnosis. The car is just a symptom of a nation rich in cash and short on class.
Motor trend
I lived and worked in China for two years. The Maextro is the most expensive version of the kind of tacky automotive excess I saw every day on the streets of Shanghai and Chengdu.
A pearl-white BMW 7 Series gliding through traffic with a Pikachu decal the size of a dinner plate slapped on the rear door. A matte-black Porsche Cayenne with Hello Kitty stickers ringing the wheel wells. A Mercedes S-Class in a finish that violates several local optometry standards, with the owner’s WeChat QR code printed on the trunk in case you wanted to add him.
People who make these choices have plenty of money. They want you to know it, immediately, from a great distance, with no possibility of misinterpretation.
The Maextro is that instinct scaled up and given a research and development budget.
Spirit of Excess
Rolls-Royce understands something the Maextro does not, which is that genuine luxury operates on the principle of subtraction. The iconic Rolls-Royce Spirit of Ecstasy hood ornament is small. The grille is dignified. Everything about the car suggests that the owner has nothing left to prove, because the proving was done by his grandfather, his great-grandfather, or some ancestor who did something morally questionable in the 1700s and was richly rewarded. Old money and new money operate on very different frequencies
China, in fairness, has had perhaps 30 years to figure out what to do with serious wealth. Desperate poverty was the default for many Chinese until relatively recently. The first generation of Chinese billionaires grew up eating cabbage in winter and now own art collections that would make a Medici blush. There is no inherited playbook for this. There is no grandfather who can pull you aside and gently suggest that the diamond-encrusted Vertu phone might be a touch much. The cultural muscle memory for restrained wealth hasn’t had time to develop, because the wealth itself is still wet behind the ears.
RELATED: Who makes the Waymos flooding American streets? China.
David Paul Morris/Bloomberg/Getty Images
From Ming to bling
So you get the Maextro: a “luxury vehicle” that confuses features with refinement, that mistakes the bill of materials for taste. Forty speakers is a number a teenager picks. A 40-inch screen is what you install when you have never considered that a car’s interior might benefit from looking less like a control room. A car that can park itself is a clever feat of engineering; most Rolls-Royce owners employ a driver for that. The Maextro is engineered to impress someone standing on the sidewalk. The Rolls-Royce is engineered to impress the person sitting inside it. These are different products serving different psychologies, and only one of them is luxury.
There is something comical about watching a nation with 5,000 years of refined aesthetic standards produce a flagship sedan that resembles a karaoke lounge on wheels. This is country that gave the world Song dynasty celadon and Ming furniture so understated it still looks modern.
The classical Chinese ideal was the scholar in the bamboo grove, the brushstroke that suggests rather than declares. Somewhere between the Cultural Revolution and the iPhone, that sensibility was misplaced. What replaced it is a culture where a man worth $200 million still feels the need to wrap his Bentley in something that announces itself from a block away, because somewhere in his lizard brain, he’s still the kid whose grandmother boiled tree bark during the famine.
The Maextro will sell. It will sell to people who want a Rolls-Royce and cannot quite stomach the price and to people who want a Rolls-Royce and find the actual Rolls-Royce insufficiently exciting. It will be photographed at the entrances of exclusive nightclubs and parked outside fancy restaurants where the valets know to leave it where everyone can see it. It will do everything its buyers want a car to do.
What it won’t do is fool anyone who has ridden in the real thing. Taste is built, not bought. China has the money now. The wisdom to spend it well is a generation or two behind.
Align cars, Cultural revolution, Shanghai, Maextro, Rolls-royce, China, Uk, Lifestyle
Will the real Dan Sullivan please stand up? Alaska GOP works to keep another Dan Sullivan off the open primary ballot
Marine veteran and former Alaska Attorney General Daniel S. Sullivan has served in the U.S. Senate since 2015 and is now seeking re-election. The Anchorage-based Republican’s route to victory is anything but assured, especially with Democratic challenger and former Rep. Mary Peltola leading him in recent polls.
The Alaska Division of Elections appears, however, to be eliminating at least one obstacle to Sullivan’s success in the Last Frontier’s Aug. 18 nonpartisan top-four primary, namely Daniel J. Sullivan of Petersburg.
‘The preponderance of evidence does not support your eligibility.’
J. Sullivan, a 69-year-old retired teacher who was born in the Midwest, reportedly registered as a Republican earlier this year and entered the race to oust Sen. S. Sullivan on May 29, just before the deadline for filing.
The namesake challenger said that he had “every right to stand up and do this” and characterized himself as a “pragmatic Republican centrist.”
Something stinks
The newly minted Republican’s candidacy didn’t pass the smell test where Sen. S. Sullivan, other Alaska Republicans, and the National Republican Senatorial Committee were concerned.
Sen. S. Sullivan told CNN earlier this month that J. Sullivan’s candidacy was effectively a Democratic effort to “cheat.”
The senator said, “Democrats recruited a guy by the name of Dan Sullivan. He is a liberal progressive, right. We’ve seen it — his donations to all the far-left groups. He’s donated to Peltola, OK. His whole purpose of running is to confuse Alaskans.”
Ex-Rep. Mary Peltola (D). Ellen Schmidt/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Tribune News Service/Getty Images.
Alaska’s News Source confirmed that a Dan Sullivan with a Petersburg zip code had previously donated to Peltola campaigns — in 2022 and in 2024. A spokesman for Peltola’s campaign has denied involvement with J. Sullivan’s Senate bid.
The NRSC filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission on June 6, stating that “there is reason to believe Daniel J. Sullivan and Amber Lee of Amber Lee Strategies have engaged in a coordinated scheme to launch a U.S. Senate candidacy in violation of the Federal Election Act’s prohibition on fraudulent misrepresentation of campaign authority at 52 U.S.C. §30124.”
Blake Murphy, general counsel for the NRSC, noted in the complaint that:
J. Sullivan’s campaign logo and website “closely mimics” that of S. Sullivan’s campaign branding; J. Sullivan has donated to Peltola; the press release promoting J. Sullivan’s candidacy for Senate was authored by Amber Lee, a Democratic consultant and Peltola supporter; and FEC records show that Amber Lee Strategies has received thousands of dollars for “PAC Strategy Consulting” from a federal PAC that has supported Peltola.
Murphy suggested that the purpose of J. Sullivan and Lee’s alleged fraudulent misrepresentation was to “deceive and mislead Alaskan voters to the detriment of another candidate.”
The NRSC asked the FEC to investigate the matter and — in the event that wrongdoing is confirmed and found willful — refer it to the Justice Department for further review.
The Alaska Republican Party separately filed a pair of complaints with the state’s Division of Election. One of the complaints claimed that J. Sullivan’s candidacy was improper because his declaration of candidacy said he was affiliated with the GOP despite having an “undeclared” political affiliation at the time, reported the Anchorage Daily News.
Disqualification
Alaska Lt. Gov Nancy Dahlstrom notified J. Sullivan on June 8 that she had requested an investigation into his eligibility, claiming that the allegations against him were credible.
On Wednesday, Carol Beecher, director of the Division of Elections, delivered the namesake challenger some bad news, writing, “Based on a review of the evidence presented and in the [Division of Elections’] possession, the Division has determined that the preponderance of evidence does not support your eligibility for the office of United States senator.”
Beecher gave J. Sullivan until 5 p.m. on Thursday to respond to the Alaska GOP’s complaints, after which time she said a final determination would be made.
The namesake challenger said in response that Dahlstrom’s “actions create the impression that the state government is being used to protect an incumbent senator from facing competition at the ballot box. That’s not how elections should work.”
“I am a qualified candidate who followed the rules and filed to run for office under my legal name. Yet, unsupported accusations have been given credibility while political operatives continue their effort to keep me off the ballot,” continued J. Sullivan. “The people of Alaska are fully capable of deciding for themselves who should represent them in Washington.”
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Dan sullivan, Alaska, Senate, Nrsc, Election, Primary, Peltola, Politics
Justice! Scottish axe girl vindicated after judge’s epic ruling: ‘F*****g creep and an immigrant’
The trial for a Bulgarian immigrant to Scotland took an unexpected turn when the judge made a ruling surrounding claims of racism.
Ilia Belov, a 22-year-old Bulgarian immigrant, was convicted on Thursday following a violent incident with a group of young girls that took place last September, resulting in one female, then 12 years old, being dubbed the “Scottish axe girl.”
‘The words of the children were eloquent to describe your behavior.’
The young lady and her family had said for months that she had acted in self-defense when she wielded an axe and a blade in order to protect herself and her friends from abusive migrants.
This week, the judge of Dundee Sheriff Court, Sheriff Timothy Niven-Smith, convicted Belov after seeing what was described as “proof beyond reasonable doubt.”
As reported by the Irish News, Scottish axe girl, now 13, claimed Belov made sexual remarks to her as she and friends walked to a bus stop: “He kept saying, ‘Come here sexy. I will show you how to have a good time,'” the girl recalled. She also said Belov shoved her to the ground while his sister, whom he called for help, arrived and attacked another girl.
The Bulgarian agreed that he both called his sister and shoved the girl, but only to protect his sister after allegedly seeing the young girl had a knife under her shirt. He also denied making sexual remarks and accused the girls of calling him a “f*****g migrant.”
However, the judge was not having it.
On top of describing Belov’s defense as “neither credible nor reliable,” Niven-Smith called it a revision of the facts, especially in the face of video evidence that was shown to the court.
Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Niven-Smith then completely dressed the Bulgarian down, saying that he found his testimony to be “wholly unconvincing and self-serving.”
The judge called out inconsistencies in Belov’s story, including that he had turned his back to the girl despite claiming he was fearful he would be attacked by her. Niven-Smith then blamed Belov’s comments as the reason the whole ordeal started.
“I accept that as a result of the comments you made abuse was directed at you, which included swear words, including you being called a ‘f*****g creep and an immigrant,'” the judge detailed.
Then, Niven-Smith delivered a striking rebuff of Belov’s defense.
“The words of the children were eloquent to describe your behavior given your age and their respective ages,” the judge stated. “Having made the sexual remarks to the children you then, enraged by the fact that they became angry and started shouting abuse at you, followed them.”
Niven-Smith criticized Belov for calling his sister — who “immediately” attacked one of the girls on arrival — instead of calling the police or leaving the area.
RELATED: Police charge man and woman in connection with Scottish axe girl incident
NIKOLAY DOYCHINOV/AFP/Getty Images
Belov’s claim that the young girl could be seen with a knife under her T-shirt was also rejected, with the judge saying he was “entirely satisfied” that the video footage showed the Bulgarian indeed assaulted the girl.
Belov was convicted of assault and behaving in a “threatening or abusive manner” toward four girls.
His sister, 20-year-old Nadjedzha Belova, pleaded guilty to one charge of assaulting a 13-year-old girl.
The siblings will be sentenced on August 5.
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News, Scotland, Immigration, Migrant, Bulgaria, Self-defense, Politics
Hate-spewing Jimmy Kimmel mocks homeless Spencer Pratt with U-Haul gag
We have gotten used to the partisan, unfunny version of former “Man Show” host Jimmy Kimmel. He’s the guy who plays the free-speech martyr on his ABC late-night show without ever defending the free speech of the others.
‘When they go low, we go high,’ Michelle Obama infamously said. No one believed it, but it sure sounded good.
Remember when he spoke out on behalf of singer M.I.A. after she was fired from Kid Cudi’s tour for sharing right-leaning views on stage? We sure don’t.
Still, Kimmel hit a new low this week, even if that didn’t seem possible. He mocked Spencer Pratt for coming in third in L.A.’s recent primary battle. Never mind the dubious nature of L.A.’s never-ending vote counting process.
Pratt lost his home and every precious item in it during the Palisades fires, and it spurred him to run for office. He wasn’t remotely MAGA or cruel, just a father and husband defending his family and hoping to do good for his city.
That’s it.
For that, Kimmel told his ABC fans that he got a U-Haul rental for Pratt so he could keep his word about leaving L.A. if he lost the race.
“Mazel tov and goodbye, Spencer Pratt!”
We’ll be saying the same when ABC finally realizes how terrible Kimmel is for the country, no doubt …
‘Fascist’ fan Platner still Democrat fave
“When they go low, we go high,” Michelle Obama infamously said. No one believed it, but it sure sounded good.
The gals at the far-left “The View” can’t even fake that any more.
Co-host Sunny Hostin admits that Graham “Maine Kampf” Platner is all the terrible things we’ve heard about him, down to his Nazi tattoo. But he must get our vote anyway.
“Look, I don’t think Republicans, at this point, can ask us to take the moral high ground. That is over at this point. … It’s time for Democrats to stop that nonsense, put emotions on the side, let’s be strategic, let’s get some power, let’s take over the Senate and let’s take over the House and let’s right the ship! Let’s get our country back!”
At this point, Hostin and Co. could stop calling President Donald Trump “Hitler.” It might reflect too kindly on their new favorite candidate …
RELATED: Spencer Pratt 2.0? Actor Michael Rapaport eyes run against NYC Mayor Mamdani
Bravo/Getty Images
No Time to Fry
An old “Gilligan’s Island” episode found the castaways discovering a Japanese soldier from WWII. He thought the war hadn’t ended yet, yuk yuk, and captured Gilligan and pals.
Pierce Brosnan sounds a bit like that while promoting climate change hysteria. The cause du jour has been dropped by Greta Thunberg. Major media outlets like Politico and NPR have dialed down their coverage. Even former scaremonger Bill Gates now says it’s not as big a deal after all.
Tell that to the erstwhile 007.
Pierce Brosnan fired up his Instagram account, from his Hawaiian home, to push the fear movement anew.
“Climate change is often spoken about as a scientific issue, an environmental issue, an economic issue. And it is all of those things. But above all, it is a moral issue. … Human activity — the burning of fossil fuels, the destruction of forests, and the relentless exploitation of our natural world — has altered the delicate balance of the Earth’s climate.”
The ghost of Alan Hale Jr., aka the Skipper, would like to swat Bronson’s head with his hat …
Broken Clock Awards
Sometimes far-left celebrities throw us curveballs. This week, two did just that, buckling our knees like vintage Clayton Kershaw. First, Whoopi Goldberg defended President Donald Trump.
No, really.
It wasn’t about policy, though. Goldberg says the president, a huge Knicks fan, should be able to attend one of the NBA Finals games against the San Antonio Spurs.
“I think anybody who’s a Knicks fan should be there,” Goldberg said. “You earned the right as a Knicks fan. I don’t have to like you.”
Huge if true. And it’s true!
Even more startling? Trump derangement sufferer Stephen King similarly praised the president this week, at least indirectly. That in itself is stunning, given the level of invective he shares against Trump.
The horror guru shared an image of the recently upgraded reflecting pool in Washington, D.C., a pet project for the president. King noted the image was “very beautiful,” no caveats.
Who knew “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” was a true story?
Toto recall, Lifestyle, Entertainment
Front-runner Democrat back on his heels after ex-staffer indicted in anti-Jewish attacks in Michigan
The leading Democratic candidate for the open Michigan U.S. Senate seat is playing defense now that a former paid staffer has been indicted in connection with a series of anti-Semitic attacks.
On Wednesday, the Department of Justice announced that eight defendants had been charged for an alleged conspiracy “to threaten University of Michigan leaders, law enforcement, and businesses, including the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit” over their supposed ties to Israel.
‘El-Sayed continues to pander to terrorists.’
Among those indicted is 24-year-old Mariam Muhammed Odeh of Dearborn, Michigan. She has been charged with one count of conspiracy to transmit threats in interstate and foreign commerce, according to the Detroit News.
The DOJ press release claimed that the eight defendants and some unindicted co-conspirators targeted the victims in the wake of the attacks on October 7, 2023, demanding that the victims immediately divest from Israel completely or the defendants would compel them to do so “by any means necessary.”
The defendants allegedly uncovered the targets’ personal information, including home addresses, business relationships, and personal acquaintances. They also allegedly plotted ways they could “harm the targets and their families, including poison, bombs, and psychological torture.”
The suspects apparently put some of their plots into action, allegedly vandalizing homes and other property with Hamas-linked symbols and messages such as “Intifada,” “Free Palestine,” and “F**k You,” images from the press release showed.
The suspects made further threats online, posting messages such as, “You cannot hide,” and “We only come back stronger,” alongside photographs of the destruction they caused, the DOJ claimed.
“The defendants also left demand notes containing additional threats, caulked doors shut, bike-locked entryways, broke windows, and threw glass jars filled with butyric acid and dye into the homes,” the press release claimed.
Composite of FBI photos of Ayman Ghazali
From February until April 15, Odeh was a paid staffer at the campaign of far-left radical Abdul El-Sayed, who is running for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate.
El-Sayed’s campaign initially claimed Odeh worked for the campaign for only two weeks but subsequently issued a follow-up statement confirming that her tenure with the campaign was much longer.
“Upon discovering an error in reviewing our HR files, we’d like to correct information on her employment for transparency. She was hired in February as an hourly employee and left the campaign on April 15. The campaign issued one missed hourly back payment in May that will appear on our next FEC filing,” spokeswoman Roxie Richner said Thursday in a text message, according to the Detroit News.
The campaign paid Odeh $747 in two payments made in March, the News reported, citing fundraising disclosures.
However, Odeh seems to have characterized her affiliation with the campaign differently, claiming that she had “full-time employment for approximately four months” “for a local Senate candidate,” a pretrial officer told the court, the News reported.
An attorney for Odeh did not respond to Blaze News’ request for comment.
On his campaign website, El-Sayed has championed “Medicare for all,” reforming the Supreme Court, and “abolishing ICE.” He opposes “mandatory voter ID laws” and prefers instead to “make voting easier” with automatic voter registration and re-registration as well as “no-reason absentee and early in-person voting.”
El-Sayed also received criticism for expressing sympathy for Ayman Ghazali, the “Hezbollah-inspired” terrorist who tried to murder school children and other Jews at a Reform synagogue and school in West Bloomfield Township on March 13.
While condemning the attack and anti-Semitism more generally, El-Sayed noted in a four-minute video statement released just hours after the incident at Temple Israel that Ghazali “lost family, including two children,” a niece and nephew, in strikes on Lebanon that were part of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.
“Hurt people hurt people,” El-Sayed said.
“Imagine there was no war in Iran. Imagine if there were no airstrikes in Lebanon. Imagine if his family had never died. Imagine there was never an attack on Temple Israel. That’s the world that we want to live in.”
Samantha Cantrell, regional press secretary for the National Republican Senatorial Committee, indicated the indictment of Odeh is further evidence of a character issue for El-Sayed: “El-Sayed continues to pander to terrorists. He found it difficult to condemn the Synagogue attack on Jewish children, mourned the death of the Ayatollah, campaigned with known anti-Semite, Hasan Piker, and now this.”
Despite his radical positions, El-Sayed holds the lead in aggregate polling. According to the latest RealClearPolling average, El-Sayed leads fellow Democratic candidates Rep. Haley Stevens and state Sen. Mallory McMorrow by 3.7 points.
El-Sayed is vying for the U.S. Senate seat now open after Democratic Sen. Gary Peters announced in January 2025 that he would not seek another term. The Michigan primary election is scheduled for August 4.
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Dearborn michigan, Senate, Democratic party, Politics, Abdul el-sayed
Former mayor described as ‘predator’ with ‘Botox and high heels’ avoids major prison time for sex crimes against teen
A former Louisiana mayor — described as a “predator” with “Botox and high heels” — learned her fate after being convicted of child sex crimes for abusing her teen son’s underage friend at an alcohol-fueled pool party, according to multiple reports.
In March, 44-year-old Misty Roberts was convicted of carnal knowledge of a juvenile and indecent behavior with a juvenile.
‘This predator was not hiding in a van carrying candy or a puppy.’
Fox News reported that Roberts was sentenced on Tuesday to 90 days in jail for having sex with a teen boy in 2024 while she was mayor of DeRidder.
Roberts received two concurrent five-year suspended sentences, which she will avoid serving provided she complies with the terms of her probation.
The judge ordered Roberts to register as a sex offender and pay a $5,000 fine.
Prosecutors petitioned for her to receive the maximum prison sentence of 17 years for both charges.
According to KPLC-TV, Beauregard Parish District Attorney James Lestage said, “We argued for the maximum sentences, which we feel are appropriate. I don’t think the sentence that was imposed reflects the severity of the crimes.”
Roberts’ defense attorney Todd Clemons said of the judge’s ruling, “We appreciate that the judge put a lot of thought and consideration into this decision.”
Clemons said, “The state wanted 17 years, so the outcome could have been much worse than 90 days.”
Roberts could be released from prison in fewer than 90 days with good behavior, her attorneys said.
Roberts’ attorneys stated, “With the good-time credit available under Louisiana law, the time Misty actually serves is expected to be shorter, and she intends to begin serving it without delay, complete it, and meet every condition the court has set.”
Roberts’ co-counsel Adam Johnson insisted that she already has received “a life sentence” by having to register as a sex offender.
According to KPLC, Roberts’ attorneys previously requested a new trial, blaming “inconsistencies” in the victim’s testimony. However, Judge Kent Savoie denied a new trial.
KPLC reported that a statement from the victim’s mother was read in the courtroom: “This predator was not hiding in a van carrying candy or a puppy.”
“This danger came from a predator with hair extensions, high heels, Botox, and other modifications,” the mom said before Roberts was sentenced.
Roberts told the judge, “I blame myself then, I blame myself today, and I will blame myself for the rest of my life. I let a lot of people down, and I am the only person responsible for that.”
According to KPLC, Roberts added, “What an embarrassment I’ve been to this city. I’ve made a mess of all of this, but it certainly was not my intent.”
Roberts told the courtroom, “I just want to be their mom. I’m here just asking for grace and mercy and the opportunity to do what the Lord has asked me to do, which is be a mom.”
Roberts added, “To the [victim’s] family, I am sorry. I can’t give back the high school days … I can’t take away the embarrassment that so many mean people on the internet have put them through.”
American Press reported that Dr. Sasha Joy Lambert, a clinical psychologist hired to evaluate Roberts’ mental health, determined that the former mayor “was not mentally healthy” around the time of the incident.
Lambert said Roberts was dealing with her father’s declining health, her divorce, and her fiancé committing suicide.
“She was in a mental health crisis,” Lambert said of Roberts.
KPLC reported that lead prosecutor Charles Robinson stated, “We’re talking about an elected public official who had sex with a child at a children’s birthday party.”
The New York Post reported that Robinson also said of Roberts, “This is not a dumb lady. This is somebody who managed an entire city budget.”
Robinson noted, “She has not come to the realization of accountability. She is not sorry.”
Blaze News previously reported that Roberts had been serving her second term as mayor after winning re-election in 2022 at the time of the child sex abuse.
In another previous Blaze News report, Roberts told the victim he “looked good, started winking at him, and dancing on him” during the boozy pool party.
The victim — who was a friend of Roberts’ son — said he was intoxicated when Roberts sexually assaulted him.
“While it was happening, I couldn’t feel my body,” the teen said of the sexual encounter. “After we had sex, I kinda was realizing what was happening.”
Roberts’ daughter testified that she saw her mother and the victim “on top of each other” on the night of the party.
Duncan Clanton — Roberts’ ex-husband and father of their two children — testified in court that his ex-wife informed him she had sex with a minor.
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Misty roberts, Party mom, Child sex crimes, Child sex abuse, Louisiana, Sentencing, Crime
AOC weighs in on Platner’s laundry list of scandals — and her take is shocking
On June 9, Graham Platner won the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate in Maine, securing approximately 72% of the vote in the primary to challenge incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins in November.
His campaign was highly scandal-ridden due to revelations, including a chest tattoo resembling a Nazi SS symbol, sexually explicit texts sent to other women while married, allegations from multiple ex-partners of emotional volatility, heavy drinking, and physically threatening or abusive behavior, and resurfaced Reddit posts containing remarks many found offensive, homophobic, and inflammatory.
Despite these controversies, Platner prevailed with strong grassroots and progressive support.
BlazeTV’s Pat Gray was surprised by the lack of outrage. “None of these scandals have had any effect on his candidacy,” he sighs.
But what shocked him even more was Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s (D-N.Y.) comments to reporters on Tuesday. Following Platner’s victory, the democratic socialist — and one of the most vocal critics of Republican scandals — appeared to hypocritically shrug off his numerous controversies.
“When it comes to the substance of this reporting, obviously there’s a lot in that behavior that’s really challenging. It’s hard to stomach … but at the end of the day, I think that this is a choice,” she told CNN’s Manu Raju.
“If the choice on the ballot is between that and a senator who’s voted to take health care away from millions of Americans, that’s the situation that we have to weigh,” she added.
Co-host Keith Malinak translates her words: “Is he sexting with women and wearing Nazi tattoos and mocking those that serve in our armed forces? Yeah, but he would vote for the government to spend money for other people’s health insurance.”
“I mean, she literally said something like, ‘at the end of the day, it’s a choice.’ What a profound statement that is,” scoffs Pat. “Obviously it’s a choice, and you made the bad choice there.”
Jeffy speculates that the scandals surrounding Platner are likely even deeper, considering progressive activists Daniel Moraff and Leanne Fan, who recruited Platner, admitted in an interview with Wall Street Journal reporter Aaron Zitner to paying a professional vetting/opposition research firm “a whole chunk of money” to scrub Platner before his campaign even began.
But it wasn’t wholly effective given the scandals that have dominated the news cycle of late — including a deleted post from 2021 where Platner wrote, “I got older and became a communist.”
“It’s despicable,” says Pat.
To hear more, watch the episode above.
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Pat gray unleashed, Pat gray, Graham platner, Aoc
The art of EVACUATION: Why every family needs a pre-planned escape strategy
(NaturalNews) Only about half of U.S. households have an emergency evacuation plan; advance planning prevents chaos during crises. Identify specific “go sign…
