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SENATOR PEPPER-SPRAYED: Shockwaves Through Newark Protest…
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SENATOR PEPPER-SPRAYED: Shockwaves Through Newark Protest…

A sitting United States senator caught a face full of pepper spray outside a Newark detention facility, and the fight over what that means could shape how America judges force, protest, and immigration enforcement this summer. Story Snapshot Pepper spray was used during protests outside Delaney Hall in Newark; Senator Andy Kim was on scene urging calm [8]. Department of Homeland Security said protesters obstructed and assaulted officers, including throwing objects and slashing a tire [6]. Four detainees were reported unaccounted for amid unrest at Delaney Hall, intensifying tensions [6]. Competing narratives mirror past immigration flashpoints, where video and reports later arbitrate claims of excess versus necessity [6]. Newark confrontation turns into a test of force and restraint Reports from the Newark protest outside Delaney Hall describe immigration officers deploying pepper spray during repeated confrontations with demonstrators, with Senator Andy Kim on site attempting to calm the crowd and step protesters back from the line [8]. Local coverage cites masked officers moving protesters away from the facility perimeter as tempers flared [8]. The scene fits a high-friction pattern common at detention sites: rapid escalation, chemical irritants, and divergent accounts of who crossed the line first and why it happened at all [6]. Law enforcement officials described a different picture. The Department of Homeland Security said demonstrators obstructed and assaulted officers, forced a suspension of visitation to protect staff and visitors, and engaged in damaging acts such as slashing a vehicle tire [6]. Those claims, if supported by video or arrest reports, supply the legal framework officers use to justify chemical agents as a crowd-control tool. The agency also disputed allegations of poor medical care for detainees that circulated among protesters [6]. A powder keg: detainee unrest and public pressure collide The protest unfolded amid wider turmoil at Delaney Hall, where four detainees were reported unaccounted for, sharpening public scrutiny and turning a tense standoff into a citywide flashpoint [6]. Facility disruptions and escapes predictably harden police posture; officers move quickly to lock down entry points and clear choke zones. Protesters argue that very posture provokes overreaction. Political leaders navigate both pressures, trying to be visible at the scene while urging nonviolence and demanding transparency about conditions and use of force [7]. Senators Andy Kim and Cory Booker issued a joint statement condemning the raid and calling for clarity on tactics and treatment of detainees [7]. That appeal underscores a bipartisan impulse many older Americans recognize: back the badge when officers face real threats, but insist that government power stays inside the guardrails. The more specific the facts—who blocked gates, who threw what, where the spray was aimed—the easier it becomes to separate justified control from mission creep that chills lawful protest. How America usually decides disputes like this Similar immigration flashpoints follow a familiar arc: immediate outrage, crisp accusations, and a fog of partial video—then, slowly, body-worn camera footage, incident logs, and court filings settle the record. Newsrooms and advocates move first with narratives; documentation either reinforces or revises those stories later. Newark already shows that template: reports of chemical agents and injuries on one side, descriptions of obstruction and officer safety threats on the other, and a running dispute over detainee care in the background [6][8]. American conservative values stress law, order, and proportion. If protesters blocked entrances or assaulted officers, a controlled use of pepper spray to clear a lane tracks with common-sense crowd management. If officers directed chemical agents at nonviolent individuals—including elected officials—without a clear, immediate threat, that fails the proportionality test and deserves discipline and policy correction. Both statements can be true in one night: justified force at one perimeter, overreach at another. The evidence will decide which happened in Newark. What to watch next: evidence, accountability, and policy fixes Three developments will clarify the Newark story. First, the release of body-worn camera and facility surveillance video should confirm whether demonstrators blocked ingress, threw objects, or charged lines, and whether officers aimed spray narrowly or swept crowds. Second, medical and arrest records will map injuries and alleged offenses to individual incidents, not just headlines. Third, congressional and local oversight can test detainee care claims and revisit crowd-control policies before the next high-stakes encounter turns into a legal and political brawl [6][7][8]. Sources: [6] Web – 4 detainees escape amid unrest at Delaney Hall immigration … [7] Web – Senator Kim, Booker Statement on Newark ICE Raid [8] Web – Report: Protesters Gassed by ICE Outside Delaney Hall, Senator …

SHOCKING Nuclear Exercises Near NATO! What Now?
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SHOCKING Nuclear Exercises Near NATO! What Now?

Belarus just ran nuclear-involved drills with Russia near NATO borders, raising the stakes for American allies and testing whether Washington and Europe are ready for real deterrence or more hollow posturing. Belarus Says The Drills Tested Nuclear-Related Readiness Belarusian defense statements, as relayed through broadcast reports, said the exercises tested combat readiness and coordination for nuclear-capable forces, including missile units and aviation operating under simulated battlefield conditions. Officials in Minsk emphasized the drills were defensive and aimed at maintaining preparedness in a changing security environment. The training reportedly included interoperability with Russia for delivery of nuclear munitions, consistent with a joint deterrence posture. These claims were conveyed in coverage of the events rather than through published primary military orders. [1][2][3] Belarus’s position aligns with earlier announcements that Russian nuclear weapons are present in the country, giving the drills operational context beyond rhetoric. Reports from 2023 onward described deployments on Belarusian territory, though exact numbers, locations, and the status of warheads remain undisclosed. That secrecy limits outside verification of what was practiced during the latest exercise, including whether real warheads, training dummies, or purely simulated procedures were used. The absence of open documentation narrows independent assessment. [1][3] Western Coverage Signals Escalation Concerns Near NATO Western media and analysts framed the drills as heightening nuclear risk and sending a strategic message to NATO’s eastern flank. A defense scholar quoted by a European broadcaster argued the exercises served both capability testing and overt signaling. Outlets linked the timing to ongoing war events and other Russian strategic moves, portraying a pattern of nuclear-capable posturing rather than a routine training cycle. That framing has traction because the activity happens close to NATO territory, where proximity magnifies perceived threat. [4][5] Reports also referenced nuclear-capable systems already in Belarus, including short-range ballistic missiles and claims about additional platforms, to support the interpretation of deliberate coercive symbolism. Ukrainian officials publicly warned that Belarusian territory could be used to threaten Ukraine or allied states, reinforcing the idea that the exercises communicate pressure as much as preparedness. While these judgments are interpretive, they reflect the broader information environment surrounding Russia’s war and long-running distrust of official messaging. [1][4][5][6] What Is Verified, What Is Opaque, And Why It Matters Publicly available evidence confirms that Belarus conducted drills involving nuclear-capable forces in coordination with Russia and that Minsk described them as defensive readiness checks. The record also supports that Russian nuclear weapons are hosted in Belarus. However, the documentation made public does not show exercise directives, after-action reports, or independent satellite corroboration that would specify whether warhead logistics were simulated or physically rehearsed. The lack of transparent data creates space for competing interpretations. [1][2][3] The drills will started on May 19 and will last until May 21. They include training related to nuclear weapons deployed in Belarus.https://t.co/AqAmxxRMLB — Eurasian Press (@EurasiaPress1) May 20, 2026 For American readers, NATO stability and credible deterrence remain vital national interests. When adversaries rehearse nuclear-capable operations on our allies’ doorstep, Washington must ensure robust missile defense, allied interoperability, energy security, and industrial rearmament are funded and functioning—not bogged down by bureaucracy or distracted by ideological agendas. Prudence demands vigilance without panic: verify capabilities, strengthen alliance posture, and uphold peace through strength grounded in clear-eyed assessments of what the drills demonstrated and what they left intentionally unclear. [1][2][3][4][5][6] Sources: [1] YouTube – Russia Deploys Nuclear-Capable Oreshnik Missile System in Belarus [2] YouTube – 65000 Russian Troops Launch Nuclear Drills With Belarus, Ukraine … [3] Web – Nuclear weapons in Belarus: What we Know – ICAN [4] Web – Belarus, Russia Practice Nuclear Operations

17 MISSING Scientists: FBI’s Stunning New UPDATE…
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17 MISSING Scientists: FBI’s Stunning New UPDATE…

A growing trail of dead and missing American scientists tied to space and defense work has pushed the FBI into a full‑field probe—yet officials still insist there is “no evidence” the cases are connected. Story Snapshot At least 10–17 U.S. scientists and staff linked to sensitive nuclear and space research have died or vanished in recent years, triggering a federal investigation.[3][4][7] The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) now leads a multi‑agency hunt for possible connections, working with the Department of Energy and Department of War.[3][4][5] Some cases involve clear homicide, others unexplained disappearances with phones and IDs left behind, fueling public concern over national security.[3][5][6] Officials and outside experts publicly say they see no proven link among the cases, despite White House and congressional scrutiny.[3][4][6] FBI Steps In As Scientist Death Toll And Disappearances Mount The Federal Bureau of Investigation is now “spearheading the effort” to determine whether a cluster of deaths and disappearances among scientists tied to nuclear and space technology is connected, after initial review by the Department of Energy.[3][4] Senior law enforcement officials told reporters the FBI is working with the Department of Energy, the Department of War, and state and local agencies to “find answers,” signaling that Washington is treating the pattern as a potential national security issue, not just local tragedy.[3][4][5] Reports across legacy and independent media describe between 10 and 17 scientists and staff either dead or missing over roughly the last three to four years, many connected to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory, or other sensitive labs.[3][4][5][7][8] Some simply vanished while hiking or walking, in several cases leaving wallets or phones behind, while others were found shot or otherwise dead under specific circumstances.[2][3][5] The White House has ordered a “holistic review” of these incidents, coordinating with the FBI and relevant agencies.[6] Cases Span Homicide, Vanishings, And Sensitive National Security Work Coverage by national outlets emphasizes that these are not routine workplace accidents: at least one scientist, Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Nuno Loureiro, was reportedly killed by a former engineering classmate in a targeted shooting, while another California case already has a suspect charged with murder.[3][4] Other scientists disappeared under murkier conditions, including outdoor excursions where vehicles or personal effects were later located but the individuals were not, creating a mix of confirmed homicide and unresolved missing‑person files.[2][3][4][8] What ties the list together is not a single project but access to sensitive research fields, from nuclear programs and advanced aerospace work to space‑related technology handled at NASA‑adjacent labs and federal facilities.[3][4][5][6] Officials confirm that multiple individuals worked at laboratories overseen by the Department of Energy, including Los Alamos, or at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, while others were connected to defense‑related contractors.[3][4][5] That combination—high‑security work plus unexplained deaths or disappearances—has stirred legitimate concern among lawmakers focused on espionage, foreign intelligence, and protection of classified material.[4][5] Washington Balances Public Reassurance Against Acknowledging Risk The political system is now fully engaged: House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer and Representative Eric Burlison have launched a congressional inquiry, warning that “if the reports are accurate,” these deaths and disappearances could represent a “grave threat” to U.S. national security and personnel with access to scientific secrets.[4][6] Chairman Comer also told Fortune that the known facts suggest “something sinister could be happening,” underscoring conservative worries that America’s strategic edge may be under quiet attack.[5] At the same time, federal and local officials repeatedly stress that no evidence yet links the cases together, and that some appear driven by personal motives rather than a coordinated plot.[3][4][6] The Bernalillo County official overseeing one missing‑person case said investigators have “so far uncovered no evidence of foul play,” though inquiries remain open.[3] Outside experts interviewed by CBS and other outlets describe the incidents as scattered across different years and locations, noting that if all scientists were tied to one weapon system, suspicion of a single operation would be much higher.[3][4] Media Silence, Public Questions, And The Need For Real Transparency While social media and some commentators have amplified theories of a broader operation, responsible voices acknowledge a simple but unsettling reality: there is currently no confirmed proof of a conspiracy, yet there is also no comprehensive public accounting that fully explains the cluster.[3][5][6][9] Legacy outlets concede that many details remain sealed in case files, autopsy records, and classified employment histories, leaving room for speculation when highly specialized researchers go missing or end up dead in a short period.[3][5][6] For Americans who value a strong national defense and limited but competent government, the path forward is straightforward: demand full transparency consistent with security needs, from detailed autopsy and missing‑person records to clear statements on whether any foreign intelligence link has been ruled out or confirmed.[3][4][6] Without that clarity, repeated official assurances of “no evidence” will struggle to satisfy a public that has watched too many national security failures and cover‑ups unfold only after the fact.[3][5][6] Sources: [2] Web – The dead and missing scientists linked to space and the military: FBI … [3] Web – FBI PROBES SPACE SCIENTISTS DEAD, MISSING, TOLL RISES … [4] Web – FBI probes deaths, disappearances of scientists tied to US research [5] Web – FBI investigation deaths and disappearances of notable scientists … [6] YouTube – FBI called on to investigate scientists’ ‘suspicious’ deaths … [7] YouTube – The Missing Scientist Mystery No One Can Explain [8] Web – FBI investigating the deaths, disappearances of scientists tied to … [9] Web – FBI investigating deaths and disappearances of staff at … – CBS News

Pope’s AI Bombshell — Unprecedented VATICAN Move!
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Pope’s AI Bombshell — Unprecedented VATICAN Move!

A historic papal document on artificial intelligence is being unveiled today with a Silicon Valley co‑founder at the Pope’s side, raising big questions about who will shape the moral rules for the machines now steering our lives. Story Snapshot Pope Leo XIV is releasing his first encyclical, “Magnifica Humanitas,” on artificial intelligence and human dignity. The Pope is personally presenting the document at the Vatican alongside Anthropic co‑founder Christopher Olah. The encyclical is framed as defending “the human person in the age of artificial intelligence.” The launch blends faith, big tech, and global politics at a moment when Washington is debating AI, war, and work. Pope Centers First Encyclical on AI and Human Dignity Pope Leo XIV has chosen artificial intelligence and the protection of human dignity as the defining theme of his first major teaching document, titled “Magnifica Humanitas” (“Magnificent Humanity”). Vatican reporting says the encyclical focuses on “the protection of the human person in the age of artificial intelligence,” putting questions about technology, work, and identity front and center for more than a billion Catholics worldwide. The letter was formally signed on May 15, 2026, underscoring its intended weight in Catholic social teaching.[3][6] Signing the document on May 15 was a deliberate historical signal. Commentators note that this is the 135th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII’s landmark encyclical “Rerum Novarum,” which responded to the upheaval of industrial capitalism in 1891.[3] Then, the Church spoke into the factory age; now, Pope Leo XIV is speaking into the algorithmic age. The Vatican is presenting “Magnifica Humanitas” as the next chapter in that tradition, asking how rapid technological change affects families, workers, and the weak.[3][6] An Unprecedented Vatican Stage Shared with Big Tech The release is notable not only for its topic but for how it is being presented. Reports say that, in a first for a modern social encyclical, Pope Leo XIV himself will appear at the Vatican press event to launch the document.[1][2] He will share the stage with Christopher Olah, co‑founder of the artificial intelligence company Anthropic, the firm behind the Claude language model. Media outlets describe this joint appearance as “remarkable” and “unprecedented” in recent papal history.[1][6] The Vatican has also organized a broad panel that includes three cardinals, senior theologians, and lay experts, signaling institutional backing for the message on artificial intelligence ethics.[1][6] Reports name Cardinals Víctor Manuel “Tucho” Fernández, Michael Czerny, and Pietro Parolin among the presenters, alongside theologians Anna Rowlands and Sister Leo Cada Lushombo.[1][6] Their presence suggests the Holy See wants this document to shape long‑term teaching on work, war, and technology, not merely spark one news cycle. What the Encyclical Aims to Address—and What We Still Do Not Know Advance interviews with Vatican watchers and Catholic scholars stress that the encyclical will not be a technical manual on software, but a meditation on what it means to remain fully human in a digital age.[2][3] Commentators expect the Pope to highlight both opportunity and risk: artificial intelligence can assist medicine, education, and productivity, but it can also change how people work, relate to one another, and understand truth itself. These are framed as moral and spiritual questions, not just engineering problems.[2][3] Several analysts emphasize that the Holy Father is likely to insist on the primacy of human dignity over profit or efficiency.[3] Prior remarks attributed to him stress that technology always raises “a spiritual problem” about “what it means to be human and how to live a fully human and flourishing life.”[3] At the same time, much discussion remains speculative. Reporters admit that the full text was not available before today’s event, and some early commentary about page length or specific policy proposals—such as bans on certain weapons systems or regulations on surveillance—remains unconfirmed without the official document.[2][3][6] Why Conservative Americans Should Pay Attention For readers in the United States, this encyclical lands at a moment when the Trump administration’s second term is wrestling with artificial intelligence in the military, the workplace, and federal regulation. Media previews suggest some commentators expect friction between Church calls for ethical limits and Washington’s push to maintain strategic advantage, particularly in autonomous weapons and high‑end computing.[3][6] Those predictions, however, come from analysts, not yet from the text itself. Today at the Vatican, Pope Leo XIV published "Magnifica Humanitas" — the first papal encyclical in history dedicated to artificial intelligence and the protection of human dignity.Standing alongside the Pope: Christopher Olah, co-founder of Anthropic.The document condemns AI… — Dasun Sucharith (@dasun_sucharith) May 25, 2026 Conservatives who care about limited government and strong families may find both reassurance and reasons for caution. On one hand, the Vatican’s repeated focus on human dignity, the value of labor, and the importance of forming younger generations to use technology wisely aligns with concerns about children glued to screens and corporations exploiting data.[2][3] On the other hand, the optics of a papal stage shared with a large artificial intelligence firm raise fair questions about whether tech elites are helping to write the moral script that will later be used to regulate them.[1][5] Church–Tech Partnerships and the Battle Over Legitimacy Anthropic’s involvement is not a last‑minute surprise. Coverage describes months of dialogues between the San Francisco‑based company and Vatican officials on technology and ethics.[5] Some reports highlight Anthropic’s public stance in favor of artificial intelligence “guardrails,” including claims that the firm has declined work connected to autonomous weapons systems, presenting itself as a conscientious voice in the industry.[4][5] For many believers and citizens, questions remain about how far to trust such self‑policing by corporations that still answer to investors. Analysts observing the launch place it within a broader pattern in which powerful institutions seek credibility by partnering on “ethics” initiatives.[1][4] In this case, the Vatican offers spiritual authority and a long tradition of reflection on human dignity, while an artificial intelligence company offers technical expertise and access to the people actually building the systems. That combination could produce much‑needed moral clarity—or it could blur the line between moral teaching and public relations. The answer will depend heavily on what “Magnifica Humanitas” actually says, and how firmly it speaks to abuses of power.[1][4][5] Sources: [1] Web – Pope Leo’s encyclical comes just in time: AI is raising questions only … [2] YouTube – Pope Leo Focusing on AI in First Encyclical [3] YouTube – What to Expect from Pope Leo XIV’s First Encyclical on AI [4] YouTube – How the Tech World Is Responding to Pope Leo XIV’s Encyclical on AI [5] Web – Why is AI company Anthropic helping launch Pope Leo XIV’s … [6] Web – Pope Leo to present his encyclical on AI alongside Anthropic co …

SpaceX IPO to SKYROCKET: Mystery OR Madness?
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SpaceX IPO to SKYROCKET: Mystery OR Madness?

Elon Musk’s SpaceX is racing toward the biggest stock listing in history, and everyday American investors must decide whether this trillion‑dollar rocket ship is real opportunity or Wall Street bubble 2.0. SpaceX Targets Record Valuation In A High‑Stakes Public Debut SpaceX is preparing to go public in what analysts expect will be the largest initial public offering ever seen on United States markets, with reporting and market commentary centering on a valuation in the ballpark of $1.5 to $1.75 trillion and tens of billions of dollars in new capital raised. [3][5] That would instantly place SpaceX alongside the world’s most valuable companies on day one of trading, turning a once‑scrappy private rocket outfit into a market behemoth under the glare of public investors. Elon Musk himself has publicly signaled that he wants to “get the SpaceX IPO going pretty soon,” describing the move toward a listing as an urgent priority while working on the deal from Texas. [1] The formal filing indicates that SpaceX plans to list on the Nasdaq exchange under the ticker “SPCX,” confirming that the long‑rumored offering is no longer speculation but a live event on Wall Street’s calendar. [3] For many conservative investors, this becomes a referendum on whether American innovation or government bureaucracy sets the pace in space. Massive Revenue Meets Massive Losses In SpaceX’s Financial Picture SpaceX’s registration documents and related reporting show that this is not a pre‑revenue fantasy: the company reportedly generated roughly $18.7 billion in revenue last year, powered by its launch business and the rapidly growing Starlink satellite internet network. [5] This scale separates SpaceX from many hype‑driven listings of the last decade and proves there is a real business underneath the headlines. However, revenue alone is not the whole story, and the numbers that follow demand a sober look from patriotic savers. Despite the impressive top line, the same reports say SpaceX posted a net loss of about $4.9 billion over that period, making clear that the company is still burning large amounts of cash to fund its expansion. [5] Those losses are framed by analysts as a central risk factor for new shareholders, because they show that ambitious projects—from reusable rockets to satellite networks and artificial intelligence infrastructure—are not yet fully self‑funding. Conservative investors who watched past bubbles inflate and burst will recognize the danger of paying sky‑high prices before profits truly arrive. Control, Culture, And Who Really Owns America’s Space Future Coverage of the filing highlights that Elon Musk will retain concentrated voting control over SpaceX after the initial public offering, even as public investors buy large stakes in the company. For many on the right, this can be a double‑edged sword. Strong founder control can insulate a company from the “woke capital” pressures that have infected many boardrooms, but it also means new shareholders will have limited ability to redirect strategy if spending, debt, or political entanglements ever spin out of control. Pre‑IPO markets already suggest that expectations are sky‑high, with private transactions marking SpaceX at lofty prices and secondary platforms listing estimated share values well above one thousand dollars each. [4] That kind of enthusiasm often attracts the same Wall Street institutions and global funds that cheered on speculative tech darlings while Main Street absorbed the damage when reality caught up. The risk is that small conservative investors arrive late to the party, buying at peak prices while bigger players treat the offering as a trading event rather than a long‑term partnership in building America’s space infrastructure. The SpaceX Initial Public Offering (IPO) is scheduled to launch as early as June 12, with share pricing expected around June 11. The company plans to trade on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol $SPCX I calculate the SP will be around $100-$120 on launch day. Will you be buying? — Day trading with Harry (@daytradingharry) May 21, 2026 Opportunity For American Strength Or Another Elitist Market Bubble? Supporters of the deal argue that SpaceX’s unique role in launch services and satellite communications makes it strategically vital for United States security and economic independence, especially as China races to dominate low‑Earth orbit. [2][3] They see a future in which American‑controlled rockets and networks ensure our military, farmers, small businesses, and families are not reliant on foreign or globalist technology interests for basic connectivity and defense. From that perspective, allowing broad public ownership could be a way for citizens to share directly in the upside of a critical national asset. SpaceX's historic IPO plans: Billions in losses and Musk's massive ownership, SpaceX sees a total addressable market of $28.5 trillion, and identifying and creating trillion-dollar market opportunities is one element of its “repeatable business model.”https://t.co/DSnogRZ4iA — Norm Roulet (@NormRoulet) May 21, 2026 Skeptics counter that, even with those strategic benefits, the proposed valuation and ongoing losses create real danger that ordinary savers will be left holding the bag if growth slows or costs spiral, especially in a world already dealing with inflation and market volatility. [5] They note that initial public offerings are engineered deal events, not patriotic missions, and that underwriters are paid to get the sale done, not to guarantee a fair price. For conservatives who value prudence and personal responsibility, that means doing the hard work: reading the fine print, questioning glossy narratives, and deciding whether this launch is worth boarding—or better watched from a safe distance. Sources: [1] YouTube – Musk Wants to Get SpaceX IPO Underway ‘Pretty Soon’ [2] Web – SpaceX IPO: everything you need to know | Capital.com [3] Web – SpaceX’s historic IPO filing is here. Here’s what investors should … [4] Web – SpaceX IPO: Investment Opportunities & Pre-IPO Valuations – Forge [5] YouTube – SpaceX plans for a record-breaking IPO