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"She is AWFUL!" - Is Gavin Newsom's Wife Somehow WORSE Than Him?!

Parents: Let your kids out to play
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Parents: Let your kids out to play

My childhood had a simple structure: Leave the house, come back when hungry.Nobody tracked my location. Nobody scheduled my fun. I roamed a small Irish village with a rotating gang of kids, knocking on doors to collect whoever was free, wandering fields we didn't own, climbing trees we absolutely shouldn't have.Our treehouse was born from boredom. Three of us, on a long summer afternoon, with nothing to do.Our treehouse — built from stolen timber, held together, technically, by two bent nails — would have given a structural engineer a full breakdown. We were enormously proud of it.Bumps and bruisesThere were scuffles. Real ones, occasionally bloody, always brief. Someone would throw a punch over some perceived injustice. A disputed goal, a broken rule, an insult that landed a little too cleanly. Five minutes later, we'd be back at it, whatever it was that day.No adults mediated. No one processed feelings. The fight resolved itself because the game needed bodies, and everyone knew it. You learned, quickly, that holding a grudge cost you far more than swallowing it.The point isn't that we were tougher or that children today are soft, although I would argue that both are true. The point I’m trying to make is that we were unsupervised, and supervision, it turns out, changes everything.I say this not from a rocking chair but as someone who, at age 8 or 9, split his time between farm chores and disappearing into the village like a feral little fugitive. Less than 25 years ago. A blink of the eye, really, except apparently long enough to completely reinvent childhood.Rationing daylightNow, one in 10 parents say their young children play outside once a week or less. One week. Seven days. Imagine rationing daylight like that. Childhood has migrated indoors, onto screens, into carefully arranged playdates where two children sit in a living room while two adults hover nearby, making sure nobody says anything upsetting. The kids sense the performance. They behave accordingly.Researchers from Denmark recently did something beautifully simple: They asked children what good play actually feels like.Not what it teaches. Not what skills it builds. What it feels like from inside.The answers were slightly embarrassing for every adult who has ever built a color-coded activity schedule. Children cared about the feeling of play. That loose, almost electric sense that something is genuinely alive. They cared about belonging — not polite, managed inclusion, but being genuinely wanted by the group. They cared about imagination running slightly off the rails. They even valued a certain productive chaos, the kind that adults instinctively shut down.Adults, predictably, care about outcomes — cognitive development, motor skills, social learning they can point to and measure. Children care about none of this while they're playing. What they actually care about is whether it's fun, whether they're wanted, and whether there's the slightest chance that it might go delightfully wrong.Screen policeOur games always went somewhere unexpected. A football match would mutate, mid-afternoon, into something involving a rope, an old mattress someone had dumped in a field, and rules nobody could fully explain afterward. The logic was impeccable at the time. The mattress did not survive.Modern play environments iron out exactly these qualities. Soft surfaces, approved equipment, and an adult nearby to ensure fairness and prevent anything resembling genuine consequence. The result looks like play. Children sense that it isn't, the way you sense when a photograph has been retouched slightly too much. Something essential has been removed.Screens fill the gap with surgical efficiency. Nearly a third of young children now engage regularly in what researchers call "media play" — a phrase that earns its quotation marks. Tapping a screen is not the same as negotiating who gets to be the villain or managing the social fallout when the smallest kid turns out to be the best climber and everyone has to begrudgingly update their hierarchy. Digital games have fixed rules, predictable rewards, and zero social friction. That's precisely their appeal. It's also precisely their poverty.The consequences don't arrive with bruises or a note from school. They arrive later, wearing other disguises. Low frustration tolerance. Social anxiety with no obvious origin. A deep unfamiliarity with boredom, which is actually the raw material of invention.RELATED: The day my father handed me the gun NurPhoto/Getty ImagesFree rangeOur treehouse was born from boredom. Three of us, on a long summer afternoon, with nothing to do. Within an hour, we had made a plan. Within a week, we had made something structurally catastrophic and deeply satisfying. Nobody told us to build it. Nobody approved the design. Nobody stood beneath it checking for hazards, which was probably wise given what happened to the second shelf.Children need exactly that kind of space. Not the park for 15 minutes before the grocery run, but long, unscheduled stretches where the only available resource is other children and whatever the back yard contains. Boredom long enough to become uncomfortable. Discomfort long enough to force creativity.They need, occasionally, for nobody to be watching.We turned out fine, most of us. There were scraped knees. One incident involved a gate left wide open, a bull wandering into the street, and a level of collective amnesia that has never fully lifted. The treehouse was, after much deliberation, abandoned to the weather. The nails, I'm told, are still there.

Activists shut down mural of Iryna Zarutska at gay bar in Rhode Island — but artist finds another location
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Activists shut down mural of Iryna Zarutska at gay bar in Rhode Island — but artist finds another location

A Democrat mayor joined a mob of activists to shut down the painting of a mural in honor of Iryna Zarutska in Providence, Rhode Island, but the muralist is getting the last laugh.Mayor Brett Smiley said the mural was against the values of the city after the owners of a prominent gay bar previously said they would allow it to be painted on one of their walls.'She worked to build a life for herself and lost it along the way. This mural is our way of honoring her on a building owned by an immigrant family who understands that journey.'Halfway through the commission of the mural, the owners of the Dark Lady changed their minds and said on social media that the outrage from the LGBTQIA+ community forced them to stop the painting.Now the mural has found a new home at a Lebanese restaurant instead of the gay bar.The owner of Opa the Phoenician on Atwells Avenue is donating space for the mural on Federal Hill."She was once an immigrant chasing the American dream," said Francois Karam about Zarutska. "She worked to build a life for herself and lost it along the way. This mural is our way of honoring her on a building owned by an immigrant family who understands that journey." He went on to say that the decision wasn't made out of political motivation. A Change.org petition garnered more than 13,600 signatures from those who demanded that the mural be returned to the Dark Lady's wall. In an email statement to Blaze News, the petition creator lamented that the voices against the mural had won. "While I appreciate that a version of Iryna Zarutska's mural has been allowed to go up at Opa Restaurant on Atwells Avenue, this is no real victory. It’s a quiet concession to political pressure," said Anthony D'Ellena, a local Republican committee chairman. "Mayor Smiley called the original prominent mural ‘divisive’ and used his influence to bully the first business into removing it," he added. "Now Iryna gets a diminished, tucked-away tribute on a side wall instead of the bold, visible memorial she deserved in downtown Providence." A separate petition on Change.org opposing the mural garnered 15 signatures.RELATED: New butterfly species named in honor of Ukrainian woman brutally murdered on NC light rail D'Ellena said in an update to the petition that he would continue to fight for the return of the mural. The brutal murder of Iryna Zarutska, an immigrant who survived the war in Ukraine, was captured on security video from the Charlotte, North Carolina, light rail system. A suspect with a history of mental illness and violent crime was arrested and sparked a campaign against lax law enforcement policies.Mayor Smiley is running for re-election in 2026 against another Democrat on the ballot as well as a third Democrat candidate who is a convicted child molester.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Angel Reese TRADED — but Chicago Sky isn’t being honest about why, Jason Whitlock says
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Angel Reese TRADED — but Chicago Sky isn’t being honest about why, Jason Whitlock says

On April 6, the WNBA’s Chicago Sky announced that it traded power forward Angel Reese to the Atlanta Dream in exchange for two first-round draft picks.According to the team’s statement, the reason for the trade was “roster balance.”But BlazeTV host Jason Whitlock isn’t buying it.On this episode of “Fearless,” he unveils the real reason Reese was chopped after just two years with the Sky. “I find it odd that the Chicago Sky would jettison her after just two years. I think that speaks to what a headache she was in Chicago,” Whitlock tells his panel — Jay Skapinac, Steve Kim, and Maurice from “Keep the Vision.”“Teammates didn’t want to play with her; coaches couldn’t corral her. She was out there doing her double-double routine while the Chicago Sky were actually trying to win games or run an offense, and Angel Reese was just out there chasing stats,” he continues.He asks the panel: “Do you think Angel Reese will adjust her approach, attitude, and style of play?”“No, no, no, and no,” is Steve Kim’s honest response.To Reese’s new Dream teammates, he warns, “Get ready to stick your hands out like this and never get the ball because she’s going to get the rebound, get another rebound, get another rebound, another rebound, and another rebound.”Skapinac agrees: “She can barely — barely — make a layup, and in fact, she doesn’t make layups most of the time.”“And Jason, I’m with you,” he continues. “She is going to be the locker-room team cancer.“There’s never been a team — at Maryland, at LSU, and the Chicago Sky — where she didn’t have some sort of locker-room problem with her teammates. People don’t enjoy playing with her,” Whitlock says.He does believe, however, that Reese may genuinely improve her game with the Atlanta Dream because she finally has the chance to potentially dunk on Caitlin Clark.“She’s being offered a chance to play on a team that’s a championship-caliber team, and if she can get a WNBA championship before Caitlin Clark, that’s really going to enhance her brand, give her some standing around the league,” he says, “and I think that opportunity may for a short-term bring out the best in Angel Reese.”To hear more, watch the video above.Want more from Jason Whitlock?To enjoy more fearless conversations at the crossroads of culture, faith, sports, and comedy with Jason Whitlock, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

MEMBERS ONLY:  Pro-Palestine posting no 
problem with 'penis,' claims fired Kate Beckinsale
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MEMBERS ONLY:  Pro-Palestine posting no problem with 'penis,' claims fired Kate Beckinsale

Actress Kate Beckinsale wants to know why she was fired but a man was not.The 52-year-old's gripe dates back to 2023, when she was allegedly fired by talent agency UTA, which also represents actor Mark Ruffalo.'The price you pay for having a vagina while even remotely liking a post that was as un political as it could possibly be.''Vagina' monologueBeckinsale took aim at Ruffalo by leaving a lengthy and inflammatory comment on his Instagram page last week. Ruffalo's post was promoting a movie about Palestine, which prompted Beckinsale to leave scathing remarks claiming that UTA had fired her for liking a social media post about Palestine."Gosh, it must be so nice not to be fired by your Agent for liking a post about a ceasefire and not supporting the murdering of children," Beckinsale reportedly wrote in response; her comments have since been deleted, Entertainment Weekly noted.It only took two sentences for the "Underworld" actress to label her apparent firing as a case of sexism."I guess having a penis in Hollywood really counts for a lot because you've not been fired by the same Agent that I had and ... I liked a post about a ceasefire and I've got fired on the same day as Susan Sarandon was fired," she continued.Saran-doneUnlike Beckinsale's alleged firing, Sarandon's was public and confirmed by UTA for allegedly making anti-Semitic remarks at a pro-Palestine rally in 2023. According to Deadline, her comments included, "There are a lot of people afraid of being Jewish at this time and are getting a taste of what it feels like to be a Muslim in this country."UTA's CEO at the time of Sarandon's firing was Jeremy Zimmer, who is Jewish.RELATED: Celebrities demand ICE send illegal immigrants back ... to your neighborhood Alex Kent/Getty Images Social justice worrierBeckinsale went on in her reported comments to describe the tough spot she was in when she was allegedly fired, having to take care of two sick parents. She also applauded Ruffalo for his "voice" and "activism," before blaming sexism once more as the reason she was dropped by her agency."... the price you pay for having a vagina while even remotely liking a post that was as un political as it could possibly be, just asking for mercy for children and babies by UNICEF, in fact doing 1 millionth of what you have laudably done, caused me to be fired and you not, and that is, to say the least interesting."The actress said that other actresses and "women's advocate groups" also found the situation interesting, before claiming that she had sent Ruffalo a private message about the issue months ago but he "ignored" her.EW also reported that Beckinsale replied to one user's comments by saying there exists "male privilege even in the good guys."RELATED: Gene Simmons' advice for celeb activists Ben Stiller, Mark Ruffalo: 'Shut the f**k up' JOCE/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images/Getty Images Hulk smashedThe agent in question was not named, and neither Ruffalo nor UTA have offered comment when approached by different outlets.Beckinsale was correct to characterize Ruffalo as very politically active, though. He has put out a constant stream of commentary during the Donald Trump administration, including accidentally sharing AI images of Trump that he thought were real."Sorry Folks. Apparently these images are AI fakes. The fact Trump was on Epstein’s plane and what Epstein was up to is not. Be careful. Elon's X and his allowing so much disinformation here is driving the value of his app down by 55%," Ruffalo wrote at the time.Ruffalo has shown his support for Palestine in many ways, including supporting the shutdown of the Oscars ceremony he was attending and calls for his union to protect pro-Palestine activists from being blacklisted.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!