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12 w

James Carville Floats Wild Theory About Why Trump Bombed Iran
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James Carville Floats Wild Theory About Why Trump Bombed Iran

'It stinks'
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12 w

‘On The Brink’: Nonprofit CEO Addresses ‘Urgent’ Need For US Energy Innovation At Daily Caller Live Event
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‘On The Brink’: Nonprofit CEO Addresses ‘Urgent’ Need For US Energy Innovation At Daily Caller Live Event

'We are probably on the brink of a reliability crisis'
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12 w

Oversight Slaps Jill Biden Aide Anthony Bernal With Subpoena After He Dodges Testimony On Biden’s mental decline
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Oversight Slaps Jill Biden Aide Anthony Bernal With Subpoena After He Dodges Testimony On Biden’s mental decline

'Your appearance before the Committee is now compelled'
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
12 w

The Teaser for Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia Is Maybe Even Weirder Than Expected
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The Teaser for Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia Is Maybe Even Weirder Than Expected

News Yorgos Lanthimos The Teaser for Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia Is Maybe Even Weirder Than Expected The director’s latest film is the Halloween treat we didn’t know we needed. By Molly Templeton | Published on June 26, 2025 Screenshot: Focus Features Comment 0 Share New Share Screenshot: Focus Features One simply does not expect normalcy from a Yorgos Lanthimos film. The director of Dogtooth, The Favourite, and Poor Things has a new movie coming later this year: Bugonia, his remake of the Korean film Save the Green Planet. And the first teaser is as unnerving and off-kilter as any Lanthimos fan might expect. Maybe even more so. The synopsis for this one says only, “Two conspiracy obsessed young men kidnap the high-powered CEO of a major company, convinced that she is an alien intent on destroying planet Earth.” The film stars frequent Lanthimos collaborator Emma Stone; Jesse Plemons (who was in the director’s Kinds of Kindness alongside Stone); Aidan Delbis (whose only other film is something called My Movie Starring Paul Dano); Stavros Halkias (Netflix’s Tires); and Alicia Silverstone (who needs no introduction). The tonal shift halfway through this teaser—from Plemons’ very serious dialogue about bees to Green Day’s “Basket Case”—is fantastic; one certainly hopes the whole film revels in this kind of see-saw of tones. The remake script is by Will Tracy, who wrote The Menu and also several episodes of Succession. (Save the Green Planet was written and directed by Jang Joon-hwan.) Lanthimos made a small splash in the US with his 2010 film Dogtooth, but garnered a lot more attention once he started making films in English (Dogtooth is in his native Greek), beginning with 2016’s The Lobster. The Favourite, released in 2018, was nominated for nine Oscars, and Olivia Colman won for Best Actress. Bugonia comes to select theaters on October 24th, and opens wide on October 31st.[end-mark] The post The Teaser for Yorgos Lanthimos’ <i>Bugonia</i> Is Maybe Even Weirder Than Expected appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
12 w

The Sci-Fi Road Trip Anima Picks Up a Great Supporting Cast
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The Sci-Fi Road Trip Anima Picks Up a Great Supporting Cast

News Anima The Sci-Fi Road Trip Anima Picks Up a Great Supporting Cast Who wouldn’t want to go on a road trip with Lili Taylor? By Molly Templeton | Published on June 26, 2025 Screenshot: Prime Video Comment 0 Share New Share Screenshot: Prime Video Anima is the narrative feature debut of writer-director Brian Tetsuro Ivie, a documentarian, and it has a fascinating pair of stars: Alien Earth’s Sydney Chandler and Shōgun’s Takehiro Hira. But now it’s added a quartet of actors who make this film seem even more intriguing. The synopsis for Anima, according to Deadline, is this: “The film tells the story of an impulsive young woman and a reclusive older man who launch on a poignant cross‑country road trip. Their mission: to preserve his failing consciousness via an experimental memory‑upload procedure at a cutting‑edge facility.” Presumably Chandler is the impulsive young woman and Hira the reclusive older man. Now joining the road trip are Tom McCarthy (The Wire), Lili Taylor (Outer Range, pictured above), Marin Ireland (The Umbrella Academy), and Maria Dizzia (Agatha All Along). In a statement, director Ivie said, “When I was writing Anima, I would often come back to films like The Station Agent and Say Anything to remind myself of a tone I’d always loved. And now to work with Tom McCarthy and Lili Taylor, two of the geniuses behind those films, is incredible to me. Marin Ireland and Maria Dizzia have also been giants of the indie space for so many years. I really can’t wait for the world to see what we’ve created together.” No release date has been announced for Anima.[end-mark] The post The Sci-Fi Road Trip <i>Anima</i> Picks Up a Great Supporting Cast appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
12 w

A One Way Trip to Revenge: Diane Hoh’s The Train 
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A One Way Trip to Revenge: Diane Hoh’s The Train 

Books Teen Horror Time Machine A One Way Trip to Revenge: Diane Hoh’s The Train  It’s just your normal school-sponsored cross-country railway adventure that’s also a funeral train! By Alissa Burger | Published on June 26, 2025 Comment 0 Share New Share Characters in ‘90s teen horror are often more complex than meets the eye: the “mean girl” might just be lashing out because her life at home is really difficult, the new “bad boy” in town seems a bit aloof because he’s secretly providing for his family, and sometimes characters aren’t quite who they seem to be because they’ve taken on the identity of a tragically lost loved one in order to seek vengeance, either as part of a fiendishly orchestrated plan or the result of psychological trauma. As a result, it can be  tricky to define characters as uncomplicatedly “good” and “bad,” but in most cases, the protagonists pretty reliably learn from their mistakes, revealing dark secrets and taking responsibility for their actions. In Diane Hoh’s The Train (1992), the vast majority of characters are a notable deviation from this trend, providing a complicated and uneasy view of these teens, their self-awareness, and the potential impact of their terrifying experiences.  As the book opens, Hannah Denton and her friends are boarding a train in Chicago, part of a school trip from Chicago to San Francisco “so that students could ‘see the country’” (5). This is a  unique opportunity and sort of crosses lines between school and social: there are two teachers traveling with them and it is clearly a school-sponsored trip, but it’s taking place over the summer. There don’t seem to be any organized or academically-focused activities—they basically load a bunch of teenagers on a train for a cross-country road trip and let them do whatever they please. Once the wheels are rolling, they can’t get off the train and are pretty easy to keep track of, but they still manage to find plenty of trouble. In The Train, this trouble almost immediately escalates from adolescent shenanigans to attempted murder when the lights go out in the cafe car and come back on to reveal one of the characters, Lolly Slocum, choking, with a bandana knotted tightly around her neck as “her round, plain face was rapidly turning purple and her eyes, wild with desperation, were bulging dangerously” (35). Even with this inauspicious beginning, the trip (apparently) must go on and while the train stops at the next station to drop Lolly (and a random doctor they met onboard) off, the rest of the group keep heading west.  The trip is optional (and presumably, quite pricey), so there’s a clear question of privilege that goes largely unaddressed, though Hannah does briefly note the social position and friend groups of her classmates, who are clique-ishly siloed. In fact, her thoughts about Lolly at the start of the trip were less than kind, as Hannah looked around the platform and spotted Lolly with her two friends and fellow outsiders, Eugene Bryer and Dale Sutterworth, as “Hannah couldn’t help wondering why they were taking the trip. They didn’t seem the least bit interested or excited and she knew they would never be included in the fun” (2). This judgment and exclusion are foundational to the horrors that follow, the die for which had already been cast in the previous school year and earlier in the summer, in the teens’ treatment of Frederick Roger Drummond (who prefers to be called Roger), their former classmate, whose coffin is traveling with them in the baggage car.  Roger—not so affectionately called “Frog” by most of his peers—had transferred to their school the previous December, sent to Chicago by his parents to stay with his grandmother when they were at their wit’s end on how to control his behavior, which included skipping school and shoplifting. His new classmates make their minds up about him almost instantaneously, with Hannah’s boyfriend Mack McComber recalling his first impression of the new boy: “Here was this big, hulking kid with long greasy hair and bad skin and anyone could see he had an attitude problem, and here he was coming in in the middle of the year—social death for a junior in high school. Everyone checked him out real quick and then wrote him off, know what I mean?” (21-22).  But as Hannah and her friends talk in the cafe car, horrified after their discovery of Roger’s presence in the baggage car, it turns out that their exclusion was a bit more active and intentional than Mack’s reflection would suggest: it’s Mack who gave Roger his unfortunate nickname. When the other boy was called to the blackboard and asked to write his name on his first day there, he began writing as “F. Roger,” abbreviating his first name, but only got as far as F. Rog— before Mack yelled “Hey, the guy’s name is Frog!” (22) to the mirth and derision of his peers, a class clown-ish quip that marks Roger as laughably Othered. Their friend Lewis Reed was captaining a basketball team in gym class and loudly, publicly objected to the idea of having Roger on his team, insulting and excluding him, which ended in Roger getting into an argument with the gym teacher that got him suspended for two days. Hannah’s best friend Kerry Oliver cruelly laughed at Roger when he asked her out on a date and Jean Marie Westlake, the editor of the school newspaper “took one look at him and knew I couldn’t use him” (29), turning him away when he comes to her asking if he can join the paper as a reporter. After hearing her friends’ confessions, Hannah claims that she doesn’t have a similar story of her own to share, but she’s obviously holding out, too ashamed to tell them about her own unkindness toward Roger.   Roger dated Lolly and was friends with Eugene and Dale, the trio of outcasts that Hannah has unkind thoughts about at the beginning of their train trip, but that seems to be the extent of his social life after being rejected by Hannah and her friends. And then, not long before the train trip, he died, “dead at seventeen, killed in a horrible, fiery crash not far from [Hannah’s] house” (31). Hannah’s having a party at the time and while they hear the sirens, they don’t pay attention, don’t think anything of it, and just keep having fun. Hannah seems to be the only one who considers—or at least is willing to vocalize—the possibility that there may have been a causal relationship between their unkindness to Roger and his death, wondering “Could Frog have been that unhappy, that night? […] Could she and her friends have made the new boy so miserable that he would actually end his own life?” (32, emphasis original). Hannah wrestles with this moral quandary, but for the most part, she does so alone, because her friends aren’t interested in wasting any more time thinking about it, even as the boy’s coffin travels with them, dismissively shoving memories of him aside even as his body remains physically close.  As the train heads west, bad things happen to people who were mean to Roger, and just like Lolly’s strangulation, whoever is trying to hurt them is playing for keeps. Hannah is attacked from behind, knocked unconscious, and wakes up in Roger’s coffin in the baggage car. Mack is separated from the group and locked in a shed when the train stops in Denver, Lewis is stabbed in the shoulder when someone throws a knife at him, and Jean Marie is killed when she is kidnapped and thrown from the top of the moving train. Hannah is certain that Roger is getting his revenge on them, either supernaturally or by faking his own death, but no one believes her, even when she climbs into one of the beds in her and Kerry’s sleeping car and finds Roger’s charred corpse (a horror that was intended for Kerry but missed her). The overwhelming feeling, remarkably, seems to be that the trip must go on and while the group is joined by a railroad detective in Denver, aside from some basic safety precautions, it’s pretty much business as usual until Jean Marie is murdered, and even then the school’s concession is that if any of the students want to fly directly home when the group gets to San Francisco, the teachers will make the travel arrangements. (There are shockingly few takers and apparently the teens’ far-away parents are cool with this whole plan).  The mystery is unraveled with two revelations: first, Lolly is behind all of the train horrors. She staged her own strangulation, made sure everyone saw her getting off the train, and then snuck back on, where she has been CRAWLING AROUND IN THE CEILING AND HIDING IN ROGER’S COFFIN the whole time. She loved Roger and while Hannah’s friends are all too willing to let themselves off the hook for how they treated him, Lolly isn’t going to let them get off so easily. As Lolly tells Hannah “you were all so rotten to him. He didn’t deserve that, Hannah. He was new and scared and he’d been dumped by his parents. He didn’t deserve to be treated like pond scum” (137). And as if that weren’t enough, Lolly is especially angry because “Roger died mad at me, Hannah, and that’s your fault!” (137, emphasis original). She’s mad at Hannah and her friends, but she’s also mad at Roger’s parents, and she’s the one who is having the coffin shipped to them, with payment due on delivery. The coffin itself is empty: Roger’s parents opted for cremation and Lolly somehow got her hands on his cremains, which she has been carrying around with her since the group left Chicago. The second revelation is Hannah’s heretofore unconfessed cruelty toward Roger, the reason for Roger and Lolly’s fight and the root of Lolly’s rage. Hannah was having a party the night Roger died, and her father happened to hire Roger to help with some yard work leading up to the event. With no one else there to judge her for doing so, Hannah is kind to Roger: “she brought him cold lemonade when he was stringing the colored lights across the lawn. Turned the sprinkler on to cool him off when he was sweating in the hot sun over a flower bed. Fixed a sandwich and some fruit to take to him when he was struggling with the heavy recycling bins her father wanted moved […] It just seemed like the decent thing to do” (159). And when he makes a comment about how this must be some party, she offhandedly tells him “You can come, too, if you want” (160). Hannah thinks she has made a huge mistake, Roger thinks his luck is finally changing at his new school, and Lolly tries to warn Roger and protect him from what she sees (and rightfully so) as the inevitable rejection of the popular kids. The night of the party comes, Roger shows up with Lolly in hot pursuit, and Hannah tells him he has to leave because she’s sick and she’s about to send everyone home … all while wearing a fancy dress with the noise and laughter of the party streaming from the house behind her. Roger is humiliated and leaves, driving fast and straight to the crash that kills him, with the sirens audible from Hannah’s party (not that anyone notices or cares).  Lolly fools them all again, faking her suicide by making people think she jumped from the train window with a note and a broken window, but when the group finally gets to San Francisco and are having some lunch and a bit of fun near a foggy cliffside before Hannah flies home, Lolly emerges from the mist and tries to murder Hannah again, this time by pushing her onto the rocks and crashing waves below, though with some self-defense and quick thinking, Hannah survives and Lolly’s the one who falls to her death.  There’s plenty of horrifying stuff going on here, but what I find the most unsettling is that aside from Hannah, the rest of the group really doesn’t seem to feel any genuine sense of culpability, regret, or remorse over what happened to Roger. There’s a kind of performative guilt—they know they’re supposed to feel bad about the way they treated Roger, so they confess their unkindnesses and claim remorse, but once they’ve said they feel bad about it, their friends reassure them that they’re good people and what happened to Roger wasn’t their fault, and that’s that. They’re not going to learn from their mistakes or be kinder to people in the future, because as far as they’re concerned, they didn’t do anything wrong. When Hannah is absorbed in thoughts of Roger early in the trip, Mack chides her, telling her “Hannah, he was a creep. Don’t make him a saint now because something awful happened to him” (33) and even Hannah has to admit that he has a point, thinking “None of them had liked Frog, that was the truth, and Mack was being more honest about it than she was” (33). They confess their unkindnesses to Roger without really believing they’ve done anything wrong and they almost immediately forgive themselves and one another, acknowledging they did something mean in the same breath that they absolve themselves of any responsibility.  There is an overwhelming sense of entitlement, self-absorption, and privilege at play here as well: the students are limited to one suitcase and one carry on, so Kerry packs an enormous carry on and then throws a fit when she’s told it’s too big and will have to be stowed in the baggage car. When they find out that Roger’s coffin is in the baggage compartment, Kerry is outraged, screaming “How could they put it on this train? […] It’s just not right! Why didn’t they put it on a regular train with people who never knew Frog? Why did they have to put it on this one and ruin our trip? It’s not fair!” (17, emphasis original). Kerry is the most egregious example of this entitlement, but there is a collective self-absorption that is echoed in the story itself, as Hannah and her friends have zero awareness of or interest in Roger’s interactions with other students at their school or really his life at all outside of the awful interactions he had with each of them. Roger is dead but they each still manage to situate themselves at the center of his world and of this traumatic experience. Their unkindness might not have been directly responsible for Roger’s death, but they definitely made him miserable and even though they say they feel bad about it, they never call him anything other than Frog, continuing to dehumanize and ridicule him. Nothing has fundamentally changed in their perception of him: he will never be Roger to them, only Frog. While her methods are misguided and go too far, Lolly might actually have a point in trying to get Hannah and her friends to face the reality of the world beyond their insular, self-affirming sphere and face up to the consequences of their actions.  Even in the book’s final pages, Hannah is the only one of her social group who has any self-awareness or authentic grief about their impact on Roger’s life and (potentially) his death. She’s the only one who takes the teachers up on the offer to get a plane ticket home once the group gets to San Francisco, but once Lolly is dead and Hannah’s life is no longer in danger, she changes her mind and decides to stay, reflecting that “She was here, in a wonderful, exciting city, with friends she cared about and trusted. Lolly was gone. So was Frog. Would going back home change anything that happened? Would it be wrong to stay?” (164). So Hannah stays, though she tells her friends that she wants to come back to the cliff where Lolly died and Roger’s ashes were inadvertently scattered when Lolly fell once the fog lifts, “to say a decent good-bye […] Then it will really be over” (164). Rather than telling her she’s overreacting again, Mack, Lewis, and Kerry tell her that they’ll come with her, though this solidarity is compromised and any potential empathy or growth is undercut when “Kerry added with a grin, ‘and then we’ll go shopping” (164, emphasis original).  Roger, Lolly, and Jean Marie’s deaths have deeply moved Hannah and she is earnest in her intent to honor their memories and make what amends she can, but she’s an outlier. Her friends will go along with it because they care for Hannah and understand that this matters to her, but they still don’t seem to have any idea why. One of the most terrifying possibilities at the end of Hoh’s The Train is that it’s just a matter of time and peer pressure before Hannah loses this sense of herself. She has tried more than anyone else to do the right thing during their horrifying westward journey, but all told, she has been hesitant to stand up to her friends or push them too hard. When she looked at Lolly, Eugene, and Dale as the group boarded the train in Chicago, she wondered “What was it like to always be on the outside looking in?” (2), a possibility that she finds almost unbearable as she counts herself “[g]rateful that she and her little group didn’t fall into that dismal category” (2). No matter what she thinks or feels, it will always be challenging for Hannah to resist her friends, what they want her to do, how they want her to act, and who they want her to be. As she mourns Roger, Jean Marie, and Lolly once the horror has come to its end, Hannah tells her friends “I don’t want to forget it. I don’t want any of us to forget it. If we do, what’s the point?” (164). But Mack, Lewis, and Kerry are not willing to carry that baggage, to hear what Hannah has to say, or to support her in this emotional processing of remembrance and atonement. In the book’s final pages, on the foggy San Francisco cliffs, Hannah is at a crossroads, though most of the signs point to her going back to the same old reliable path of conformity and acceptance, leaving nothing learned and no one changed except the dead.[end-mark] The post A One Way Trip to Revenge: Diane Hoh’s <em>The Train</em>  appeared first on Reactor.
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12 w

Senator Demands Parliamentarian’s Firing Over Ruling on Medicaid for Illegals
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Senator Demands Parliamentarian’s Firing Over Ruling on Medicaid for Illegals

Sen. Tommy Tuberville called for the firing of the Senate parliamentarian Thursday over her ruling against a provision in the One Big, Beautiful Bill Act to prevent illegal aliens from accessing Medicaid. “The WOKE Senate Parliamentarian, who was appointed by Harry Reid and advised Al Gore, just STRUCK DOWN a provision BANNING illegals from stealing Medicaid from American citizens,” wrote Tuberville, R-Ala., on the social media platform X. The “big, beautiful bill,” as President Donald Trump calls it, would fulfill a number of campaign promises, such as extending his 2017 first-term tax cuts and funding border security. Tuberville thinks the parliamentarian, Elizabeth MacDonough—essentially the Senate’s rules arbiter—is taking a hatchet to the 10-year fiscal package. The WOKE Senate Parliamentarian, who was appointed by Harry Reid and advised Al Gore, just STRUCK DOWN a provision BANNING illegals from stealing Medicaid from American citizens. This is a perfect example of why Americans hate THE SWAMP. Unelected bureaucrats think they know…— Coach Tommy Tuberville (@SenTuberville) June 26, 2025 “Unelected bureaucrats think they know better than U.S. congressmen who are elected BY THE PEOPLE. Her job is not to push a woke agenda. THE SENATE PARLIAMENTARIAN SHOULD BE FIRED ASAP.” MacDonough has the authority to decide whether or not provisions in the budget reconciliation process follow Senate rules. In such cases, she is invoking the “Byrd Rule,” which is generally intended to restrict the process to budgetary policy only. The rule is named for then-Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., who was the rule’s main sponsor when it was adopted in 1985. Firing MacDonough would not be unprecedented. Then-Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., did so with then-parliamentarian Robert Dove in 2001 over his frequent overruling of Senate budgetary proposals. Nor is Tuberville the first to recommend defying the parliamentarian, who technically serves at the pleasure of the Senate majority leader. In 2021, Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., urged then-Vice President Kamala Harris to overrule MacDonough striking a $15 minimum wage provision from the American Rescue Act, a reconciliation package during the Biden administration. “I’m sorry—an unelected parliamentarian does not get to deprive 32 million Americans the raise they deserve,” Khanna said at the time. “This is an advisory, not a ruling. VP Harris needs to disregard and rule a $15 minimum wage in order.” Harris ultimately did not do so. Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., also called for MacDonough’s firing at the time. “Abolish the filibuster. Replace the parliamentarian,” she said on social media. “What’s a Democratic majority if we can’t pass our priority bills? This is unacceptable.” Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., was quick to join in on Tuberville’s criticism Thursday. “It is time for our elected leaders to take back control. @JDVance should overrule the Parliamentarian and let the will of the people, not some staffer hiding behind Senate procedure, determine the future of this country,” he wrote. Vice President JD Vance (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images) As presiding officer of the Senate, Vance does hold that power, although using it would break with precedent. Another way to address the issue is to amend a provision and resubmit it in the hope that the parliamentarian will let it stand. Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., told The Daily Signal on Wednesday, “I’ve heard from people that are former Senate staffers that it all has to do with what the leader wants to accomplish.” He continued, “That if the leader wants something dead, they will write it in such a way that they know that it will die. But yet if they want something to pass, they’ll figure out a way to write it to get it though Byrd.”  Rep. Michael Cloud, R-Texas, expressed a similar skepticism Wednesday over the power of the parliamentarian to derail the Republican agenda. “When we look back two, three generations from now and our kids wonder why [we failed] at doing the fiscal reforms and transformative reforms that need to happen, and the excuse was the Senate parliamentarian, I don’t think that’s a good excuse that would be good enough for our kids. So we’ve got to figure out what it’s going to take to get the reforms that need to happen, the things that we all campaigned on.” The UN-ELECTED Senate Parliamentarian just ruled against throwing illegal aliens off of American taxpayer funded Medicare and Medicaid AND STOPPING MEDICAID AND CHIP FROM FUNDING SEX CHANGES ON CHILDREN!!!We are trying to undo the America LAST insanity from the Democrats by…— Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene?? (@RepMTG) June 26, 2025 Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., viewed the parliamentarian’s new ruling against Medicaid for non-citizens as a dire threat. “The UN-ELECTED Deep State bureaucrats, radical far left activist judges, and America LAST Democrats are doing everything they can to destroy President Trump and THE PEOPLE’S agenda!!!” she wrote on X. The post Senator Demands Parliamentarian’s Firing Over Ruling on Medicaid for Illegals appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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12 w

Predictable: Anybody Criticizing Mamdani Is 'Islamophobic'
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Predictable: Anybody Criticizing Mamdani Is 'Islamophobic'

Predictable: Anybody Criticizing Mamdani Is 'Islamophobic'
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12 w

Boxing Khamenei
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Boxing Khamenei

Boxing Khamenei
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
12 w

Space Selfies & DJing A Party From Orbit – How Astronaut Luca Parmitano Brought Space To Earth
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Space Selfies & DJing A Party From Orbit – How Astronaut Luca Parmitano Brought Space To Earth

To mark 50 years of the European Space Agency, we spoke with one of its brilliant astronauts!
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