The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed

The Blaze Media Feed

@blazemediafeed

YouTube
Detransitioner Chloe Cole: Here's How Doctors Lied to Me AND My Parents

What was to be fun Florida trip ends in 'cold-blooded' triple murder: Elderly tourists dead, suspect earlier beat murder rap
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

What was to be fun Florida trip ends in 'cold-blooded' triple murder: Elderly tourists dead, suspect earlier beat murder rap

A Florida man is accused of going on a killing spree and gunning down three elderly tourists during their vacation near Disney World. The suspect previously beat an attempted murder charge with an insanity defense, according to court records.The Osceola County Sheriff's Office said in a recent statement that officers responded to reports of a shooting near a residence in Kissimmee around 12:13 p.m. Jan. 17.'It was cold-blooded, it was premeditated ... absolutely no issues.'Police said they "discovered three adult males deceased in front of the home" and that "all three victims suffered from apparent gunshot wounds."Deputies quickly located and arrested the suspect — 29-year-old Ahmad Jihad Bojeh.Bojeh is facing three counts of premeditated murder and one count of resisting arrest without violence, according to Osceola County Jail records. Bojeh is being detained at the Osceola County Jail without bond."There is no threat to the community, as the suspect responsible for these horrific and senseless murders has been apprehended by Osceola County deputies," said Osceola County Sheriff Christopher Blackmon.Blackmon told the Tampa Bay Times that Bojeh lived next door to the rental property where the tourists were staying."It was cold-blooded, it was premeditated ... absolutely no issues," Blackmon told Fox News. "There was no conflict between these people. This was just random. And this happened to be the person who lived next door."After securing a warrant, deputies searched Bojeh's residence and recovered two firearms, police said. Police noted that the firearms were being examined to see if they were used in the fatal shootings.Sheriff Blackmon described Bojeh as a "frequent flyer" with police and added to Fox News that he is "a threat to the neighborhood all the time," citing repeated calls for service involving the suspect.Blackmon said the motive for the shooting is unclear; the investigation into the killings remains ongoing.Fox News reported that the three friends — 68-year-old Douglas Kraft of Columbus, Ohio, 70-year-old Robert Kraft of Holland, Michigan, and 68-year-old James Puchan of Galena, Ohio — attended a car show together. Two of the slain tourists were brothers.Families and friends of the slain victims released a joint statement to WKMG-TV: "With heavy hearts, we confirm the deaths of our beloved husbands, fathers, grandfathers, uncles, brothers, and friends."The statement added that the tourists visited the Mecum Car Show in Kissimmee and were staying at a local Airbnb rental property."While waiting for assistance after rental car trouble and preparing to travel home, they were being observed from a distance by an unknown individual who was well-known to local law enforcement," the statement read.The tourists were "approached and senselessly murdered" in a "random, tragic act," the families stated."Our families are left with an unexpected, unimaginable loss that cannot be put into words," the statement said."We ask for privacy, prayers, and respect as we mourn and begin to process this tragedy," the families concluded.RELATED: What was to be a fun bachelor party in Florida ends with best man dead, 3 friends hospitalized, another sentenced to prison Previously, Bojeh reportedly was arrested and charged with attempted first-degree murder but was released back on the streets on the grounds of insanity.WOFL-TV reported that deputies with the Osceola County Sheriff's Office arrested Bojeh in 2021 for attempted first-degree murder, aggravated battery, and two counts of criminal mischief in connection with an alleged shooting at a Wawa convenience store and gas station.Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier wrote on the X social media platform, "Prior to State Atty [Monique H.] Worrell's suspension, Ahmad Jihad Bojeh was acquitted of attempted first-degree murder with a firearm and aggravated battery."Uthmeier continued, "It appears she didn't put up a fight to Bojeh's use of the insanity defense, and he was allowed to go free." The attorney general added, "This guy, literally named Ahmad 'Jihad' Bojeh, shoots three tourists after being acquitted of multiple violent crimes on grounds of insanity."Uthmeier also declared, "This is why I've proposed Florida's legislature narrow the insanity defense. Violent criminals should not be set free to hurt others!"He also told WOFL, "If there's a risk of them harming others, we need to ensure they're locked up."Law enforcement sources told the New York Post that Bojeh was banned from owning firearms as part of his insanity plea.WOFL reported that Bojeh was arrested in 2019 for retail theft.The Osceola County Sheriff's Office did not immediately respond to Blaze News' request for comment.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Trump’s economic agenda needs a Vegas test — and a Vegas win
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

Trump’s economic agenda needs a Vegas test — and a Vegas win

Las Vegas is a mirror. When it works, America works. When it struggles, the problem isn’t local — it’s national.Vegas was built on a simple idea: value. Give people a reason to come, treat them fairly, and let them choose how much risk they want to take. No lectures. No stupid political games. No government hand in your pocket every five minutes.A great city doesn’t nickel-and-dime its customers. Value matters. People don’t expect cheap. They expect fair. That lesson applies nationally, too.That formula built the entertainment capital of the world. And right now, it’s under pressure.The neon lights have dimmedVegas is getting squeezed from both ends, and the pressure feels familiar because it’s the same pressure families across the country have felt.Under the Biden administration, inflation surged. Housing costs jumped. Groceries, energy, airfare, and insurance rose together. Families didn’t get richer. Their dollars just bought less.Reckless spending, energy restrictions, and regulatory overreach drove the damage. Washington acted like prices were somebody else’s problem.Southern Nevada also felt the economic whiplash. Tourism collapsed during the 2020 lockdowns, wiping out billions and driving unemployment as high as 33% at its peak. Visitor spending returned slowly, then softened again in 2025 — after wages, rents, and debt had already risen on the assumption that demand would keep growing.For locals trying to raise families, that meant higher baseline costs and less margin for error. Housing, rent, and transportation ate paychecks. Hospitality wages rose, but many workers still lost ground as commuting costs and rents climbed faster.A gamble on progressUnder President Trump, the trend has started to reverse — not overnight, but directionally. Energy production is up. Supply chains have stabilized. Regulatory pressure has eased. Inflation cooled. Costs didn’t snap back, but the bleeding slowed.That matters because affordability is competitiveness. Vegas shows what happens when value breaks.For decades, Vegas understood the middle-class customer: a weekend trip, a decent room, a good meal, a show, maybe a little gambling — and you left feeling like you got your money’s worth.That perception is cracking. Resort fees that feel like a second room rate. Paid parking where it never used to exist. Food and drink prices that make people stop and stare. Fees stacked on top of fees, revealed at checkout. The experience starts feeling less like entertainment and more like an airport terminal.Visitors notice. And when people feel squeezed, they don’t just complain — they change their behavior.RELATED: America tried to save the planet and forgot to save itself Photo by Timothy Fadek/Corbis via Getty ImagesVegas runs on volume. When fewer visitors come, fewer dollars circulate. The pain hits the dealer, the server, the bartender, the stagehand, the hotel staff, and the rideshare driver long before it reaches the executive suite.Zoom out, and you see America facing the same dynamic.The United States used to win because we offered the best value on earth. Not the cheapest — the best deal. A place where costs made sense and life felt attainable.That edge has been eroding, especially in housing. When home ownership becomes a fantasy, workers can’t relocate, young families delay building stable lives, and talent looks elsewhere.Meanwhile, competitors are building. Riyadh. Dubai. Macao. Singapore. They’re creating new tourism and entertainment hubs designed to pull dollars away from legacy markets like Las Vegas.They’re betting America forgets how competition works.Make Vegas Vegas againFederal policy matters here. Washington still treats Vegas like a cash register, with outdated rules such as taxing gambling winnings and forcing IRS reporting thresholds stuck in the 1970s. That doesn’t just annoy visitors. It tells the world America doesn’t understand modern consumer behavior.Ending the federal tax on gambling winnings isn’t radical. It’s strategic. Updating IRS reporting levels isn’t reckless. It’s realistic. Both would improve the visitor experience and help Vegas compete.The industry also has work to do. A great city doesn’t nickel-and-dime its customers. Transparency matters. Value matters. People don’t expect cheap. They expect fair.That lesson applies nationally, too.America doesn’t win by lecturing consumers or ignoring affordability. America wins by making this country the best place on earth to live, work, build, and spend money.Vegas is telling that story in real time. If Washington listens, the rest of the country benefits.

Forget Greenland — we’re losing the real green land that feeds America
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

Forget Greenland — we’re losing the real green land that feeds America

The world is abuzz with chatter about the United States’ pursuit of Greenland, but Daniel Horowitz, Blaze Media host of “Conservative Review with Daniel Horowitz,” says we ought to consider prioritizing a different kind of green land: “our pastures, our farms, our ranches.”America’s food security, or lack thereof, is an issue that should deeply concern every American, he says. Between rising beef prices, the “endless shrinkage of ranchers exiting the farming business,” “the consolidation of corporate farms,” the “corporate monopoly of meat processors,” “inflation-driven land depreciation,” and the “government’s steering capital to data centers instead of ranches,” America’s ability to feed her people is growing weaker by the day. Horowitz confesses he has grown weary of the Trump administration’s geopolitical distractions and obsession with building AI data centers when “the future of [America’s] food security is what matters.” “We should be pushing for a Manhattan project for cheap and abundant food, for more ranchers, more farmers, more utilization of the land to produce American-made beef rather than cloud-based AI slop that's actually now about to pop as a bubble and is not really getting us anything,” he says. Yet Horowitz sees this prioritization not as a purely conservative misstep, but as a clever pivot by the left.The shift toward prioritizing AI over food production, he argues, is just progressives’ latest trick in their long game: “jiu-jitsuing” conservatives’ support for “functional energy” and funneling it toward “building their surveillance, transhumanist cloud” to create a world where “we own nothing, are dependent on government,” small businesses (including ranchers and farmers) are crushed, and we’re all forced to “put our lives on the cloud.” Based on several Davos speeches delivered at this year’s World Economic Forum conference, it appears that fossil fuels are back in style with the elites, but Horowitz warns that their plan is to “siphon it all off for their cloud-based, transhumanist" trashing of the internet.” “Consuming all of our land — not for food, farming, ranching — but for cloud. That's what this is all about,” he says. He accuses the Trump administration of “literally digging our own grave” by handing power-hungry elites tax breaks, streamlined regulations, and priority land access for massive data centers, all while pushing policies that would block states and localities from using basic zoning rules to safeguard farmland and ranching. In short, their efforts are paving the way for the destruction of farmland to build “massive power-sucking dung holes,” where our data will be stored and likely used to surveil us. What this administration should be doing, Horowitz says, is “getting out of the way of ranchers and farmers so that we have safe, healthy, abundant, cheap food and protein in this country.” To learn more about the boots-on-the-ground fight for food security in America, Horowitz interviews Texas cattle rancher and co-founder of the Beef Initiative Cole Bolton. To hear their conversation, watch the full episode above.

Bad Bunny blitzes Super Bowl fans with super 'queer' halftime show
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

Bad Bunny blitzes Super Bowl fans with super 'queer' halftime show

An insider report claims that Puerto Rican musician Bad Bunny has plans to make the Super Bowl LX halftime show awfully political.Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, aka Bad Bunny, stirred controversy for most of 2025, both before and after being named as the performer for the big game. This included telling audiences they "have four months to learn" Spanish to understand his performance and releasing a parody of President Trump in his music video song "NUEVAYoL" on the fourth of July.'The NFL has no idea what's coming.'Now outlet Radar said that members of the musician's style team have revealed he plans on delivering a "political thunderbolt" during the halftime show.Glam squadInsiders described as a stylist and a member of the singer's "glam team" alleged that Bad Bunny plans on wearing a dress during the halftime show to honor Puerto Rican "queer icons" and "generations of drag, resistance, and cultural rebellion," the outlet wrote.RELATED: Trump says NFL is passing the blame on Bad Bunny Super Bowl halftime show: 'I don't know why they're doing it' Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images "He loves controversy. He lives to push envelopes," a stylist involved in Bad Bunny's clothing choices allegedly told Radar.Dress mess"He is 100% going to wear a dress. A political thunderbolt disguised as couture," they added.A second source also explained, "He's not playing it safe. The NFL has no idea what's coming. Zero."An apparent third source, listed as only "a pal" of Bad Bunny's, said that critics are free to complain, but "the dress is already being sewn."RELATED: Trump administration responds to Bad Bunny's promise to perform in Spanish for 'woke' halftime show Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images HarebrainedThe NFL has been accused by the president of passing the responsibility of the booking on to the promoters, as the content seemingly is at odds with the league's core fans."Apple Music, the NFL, and Roc Nation announced that 3x Grammy Award-winning global recording artist Bad Bunny will perform at the Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. on Sunday, February 8, 2026, airing on NBC," the NFL wrote in a press release last September.Apple Music's key figure is listed as Oliver Schusser, vice president of Apple Music and international content.Roc Nation is also involved. That company was founded by rapper Jay-Z and has been working on Super Bowl halftime shows since 2019.Shawn "Jay-Z" Carter said in the same press release that Bad Bunny's "unique ability to bridge genres, languages, and audiences makes him an exciting and natural choice to take the Super Bowl halftime stage."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!