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Judge threatens to hold sheriff in contempt of court after police refuse order to release violent criminal with 35 arrests
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Judge threatens to hold sheriff in contempt of court after police refuse order to release violent criminal with 35 arrests

The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department is facing contempt of court charges after it refused to release a violent criminal with 35 arrests.Las Vegas Justice Court Judge Eric Goodman said that 36-year-old Joshua Sanchez-Lopez should be released and placed on electric monitoring, but police say he's too much of a risk.'The idea that a Metro employee can overrule a judge's release order and keep someone locked up should worry anyone who believes in the Constitution and the rule of law.'Sanchez-Lopez has previous convictions that include involuntary manslaughter and drug charges and was arrested in January on a charge of grand larceny of a motor vehicle. Goodman said he could be released from jail and monitored if he posted bail.Metro police told the judge on Jan. 29 they would not release Sanchez-Lopez, in defiance of his order.The letter cited previous incidents where Sanchez-Lopez failed to appear in court and violated the department's program. In one instance, he mocked police after posting a photo of his ankle monitor on Snapchat.On Feb. 5, Goodman responded and threatened to hold the cops in contempt of court.Metro argues that the decision to keep Sanchez-Lopez is granted to the sheriff by state law.The suspect's public defender disagreed."Metro's argument is flat wrong," reads a statement from public defender P. David Westbrook."It is the job of the elected judge to decide whether someone charged with a crime should be released and under what conditions," he added. "The idea that a Metro employee can overrule a judge's release order and keep someone locked up should worry anyone who believes in the Constitution and the rule of law."Metro assistant general counsel Mike Dickerson said they're trying to preserve public safety."We have to take a look at that and say, ‘Is this somebody who our electronic supervision program can monitor safely in the community?'" Dickerson said. "There's absolutely competing narratives about public safety occurring in our community. There's different approaches too," he added.RELATED: Former DHS attorney who told judge 'this job sucks' is now running to unseat Rep. Ilhan Omar In a statement on social media, Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo of Nevada said he backed the police."Sheriff McMahill and the men and women of Metro are doing exactly what they're sworn to do: protect the public," he wrote. "When repeat violent offenders are ordered back onto our streets, law enforcement has a duty to speak up and push back. I fully support LVMPD's decision to take this issue to the Nevada Supreme Court and fight for public safety. I stand with law enforcement."Goodman also pointed out that the level of electronic monitoring ordered for Sanchez-Lopez was similar to house arrest."The safety of our officers is paramount," Dickerson continued. "The safety of the public is key, and the key here is Sheriff McMahill will not violate the law to appease the Las Vegas Justice Court and let out people who he deems to be dangerous. We have a system that’s set up so people can get out of jail quickly, and sometimes, there just needs to be a little bit more thought given to it because lives are on the line."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

NYT columnist makes SICK comments about white people — John Doyle responds
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NYT columnist makes SICK comments about white people — John Doyle responds

A viral video is making waves online after journalist Wajahat Ali, journalist for the Daily Beast and the New York Times, posted a clip declaring that white Americans have already “lost” the demographic future of the country.BlazeTV host John Doyle breaks down the clip on “The John Doyle Show” — and he doesn’t appear to be worried about the journalist’s wild claims.“He is a Pakistani gentleman born to immigrant parents in California. He’s a Muslim leftist, very active on Twitter. So a few months ago, he posted this video essentially as a warning to white Americans, a kind of premature victory lap,” Doyle explains, “you know, practically confirming the idea of what’s been described as the ‘Great Replacement.’”“You’ve lost. You have lost. You lost. The mistake that you made is you let us in in the first place. That’s the thing with brown people. And I’m going to say this as a brown person. There’s a lot of us. Like a lot. There’s like 1.2 billion in India. There’s more than 200 million in Pakistan. There’s like 170 million in Bangladesh,” Ali said proudly in the selfie video.“Those are just the people there. I’m not even talking about the folks who are expats or immigrants. There’s a bunch of us. And we breed. We’re a breeding people. And the problem is, is you let us in in 1965,” he continued.“There were a few of us beforehand, but once you let one of us in, you know what happens with brown folks? Our grandmother comes, our grandfather comes, our uncle comes, our aunt comes, our cousin comes, our second cousin comes, our third cousin comes. Then we have kids, a bunch of kids,” he said, asking, “And then guess what?”“Some white women, you know, the Western civilization women, the pure women, the American women, quote unquote, the rust belt women, the real women, they like some of us brown folks. We don’t take them. They come to us,” he added.“So this is obviously just like some irrational bloodlust fantasy. You know, this like cucking fantasy pretending that one, literally white people are being outbred. We are demographically less virile. We’re going to lose because, you know, we’re going to be outbred by people like that,” Doyle comments.Doyle believes that Ali is “doing a kind of war dance” that Doyle himself sees as "bizarre."“I think that this person is performing. So I’m going to try to interpret it in good faith. ... You know, the only reason that our country is being flooded with immigrants is because of the decisions of other white people,” Doyle explains, pointing out that those white people, who are the “elites,” are “evil.”“I think that they align themselves with the third world because they have a bone to pick with the first world, with our civilization. That being said, they are in the driver’s seat to our problem. They are in the driver’s seat to our opposition,” he continues, before addressing Ali, “Not you. You are a pawn.”“You are brought in specifically because it makes them more powerful, simply because, yeah, you're a number on a piece of paper. You’re not inventing things. You’re not organizing. You are shuffled around,” he says.“So anyway, he’s trying to take this premature victory lap. It’s very passive aggressive, you know, declaring victory over Americans, white people. We’re going to be outbred or something in our own country. It’s just simply not true,” he adds.Want more from John Doyle?To enjoy more of the truth about America and join the fight to restore a country that has been betrayed by its own leaders, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

'Bugonia' and Hollywood's most post-Christian Academy Awards yet
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'Bugonia' and Hollywood's most post-Christian Academy Awards yet

Last night’s Academy Awards brought the usual mix of celebration, surprises, and disappointment.It also offered a revealing glimpse into how modern storytelling wrestles with the problem of human evil. Again and again, our stories invent new creators and judges — aliens, scientists, political systems — while avoiding the possibility that the answer might be the one Christianity has proposed all along.Interestingly, the film’s bleak ending inadvertently highlights the beauty of the alternative.We see this pattern clearly in this year’s Best Picture winner, "One Battle After Another." In that film, humanity’s problems are framed largely as political ones: injustice embedded in systems that must be overcome through struggle here on earth.The problem of evilThe year’s other nominees approach the same problem from different angles. "Frankenstein" warns about the dangers of human beings assuming the role of creator, while "Sinners" treats Christianity itself as a corrupting force rather than a remedy for human brokenness. The stories differ in tone and message, but they circle the same question: Why does humanity repeatedly descend into violence, cruelty, and exploitation?And then there's "Bugonia," Yorgos Lanthimos' ambitious science-fiction drama. Although the film failed to take home Best Picture or any of the four Oscars for which it was nominated, its unsettling message reveals much about our post-Christian frame of mind.The film proposes a provocative premise: Humanity was seeded on Earth by extraterrestrial beings known as Andromedans. But when humanity fails to live up to their expectations — ravaging the planet, waging war, exploiting one another — the aliens decide to erase the experiment and reboot the world.Spoiler alert: They succeed.Failed experimentIn the film’s closing act, the Andromedans judge humanity irredeemable. Our history of violence, greed, and environmental destruction becomes the evidence against us. Like scientists abandoning a failed experiment, they extinguish the human race in order to start again.The premise is morally haunting because it contains a kernel of truth. Humanity has indeed fallen short of what we know to be right. Our history is filled with wars, cruelty, and exploitation of both people and planet. Watching the film, you can almost understand why an external observer might conclude that humanity is incapable of redemption.But the film’s central idea contains a deeper philosophical problem that it never addresses.In "Bugonia," aliens replace God.Persistent theoryInstead of an eternal Creator, we are told that advanced beings from another star system planted life on Earth. Humanity, in other words, is merely the product of a cosmic experiment. The idea echoes the pseudoscientific theories popularized decades ago by Swiss author Erich von Däniken, most famously in his 1968 best-seller "Chariots of the Gods?" He argued that ancient monuments and religious traditions were evidence that extraterrestrials had visited Earth and influenced — or even created — human civilization.Despite the popularity of those claims, they have been widely rejected by scientists and historians as speculative at best and misleading at worst. Yet the underlying idea persists in popular culture, resurfacing in films, television shows, and speculative fiction like "Bugonia."The problem is that such explanations never truly answer the deepest question. They merely move it one step back: If the Andromedans created humanity, who created them?The difficulty with theories that attempt to explain existence without God is that they ultimately arrive at an illogical conclusion — that somehow the material universe emerged from nothing. Matter, life, and consciousness simply appeared. The universe, in effect, would have to create itself.Every effect requires a cause. Every creation requires a creator. If alien life exists somewhere in the universe — and it very well may — those beings would still be part of the created order. They, too, would owe their existence to something greater and eternal.A different story"Bugonia" imagines alien overseers who judge humanity and wipe the slate clean when the experiment fails. But the story humanity actually lives in is far different.According to Scripture, there was indeed a moment when God chose to “reset” the world. In the story of Noah, humanity had become so violent and corrupt that God sent a flood and preserved only Noah and his family to begin again. Humanity was, in a sense, rebooted.But even after the flood, humanity fell short again. We continued to quarrel, exploit, and destroy. The human story remained one of brokenness mixed with moments of grace.The difference between the God of Scripture and the Andromedans of "Bugonia" is not power. It is mercy.The aliens in the film conclude that humanity’s failures justify annihilation. God reached a radically different conclusion. Rather than abandon His creation, He entered into it.The eternal God sent His Son, Jesus Christ, into the world — not to condemn humanity but to redeem it. Where the Andromedans choose extermination, God chooses sacrifice.This is the heart of the Christian story. Humanity fails again and again. Yet instead of discarding us as a failed experiment, God offers forgiveness and transformation.RELATED: What Shia LaBeouf's public struggle shows us about Christian redemption MEGA/GC Images via Getty ImagesQuiet revolutionEven then, the story does not become one of instant perfection. People who follow Christ still struggle. They still fall short. The difference is not that believers suddenly become flawless, but that they now have a path toward redemption.One of the most profound summaries of that path comes from John the Baptist, who famously said of Christ: “He must increase; I must decrease” (John 3:30).Those few words describe the quiet revolution at the heart of Christianity. The transformation of humanity does not come from our own power or moral superiority. It comes from learning humility — placing God at the center rather than ourselves.And that humility has consequences. A world shaped by self-interest breeds the very problems "Bugonia" highlights — violence, greed, environmental destruction, and exploitation. A world shaped by love of neighbor and reverence for a Creator begins to look very different.Radical visionInterestingly, the film’s bleak ending inadvertently highlights the beauty of the alternative.In "Bugonia," humanity is judged solely by its failures. There is no grace, no redemption, no possibility that flawed beings might grow into something better.The Christian story, by contrast, insists that redemption is the point of the whole drama. God promised after the flood that He would not destroy the world again in such a way. The ultimate reset came not through annihilation but through Christ — through renewal.For all its imaginative power, "Bugonia" ultimately imagines a universe governed by distant creators who abandon their creation when it disappoints them.The Christian vision offers something far more radical: a Creator who loves His creation enough to save it.

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Israel's Present vs Future: Why THESE Massive Changes Appear Inevitable

NYT is getting crushed online for downplaying infamous 'population bomb' false alarm
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NYT is getting crushed online for downplaying infamous 'population bomb' false alarm

The ecologist responsible for one of history's most infamous false global predictions died on Friday, and the New York Times used the occasion to try to keep his anti-population prognostications alive. In his best-selling book "The Population Bomb" from 1968, Paul Ehrlich popularized the idea that the world was heading toward massive famine and starvation. Ehrlich argued that the Earth's natural resources were being depleted at such a rate that the population would crash worldwide.'His predictions proved wrong. They were not premature. They were wrong. His understanding of the world was wrong.'Instead, the global population more than doubled from about 3.5 billion people when the book was published to 8.3 billion by 2026.While most would call the infamous prediction a complete and utter failure, the Times said it was merely "premature."Many online reacted with scorn and ridicule."Wrong. His predictions proved wrong. They were not premature. They were wrong. His understanding of the world was wrong. Faulty. Unrealistic. False. Falsified," data scientist John Aziz responded."Its [sic] stunning not just how wrong Ehrlich was ... or how evil he was ... but how constantly our media amplified him and is still covering for his endless failed predictions," replied Andrew Follett of the Club for Growth.Others pointed to stories of people who chose to avoid having children based on Ehrlich's book and regretted it greatly later."Paul Ehrlich was one of the most pernicious public figures of the last 50 years. Somehow he was still celebrated in certain intellectual circles until the very end. Never forget the harm his ideas caused," replied Alec Stapp, who cited an example from the comments section."I was a college student when I read Mr. Ehrlich's 'The Population Bomb.' I took it to heart and now have no grandchildren, but 50 years later the population has increased to eight billion without dire consequences. I was gullible and stupid," a man named Kenneth Emde wrote."Paul Ehrlich's work wasn't 'premature,' it was wrong, completely so, and evil: his recommendations resulted in many hundreds of thousands of coerced sterilizations and abortions among the world's most vulnerable people," city planner M. Nolan Gray replied.RELATED: CBS kicks off new year with 'mass extinction' prediction from 'anti-human' depopulationist who spent his career being proven wrong "His predictions in the 1960s and 1970s weren't premature; they were just wrong and his Malthusian views cascaded into innumerable damage on society. ... He advocated for abortion and policies for population control," science policy analyst Chris Martz responded. "Lots of people refused to have children as a result of his philosophy. But many climate activist degrowthers still hang on every word."Ehrlich died of complications from cancer at the age of 93 at a nursing facility in Palo Alto, California.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!