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DHS Power Grab SHREDDED In Court
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DHS Power Grab SHREDDED In Court

A single federal judge just told Washington that it cannot quietly freeze the lives of thousands of legal immigrants in the name of “security” and expect nobody to question the paperwork behind it. Story Snapshot A Rhode Island federal judge struck down four Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services policies that froze immigration benefits for people from dozens of countries. The court said the agency claimed legal authority it did not have and acted in an “arbitrary and capricious” way under the Administrative Procedure Act. The judge blasted the freeze as throwing immigrants into “indeterminate legal limbo” and masking anti-immigrant sentiment behind national security language. The ruling fits a growing pattern: courts forcing federal immigration agencies to stop using backdoor delays instead of upfront lawmaking. How a Quiet “Pause” Became a Constitutional Problem The policies at issue did not look dramatic on paper. United States Citizenship and Immigration Services issued memos in late 2025 and early 2026 that effectively froze final decisions on immigration benefit applications for people from dozens of countries tied to a new travel ban, eventually covering up to thirty-nine nations.[1][3] Lawyers and policy analysts describe them as a “benefits hold” and an adjudication “pause,” but the substance was simple: stop saying yes or no, and leave people in limbo.[2][3] That limbo applied to work permits, green cards, travel documents, and even some naturalization-linked filings.[3] Law firms quickly warned that the freeze was sweeping and indefinite. A major business-immigration firm reported that adjudications were paused for virtually all types of benefits for nationals of the listed countries, no matter when they entered the United States.[3] The same guidance described a “comprehensive rereview” of previously approved cases, complete with mandatory interviews, enhanced terrorism and criminal checks, and possible referral to law enforcement.[3] Community groups documented similar effects on asylum and humanitarian applicants, many already living here lawfully and following every rule set for them.[4][5] What the Judge Actually Said About USCIS Power On June 5, 2026, Chief Judge John J. McConnell Jr., of the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island, took direct aim at the legal foundation of these policies. He ruled that four Department of Homeland Security and United States Citizenship and Immigration Services policies were “unlawful under the Administrative Procedure Act,” declared them invalid, and set them aside nationwide.[1][3] In plain English, he found that the agency had no authority to impose an open-ended freeze on whole categories of cases while continuing to process others.[1][3] He emphasized that Congress gave the agency a framework: adjudicate cases based on clear statutory criteria and within reasonable timeframes, not whenever it feels like it.[2][3] The language of the opinion is bruising. According to immigration counsel summarizing the ruling, the judge said United States Citizenship and Immigration Services “claims statutory and regulatory authority that it does not possess, makes decisions without the reasoned explanations that it must provide, acts without regard for the reliance interests of applicants that it must consider, and justifies its actions with pretextual concerns of national security that mask anti-immigrant sentiments that it is forbidden from letting influence its decision-making.”[1][3] That is not a technical quibble; that is a federal judge accusing an agency of dressing politics up as “security.” From a rule-of-law and conservative limited-government perspective, that should be alarming. Why This Ruling Matters Beyond Immigration Lawyers The case is part of a broader pattern stretching back years: administrations of both parties repeatedly test how far they can go using internal guidance, security vetting language, and “temporary holds” to reshape who can live and work here, without Congress ever voting.[2][3] When the government claims open-ended discretion to stop adjudicating, real families pay the price—lost jobs, expired work permits, and impossible decisions about whether to travel or stay put.[3][5] Conservative common sense says the executive branch should enforce the law as written, not invent new penalties by slow-walking legal applications into oblivion. Federal Judge Strikes Down USCIS Benefit Freeze Policies https://t.co/ve2f2i0lsl — Marlow62 (@Marlow3456) June 6, 2026 The Rhode Island ruling pushes back hard on that habit. By calling out “pretextual” national security justifications and “anti-immigrant sentiments,” the court is effectively warning that security cannot be a magic word that suspends both statutory duties and constitutional limits.[1][3] That does not mean serious vetting is wrong; most Americans support it, and many immigrants welcome it because it makes the system more credible. It does mean vetting must follow law, not replace it. When the government wants new powers, the adult way to get them is through Congress, not secret memos. What Comes Next for Applicants and for Executive Power For people whose cases were frozen, the immediate impact is practical but significant. Immigration attorneys expect United States Citizenship and Immigration Services to start moving long-stalled work permit and green card cases, both for those still waiting and for those whose approvals were yanked back into “review.”[1][5] Lawsuits already pending in other courts over similar pauses and delays will likely cite this decision as persuasive support that open-ended holds violate the Administrative Procedure Act and due process.[5] Future administrations now know that if they want to target entire nationalities with benefit freezes, they will face not just political blowback, but a serious chance of having their policies erased from the books. For Americans who favor both secure borders and accountable government, that is a healthy reminder: the same laws that limit bureaucrats today can protect your freedoms tomorrow. Sources: [1] Web – Federal Judge Strikes Down USCIS Benefit Freeze Policies [2] Web – Breaking: Federal Court Strikes Down USCIS Adjudication Pause for … [3] YouTube – Major Update: Judge Rules Against USCIS Freeze [4] Web – Judge Finds DHS Violated the Law By Freezing Legal Immigration [5] Web – Judge Rules USCIS Cannot Indefinitely Pause Immigration Benefit …

Runway Mayhem: Lizzo Denies The Fall
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Runway Mayhem: Lizzo Denies The Fall

When Lizzo told the world “people were slipping and eating s–t” backstage at the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit show, she wasn’t complaining — she was bragging about surviving it. Story Snapshot Lizzo performed live and walked the runway at the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit show during Miami Swim Week at W South Beach in May 2026. Post-show, Lizzo revealed the pool deck stage conditions were dangerously slick, with multiple people falling during the event. She flatly denied slipping herself, calling the experience “so intense” while praising the cast for pushing through. The show also featured Tiffany Haddish, Dancing with the Stars professionals, and a packed celebrity lineup on a notoriously wet venue surface. What Actually Happened on That Pool Deck in Miami The Sports Illustrated Swimsuit runway show took over the W South Beach pool deck during Miami Swim Week, and the venue choice came with a very real physical hazard. [3] Pool decks are wet by design. Combine that with high heels, live performance choreography, swimwear, and a crowd-charged atmosphere, and you have a recipe for chaos. Lizzo didn’t just perform — she performed through conditions that were apparently sending other people to the ground around her. Lizzo hit the runway to perform several of her high-energy hits and also walked in a striking blue one-piece swimsuit. [3] That’s two entirely different physical demands on the same slick surface — singing and moving with performance energy, then pivoting to model composure on a catwalk. The fact that she pulled off both while others were reportedly falling is either impressive athleticism, good footwear, or sheer stubbornness. Probably all three. Lizzo’s Version: Chaos Was the Point, Not the Problem After the show, Lizzo addressed the obvious question directly. “I didn’t slip,” she said, and then immediately reframed the entire event not as a near-disaster but as a test of collective grit. [2] She described the experience as “so intense” and credited the full cast, saying “everyone was such a good sport” and “kept pushing.” [2] That framing matters. She’s not minimizing what happened around her — she’s contextualizing it as part of what made the performance real and earned. This is where the media narrative and Lizzo’s own account diverge in an interesting way. Entertainment coverage gravitates toward the fall, the slip, the stumble — those are the clips that travel. But Lizzo’s version centers the recovery, the endurance, and the group effort to hold the show together despite a surface that was working against everyone. Whether you find that inspiring or just good spin depends on how much credit you extend to performers who show up and deliver under genuinely difficult conditions. The Larger Pattern: Live Fashion Events Are More Dangerous Than They Look Pool deck runways during outdoor summer shows are a recurring liability in the fashion and entertainment world. Wet surfaces, bare feet or stilettos, live music energy, and tight choreography windows create conditions that professional athletes would approach with caution. The Dancing with the Stars professionals who also appeared at the same show reportedly took a tumble as well — and these are people whose entire career is built around not falling. [3] That detail alone validates Lizzo’s account that the conditions were genuinely treacherous. Lizzo spills wild secret from Sports Illustrated Swimsuit show performance: ‘People were slipping and eating s–t’ https://t.co/1CE3xKrM6I pic.twitter.com/rdDmlR3AE1 — New York Post (@nypost) June 6, 2026 Tiffany Haddish also appeared at the show, adding to a celebrity-heavy lineup that made the stakes of any public stumble considerably higher. [1] When you have cameras everywhere and a crowd primed for viral moments, a slip becomes a story within seconds. Lizzo clearly understood that dynamic, which is likely why she addressed it head-on rather than letting the footage define the narrative. She got ahead of it, owned the chaos, and turned a potential embarrassment into a behind-the-scenes war story. Why This Story Is More Interesting Than It Appears At face value, this is a celebrity runway slip story. But underneath it is something more telling about how performers manage public perception in real time. Lizzo has spent the past few years navigating significant personal and professional turbulence, including lawsuits, public criticism, and a period of relative quiet. Showing up at a major Sports Illustrated event, performing live, walking the runway, and then coming out the other side with a funny, self-assured story about the chaos — that’s a deliberate image moment, and it landed cleanly. [2] [4] The pool deck was slippery. People fell. Lizzo didn’t. And she made sure you know the difference. Sources: [1] Web – Lizzo spills wild secret from Sports Illustrated Swimsuit show … [2] Web – Tiffany Haddish & Lizzo Rip The Runway At The ‘SI Swimsuit’ Show [3] Web – Lizzo dishes out on Sports Illustrated Swimsuit show: ‘Crazy’ [4] Web – From Lizzo to ‘Dancing With the Stars,’ Our Fave Moments From the …

Watermelon Apology Exposes Bigger Failure
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Watermelon Apology Exposes Bigger Failure

A watermelon graphic on a school lunch menu triggered a district-wide apology, and the real story is not about a piece of fruit — it is about a recurring institutional failure that keeps happening because nobody is actually watching the details until the outrage arrives. Story Snapshot Montclair Public Schools in New Jersey condemned a watermelon graphic that appeared on a Juneteenth lunch menu as offensive and culturally insensitive. The incident mirrors a 2023 case at Nyack Middle School in New York, where food vendor Aramark served chicken, waffles, and watermelon on the first day of Black History Month and the district called it a reinforcement of racial stereotypes. In the Nyack case, Aramark publicly admitted the timing was inappropriate and acknowledged its team should have been more thoughtful — a pattern of vendor-first blame and institution-second accountability. No primary documents — the actual menu graphic, approval chain, or internal communications — have surfaced in the Montclair case, leaving the public record dependent on outrage coverage rather than verified facts. The Same Mistake Keeps Getting Made in School Cafeterias The Montclair, New Jersey school district did not discover a new problem. It stumbled into a well-worn pattern that has played out in school cafeterias and institutional settings across the country. A food item or graphic lands on a menu tied to a Black cultural observance, someone recognizes the racial stereotype embedded in the choice, and the institution pivots immediately to apology mode. The speed of the apology is usually inversely proportional to the depth of the review that should have happened before the menu was ever printed. The Nyack Middle School incident from February 2023 is the clearest documented parallel. On February 1, the first day of Black History Month, food vendor Aramark served chicken and waffles and watermelon to students — items that differed from the published monthly menu. Nyack Public Schools Principal David Johnson stated he was “disappointed that Aramark would serve items that differed from the published monthly menu, especially items that reinforce negative stereotypes concerning the African-American community.” [1] The superintendent echoed that language. Aramark responded by saying the menu was not intended as a cultural meal but acknowledged the timing was inappropriate and that more thought should have been given. [1] That is a nearly perfect template for how these incidents resolve: the vendor absorbs blame, the district signals its values, and the actual approval process that let it happen goes unexamined. University of California San Francisco Fell Into the Same Trap on Juneteenth The problem is not limited to K-12 cafeterias. The University of California San Francisco faced a nearly identical controversy when watermelon images appeared on an employee whiteboard display during Juneteenth. [3] A hospital employee raised concerns not just about the imagery itself but about the institution’s initial response — suggesting that how leadership reacts in the first hours matters as much as the original mistake. The pattern across these cases is consistent: low-stakes production decisions carry high symbolic weight, and the institutions involved rarely have any cultural review process in place before the item goes public. What the Montclair Case Is Still Missing The Montclair incident has a significant evidentiary gap that the outrage cycle tends to paper over. No one has publicly released the actual menu graphic, the vendor approval chain, the internal emails, or the procurement records that would establish who created the image, who signed off on it, and whether anyone raised a concern before it reached students. Without those documents, the public is reacting to a headline rather than a verified sequence of events. That matters because the strength of any institutional-failure argument depends on whether the district designed the graphic, approved it, or simply inherited it from a vendor template. The Montclair district is already managing a separate and serious financial crisis — a reported eighteen-million-dollar budget shortfall that Superintendent Ruth B. Turner disclosed publicly. [4] A district stretched thin on resources and administrative bandwidth is exactly the environment where a cafeteria menu graphic slips through without a second set of eyes. That is not an excuse. It is a structural explanation for why the same preventable mistake keeps recurring across districts that have every reason to be paying attention to this specific type of error by now. The Outrage Cycle Moves Faster Than the Facts What makes these incidents so predictable and so frustrating is that the symbolic recognition of a racial stereotype is instantaneous while the factual record takes weeks to reconstruct, if it ever gets reconstructed at all. A California private school faced the same dynamic when it apologized for a Black History Month lunch menu featuring fried chicken and watermelon. [2] Each time, the institution moves to apology and remediation before anyone has established the full decision-making chain. That sequence protects the institution’s reputation in the short term but does nothing to prevent the next incident, because the actual process failure never gets fixed. Until schools build a basic cultural review step into menu approval — not a lengthy bureaucratic exercise, just a second set of eyes with clear authority to flag — the watermelon graphic will keep showing up somewhere, and the apology will follow right behind it. Sources: [1] Web – NJ school district slams ‘offensive’ watermelon graphic on Juneteenth … [2] Web – School district apologizes for offering chicken and waffles … [3] Web – School Apologizes For Serving Fried Chicken, Watermelon At Lunch … [4] Web – UCSF responds to images of watermelon on employee board during …

Iran Provokes, CENTCOM Strikes Back
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Iran Provokes, CENTCOM Strikes Back

U.S. Central Command just shot down four Iranian attack drones aimed at the world’s most critical oil chokepoint, sending a stark warning to Tehran and every America-hating regime watching. Story Snapshot U.S. Central Command says it shot down four Iranian one-way attack drones launched toward the Strait of Hormuz and then hit Iranian radar sites in response.[2][1] The command says the drones posed an “immediate threat” to regional maritime traffic in a corridor that carries a huge share of the world’s oil.[2] Follow-on strikes targeted Iranian coastal surveillance radar and drone command infrastructure in Goruk and on Qeshm Island to prevent further attacks.[2][1] The incident fits a long pattern of Iranian harassment near Hormuz, but under Trump’s second term the response is faster and far less restrained than during prior administrations.[1][5] CENTCOM Intercepts Iranian Drones Over Strategic Oil Lifeline U.S. Central Command reported that American forces “moments ago” shot down four Iranian one-way attack drones launched toward the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway that carries a major share of global oil shipments.[2][1] The command said the attack drones posed an immediate threat to regional maritime traffic, giving U.S. forces clear legal and moral ground to act in self-defense and protect commercial shipping lanes used by American allies and partners.[2] No U.S. forces were reported harmed in the engagement.[1] Central Command described the aircraft as one-way attack drones, the same class of systems Iran and its proxies have used across the Middle East to strike oil infrastructure, U.S. facilities, and civilian targets.[2][4] These platforms are designed to crash into a target with an explosive payload and cannot be recovered, which is why military officials treat them as offensive weapons rather than simple surveillance tools.[4] The statement framed the shootdown as part of an ongoing defensive posture against “unjustified Iranian aggression.”[2] Follow-On Strikes Hit Iranian Radar and Command Sites After neutralizing the four incoming drones, U.S. forces moved quickly to hit the systems that enabled the attack.[2][1] Central Command stated that American forces struck Iranian coastal surveillance radar sites in Goruk and on Qeshm Island, key locations on or near Iran’s southern coastline that help Tehran track and target shipping and U.S. assets in the area.[2][1] The command said these follow-on strikes were taken to defend against further attacks and to disable capabilities that threatened ships transiting regional waters.[1] A separate Central Command release described additional self-defense strikes against Iranian radar and drone command and control facilities in Goruk and Qeshm Island after Iran previously shot down a U.S. MQ‑1 drone operating over international waters.[1] U.S. fighter aircraft destroyed Iranian air defenses, a ground control station, and two one-way attack drones that posed clear threats to commercial shipping.[1] That sequence underscores a broader shift: when Iran targets U.S. assets or endangers maritime traffic, Washington is now hitting not just the incoming weapon but also the infrastructure behind it. Why the Strait of Hormuz and Iranian Drones Matter to American Readers The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most important maritime chokepoints, and Iran has repeatedly tested U.S. resolve there by harassing tankers, targeting drones, and challenging international airspace and waters.[1][5] In 2019, Iran’s air defense forces shot down a high-altitude U.S. RQ‑4 surveillance drone near the same region, with Washington saying the aircraft was in international airspace and Tehran insisting it violated Iranian territory.[5] That incident nearly triggered a larger conflict and illustrated how quickly a single drone engagement can escalate.[5] • 2026-06-05T23: 08 to 23: 12 … Input events and claims by time order • 2026-06-05T23: 08 … U. S. leadership remarks on appointment timeline@POTUS responded to a question on how long @pulte would remain “in that position,” saying the duration “depends on how long it… https://t.co/W7f1nD4nOJ — U.S.A.I. (@researchUSAI) June 5, 2026 Under President Trump’s second term, the pattern now looks different from the era of delayed or symbolic responses that many conservative Americans remember all too well. Central Command’s latest language emphasizes self-defense, protection of shipping, and immediate retaliation against enabling sites, not drawn-out “red line” debates or apologetic messaging.[1][2] For readers worried about globalism, energy prices, and U.S. deterrence, these engagements highlight a hard reality: when Iran pushes near Hormuz, American strength on the front end can help prevent much costlier chaos at home later. Sources: [1] Web – U.S. CENTCOM Shoots Down More Iranian Attack Drones [2] Web – U.S. Shoots Down Iranian Drones Launched At Strait Of Hormuz: Official … [4] Web – US forces shot down four Iranian drones headed toward Strait of … [5] Web – Hormuz flashpoint: US downs Iranian drones, strikes radar sites; Trump …

Hollywood Murder Rocks Quiet Tarzana
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Hollywood Murder Rocks Quiet Tarzana

A murder charge in the James Handy case has put a family tragedy and a public safety issue in the spotlight, with prosecutors now accusing the actor’s girlfriend’s son of a deadly stabbing in Tarzana. Quick Take Los Angeles County prosecutors charged Michael Gledhill with murder and a knife-use allegation in Handy’s death.[1] Police say Gledhill is the girlfriend’s son and was arrested after the stabbing outside a Tarzana home.[1][2] The district attorney says Gledhill faces 26 years to life if convicted as charged.[1] The case remains under investigation, and the charges are allegations, not proof of guilt.[1] Prosecutors Move Forward With Murder Case Los Angeles County prosecutors say 44-year-old Michael Gledhill fatally stabbed 81-year-old actor James Handy outside a Tarzana home earlier this week.[1] The district attorney’s office says Gledhill was charged with one count of murder and a special allegation that he personally used a deadly weapon, a knife.[1] If convicted as charged, prosecutors say he faces 26 years to life in state prison.[1] The district attorney’s announcement says officers responded to a 911 call on June 3 and found Handy stabbed in the front yard of the home.[1] Handy was taken to a nearby hospital and died there, according to the same statement.[1] Prosecutors also say Gledhill lived at the home with his mother, who had been dating Handy, which places this killing inside a domestic setting rather than on a street or in some random encounter.[1] Police Say the Suspect Turned Himself In Los Angeles police identified Gledhill as the suspect and said he was arrested after the killing.[2] Reporting from local and national outlets says he turned himself in or was taken into custody after police began investigating the stabbing.[2] One report also says officers received a disturbing 911 call and later identified Gledhill as the person they were looking for.[3] The early record now public is strong on arrest and charging details, but it is still limited on the full evidentiary picture.[1][2] The released materials do not include a sworn complaint or the kind of detailed probable-cause filing that would show the prosecution’s case line by line.[1][2] That means the court process still matters, especially before anyone treats the accusation as the final word. Mental Health Review Could Affect the Timeline ABC7 reported that the court sent Gledhill to mental health court for psychological evaluations and that another judge will decide whether he is competent to stand trial.[1] That step does not erase the murder charge, but it does delay a merits ruling and shifts the immediate focus from public outrage to legal competency.[1] In a system that still values due process, competency review is a reminder that a charge is not a conviction. Actor James Handy, known for roles in “Jumanji,” “Top Gun: Maverick,” “NYPD Blue” and “CSI: NY,” was killed this week in Los Angeles, @LAPDHQ said. Police identified the suspect as Michael Gledhill, 44, the son of Handy’s girlfriend, who was arrested and booked on a murder… — Erik Hoffmann (@TheErikHoffmann) June 5, 2026 This case also reflects a broader truth about violent crime: homicides often involve people who know one another, especially within families or households. Here, the alleged victim and accused were linked through a shared home and a family relationship, which makes the tragedy more personal and more disturbing for ordinary Americans who expect basic safety inside their own walls.[1][2] The legal outcome now depends on what prosecutors can prove, what the defense challenges, and what the court decides about Gledhill’s ability to proceed.[1] Sources: [1] Web – The son of actor James Handy’s girlfriend has been charged with murder … [2] Web – James Handy death: Michael Gledhill charged with killing veteran actor … [3] Web – Actor James Handy of “Top Gun: Maverick” allegedly killed by …