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21 hrs

Christians, Jews Take Matters Into Their Own Hands Amid Surge In Attacks
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Christians, Jews Take Matters Into Their Own Hands Amid Surge In Attacks

'Don't normalize evil'
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
21 hrs

Another Day, Another Sherlock Holmes Show, but This Time It’s Animated… and Risqué
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Another Day, Another Sherlock Holmes Show, but This Time It’s Animated… and Risqué

News Animated Sherlock Another Day, Another Sherlock Holmes Show, but This Time It’s Animated… and Risqué The series will adapt The Unexpurgated Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, risqué versions of the Sherlock stories. By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on September 8, 2025 Media: EVA BOOKS Comment 0 Share New Share Media: EVA BOOKS Did you wake up this morning and say to yourself, “Wow, there hasn’t been news of a new Sherlock Holmes adaptation in days!” If so, I have something to tell you: Another Sherlock Holmes adaptation is, indeed, in the works, and this one has the working title of Animated Sherlock because it is, in fact, an animated series. But that’s not all, folks. According to Variety, the show won’t adapt the standard stories you likely know. Instead, they’re adapting “naughty” tales put out under the moniker, The Unexpurgated Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. These novels are written by Nicholas Sercombe, who is also CEO of Harry King Television, the company creating this animated series with Shrek producer, David Lipman. The series is meant for “mature viewers,” according to Variety, and will “explore character backstories for Holmes, Watson, Mrs. Hudson and Moriarty through a contemporary lens aimed at international adult demographics.” Whatever that means. It’s not surprising, however, that this cartoon won’t be for kids, given some of the book titles are The Mysterious Marriage of the Gay Bachelor, The Case of the Randy Stepfather, and A Balls-Up in Bohemia. “Taking the animation route allows us to reimagine Sherlock Holmes on a grander, more imaginative and risqué scale than before…  we are creating our very own Sherlock Holmes universe that feels both timeless and completely fresh—rich in character, humor and adventure,” Sercombe said in a statement. “We can’t wait for Animated Sherlock (wt) to surprise audiences globally and imbue one of the world’s most beloved literary icons with newfound energy.” No news yet on when or where we’ll be able to watch the animated series. [end-mark] The post Another Day, Another Sherlock Holmes Show, but This Time It’s Animated… and Risqué appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
21 hrs

Read an Excerpt From Play Nice by Rachel Harrison
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Read an Excerpt From Play Nice by Rachel Harrison

Excerpts Horror Read an Excerpt From Play Nice by Rachel Harrison A woman must confront the demons of her past when she attempts to fix up her childhood home… By Rachel Harrison | Published on September 8, 2025 Comment 0 Share New Share We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from Play Nice by Rachel Harrison, a new take on the haunted house novel publishing with Berkley on September 9. Clio Louise Barnes leads a picture-perfect life as a stylist and influencer, but beneath the glossy veneer she harbors a not-so glamorous secret: she grew up in a haunted house. Well, not haunted. Possessed. After Clio’s parents’ messy divorce, her mother, Alex, moved Clio and her sisters into a house occupied by a demon. Or so Alex claimed. That’s not what Clio’s sisters remember or what the courts determined when they stripped her of custody after she went off the deep end. But Alex was insistent; she even wrote a book about her experience in the house.After Alex’s sudden death, the supposedly possessed house passes to Clio and her sisters. Where her sisters see childhood trauma, Clio sees an opportunity for house flipping content. Only, as the home makeover process begins, Clio discovers there might be some truth to her mother’s claims. As memories resurface and Clio finally reads her mother’s book, a sinister presence in the house manifests, revealing ugly truths that threaten to shake Clio’s beautiful life to its very foundation. It’s exactly as I remembered it. The long driveway sneaking off the cul-de-sac. It needs to be paved; it’s needed to be paved for the last twenty years. The house is set back, surrounded by woods. The front lawn is pale and patchy, covered in dead leaves and twigs. I park and step outside. It’s chilly, and I’m grateful for the hoodie and to whomever it once belonged. The roof is all angles, which gives the house character, I think. There’s a tall brick chimney that runs along the side. A working fireplace—another feature. The siding is an ugly rusty red, which doesn’t exactly help with the house’s reputation as a demon lair. But paint it white or a dark navy, and suddenly it’s chic and modern instead of evil and dated. I dig the key out of my bag and watch my step as I head up the stone path toward the house. The pavers have sunk into the earth, thick moss between them. It’s the smell of the rickety wooden stairs that lead to the front door that gets me, that resurrects a sentimentality, a nostalgia, that I didn’t know I had. It’s such a distinct scent, these stairs. I’m surprised they haven’t collapsed by now. There are parts of these stairs in me and my sisters. Parts of the back deck, too. Splinters we couldn’t dig out, that we gave up on, impatient after sitting for too long on the bathroom floor with tweezers and a flashlight. This is a reunion. I get to the top of the steps, slip the key into the lock, and twist. The landing is brick, but not nice brick. Loose chipped brick. There are carpeted stairs that lead down to a hall, off that hall a bathroom, my old room, Mom’s room, and the garage. There are also carpeted stairs that lead up to the living room, kitchen, Mom’s office, the second bathroom, a linen closet, and then Leda and Daphne’s room. As expected, the carpet hasn’t been replaced—the gross beige shag persists. The wall to the left is wood paneled, all the way up to the cathedral ceiling. To the right are vertical wood posts that leave the space open, allow a peek into the living room from the stairs. My sisters and I used to have fun weaving in and out of these posts, jumping down onto the landing, until Daphne sprained her ankle and ruined it for us. The wood paneling is, unfortunately, orange-toned, but the wooden posts are a darker stain, along with the wooden beams that cross the high ceiling. Buy the Book Play Nice Rachel Harrison Buy Book Play Nice Rachel Harrison Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget I hold on to the banister, black wrought iron, not totally ugly but not ideal, and make my way to the top of the stairs. There’s barely any furniture. A beat-up leather couch set in front of the clunky brick fireplace, a round glass dining table with three old cane chairs over by the tacky saloon doors to the kitchen. The table is a relic from our time here. The couch is a relic from the sad back room of some discount furniture store, probably. The ceiling fan hangs low, big blades like the propellers of a jet. I stare up at it. And I watch as it slowly starts to spin. I swallow. Something hot and dense squeezes down my throat, landing heavily in my gut. Fear? Dread? The feeling has yet to crystallize, to reach its final form. The blades travel at a lazy cadence. Did I accidentally hit a switch? Is it just the circulation of air in the house stirring the fan? There’s a breeze coming in from somewhere. It’s here, stroking the back of my neck. I turn around and walk over to the wood posts, peek down into the foyer. I left the front door open. I’m tempted to shimmy through the posts and jump down onto the landing for old times’ sake, but I don’t have rubber kid knees anymore, I have prematurely achy former dancer knees, so I go around, down the stairs, and close the door. I listen to make sure I hear it latch, then turn to lean back against it, rest my head, take a moment to think. The carpet needs to go, needs to be replaced with hardwood or quality vinyl. The brick replaced with tile. The ceiling beams can stay, but the paneling can’t. I could keep it mid-century, incorporate some funky retro accent pieces. Go for a neutral color palette. Use mirrors to make it seem bigger, brighter. I head downstairs to visit my old bedroom and check out the state of the lower level. It’s dark. I feel around the wall for the light switch. The fixture on the ceiling above me flickers on, the bulb humming. Every door down here is shut, the framed artwork knocked off the walls, and there are muddy footprints on the carpet. They lead to my room. I lean down and run my hands over the footprints. The mud is dried, crusty. They appear to have been left by bulky man boots. Could belong to Roy or the paramedics or the coroner or whatever. No one offered up any other details about Mom’s death, and I don’t really care to know. She had a massive heart attack. She called 911. She died before they got here. Any specifics beyond that aren’t for me; they’re for the kind of morbid weirdos who look at photos of dead celebrities on TMZ or spend their lives on true crime forums obsessing over blood spatter. I’m curious, but not curious like that. Dead is dead. One thing I do know now, whether I want to or not, is that she clearly died in my room. I follow the footprints there and open the door. Someone left the light on. There’s my twin bed, in the corner, with my pink floral sheets. Unmade. The bed is unmade. “Did she die in my bed?” I ask aloud to no one. It would make sense, why Leda and Daphne and Helen would choose to omit that particular detail. A squeaking interrupts my train of thought. I pivot, chasing the sound. I listen, but it’s gone. Now I face my double dresser. My closet. The dreaded closet. My hot pink beanbag chair is opposite the closet, under a lamp that looks like a giant tulip, and there are books and magazines piled up beside it. Pictures I cut out of those magazines are tacked to the walls, along with some drawings I made at school and photos from disposable cameras. She left it the same. It’s a bug in amber. A time capsule. The lone window is in a weird spot between the bed and the beanbag chair, too high on the wall inside and too low to the ground outside to let in decent light. It’s covered by a white lace curtain that Mom made from her wedding dress. There’s a matching one in Leda and Daphne’s room upstairs. I approach the bed, study the impression in the covers, the curve of the sheets, the shape made by her, the shape she left in her absence. If I believed in ghosts, I’d wonder if hers was lying there. Another squeak. I whip around, not sure where it’s coming from. I hold my breath. Wait. Stay completely still. There’s nothing but quiet. When I turn back toward the bed, I notice there’s a book on the nightstand. One I’ve never read, that never belonged to me when I lived in this house. I pick it up and realize it’s torn along the spine; the binding fragile. There’s no back cover, nothing past page 137. Part of it is missing. I open it, and another page comes loose, fluttering to the floor. It’s falling apart in my hands. I’m about to look around for the rest of the book when I see it. A flash of writing in blue pen. There’s a handwritten note on the title page. For my Clio—My troublemaker. My fireball. May you always be brave.Don’t ever let anyone extinguish your light. I hope this helps you understand. Love forever,Mom I trace my fingers over her words. I forgot her perfect handwriting, the beautiful loops of it. I continue to flip through the book gently, careful not to damage what’s left. There are notes on almost every page. She annotated this copy. Annotated it for me. When? This thing is beat to hell. Did she leave it here for me to find? Did she know she was about to die? Squeak! There’s movement. A flash of fur. I’m screaming before my mind catches up, before my brain comprehends there’s a mouse scurrying across the top of my sneakers. “Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God!” I kick my feet and run. Down the hall, up the stairs, to the landing, wishing I hadn’t shut the door only a few minutes ago because now I’m fumbling to get it open, to dash through it and escape mouse house. Out of the corner of my eye, I see the ceiling fan in the living room spinning fast, like it’s caught in a hurricane. I turn toward it, and it stops. Suddenly, all on its own. Unless it wasn’t spinning at all, and I imagined it. Unless I didn’t see what I thought I saw. I stand staring, arrested by confusion. A blood-freezing cold grabs me by the back of the neck. Icy fingers press hard into my skin with the promise of bruises. I shake, throw my hands up, spin around. There’s no one, nothing, but it doesn’t matter, because I still feel that terrible chill on my neck and in my bones. Feel little mice crawling all over me, their claws scoring my skin. What I don’t feel is alone. I don’t feel like I’m alone in the house. Excerpted from Play Nice by Rachel Harrison, published by Berkley, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC. Copyright © 2025. The post Read an Excerpt From <i>Play Nice</i> by Rachel Harrison appeared first on Reactor.
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21 hrs

Secret Service Spent $11 Million on Hunter Biden Travel Detail
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Secret Service Spent $11 Million on Hunter Biden Travel Detail

THE CENTER SQUARE—The Biden administration spent more than $10 million over three years on a security detail and related expenses for former First Son Hunter Biden after denying similar protections to other high-profile political figures, documents obtained by the Center to Advance Security in America and shared exclusively with The Center Square show. The security detail for former President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter, cost nearly $11 million, including on travel, real estate, and expensive hotels, according to documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request CASA filed. The documents from Jan. 1, 2022, to Dec. 31, 2024, indicate that the Biden administration spent nearly $9.3 million on hotels, $1.1 million on air and rail travel, and nearly $600,000 on car transportation and rentals for Hunter Biden’s Secret Service detail. “Due to reports that Hunter Biden was playing a senior role in advising his father within the White House in 2024, CASA filed a FOIA request for information related to the taxpayer resources being spent to protect him,” CASA Director James Fitzpatrick told The Center Square in an exclusive interview. “What we found is that while the Secret Service denied protection to [then presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.], and failed to properly protect President [Donald] Trump resulting in two assassination attempts, Hunter Biden was enjoying a robust detail wherever he traveled, including trips to Nantucket, South Africa, and the Virgin Islands.” Nearly all costs—95%—were incurred in California, where Hunter Biden often resided, but also were incurred on expensive trips to the Virgin Islands, Nantucket, and Santa Ynez, California. “If the Biden Secret Service was truly low on funding and staffing as they claimed in July 2024, the American people deserve answers as to why their priorities were so grossly misaligned,” Fitzpatrick said. According to the documents, taxpayer-funded Secret Service expenses for Hunter Biden included multiple trips to Nantucket, an exclusive island off of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. This included several hundred thousand dollars spent for a 2022 Thanksgiving trip to Nantucket, including $10,000 on golf cart rentals, $120,000 on lodging with $740 nightly hotel rates; $120,000 on travel cards, among other expenses. A 2023 Thanksgiving trip to Nantucket cost more than half a million dollars, including $26,000 on ferries, $10,000 on golf cart rentals, $36,000 on Salt House Nantucket lodging, $133,500 on White Elephant Hotel lodging, $198,000 on Faraway Nantucket lodging, $161k on The Beachside Hotel lodging, $60,000 on Nantucket Inn lodging, among others. Hunter Biden reportedly stayed at the estate of Democrat Party donor Joe Kiani when visiting Nantucket. “Biden and his family have made a habit of vacationing at the homes of donors to the Democratic Party. The president and his family spent Thanksgiving together three years in a row at the Nantucket compound of private equity billionaire David Rubenstein, and rang in the New Year in 2023 at the U.S. Virgin Islands home of Democratic donors Bill and Connie Neville,” The Los Angeles Times reported. Other trips carried hefty price tags: a New Year’s trip to St. Croix cost $372,000 for real estate property and $372,000 for travel cards, according to the documents. Multiple trip costs were for Hunter Biden and Melissa Cohen, Hunter’s wife. They include: $18,000 for a two-day trip to Santa Barbara; $10,000 for one night in Arlington, Virginia; more than $170,000 for a two-day trip to Wilmington, Delaware; more than $250,000 on 13 hotels for a Biden family and Cohen day trip to New York City; nearly $650,000 for a trip to Santa Ynex, Calif, for six hotels. During the Biden administration, CASA recognized “a significant departure from the typical norms surrounding Secret Service protection coverage,” Fitzpatrick told The Center Square, which prompted his FOIA request. CASA, a nonpartisan organization, is dedicated to improving the safety and security of Americans. Many also raised concerns about Biden administration policies. During the 2024 election season, the Biden administration denied former Democrat presidential candidate Kennedy Secret Service protection when he was running for president even though both his father and uncle were assassinated. Since then, extensive failures have been uncovered by congressional investigations regarding Secret Service protections, or lack thereof, for Trump, including during two assassination attempts made on his life. A recent inspector general report highlights even more extensive failures. These include chronic understaffing of Secret Service counter snipers; agents working the equivalent of an additional 24 full-time employees’ workload each year in overtime; and agents missing mandatory weapons requalification testing. CASA filed the FOIA request in June under the Trump administration and requested records within specific time frames for resources, expenditures, and other information related to travel and security detail for Hunter Biden. Originally published on The Center Square The post Secret Service Spent $11 Million on Hunter Biden Travel Detail appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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21 hrs

Missouri Senator Urges Trump to Award Medal of Freedom to Conservative Stalwart Buchanan
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Missouri Senator Urges Trump to Award Medal of Freedom to Conservative Stalwart Buchanan

Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., has written to President Donald Trump expressing support for awarding Pat Buchanan the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Schmitt joins other conservative movement leaders asking Trump to honor Buchanan with the nation’s highest civilian honor awarded by the president. Public advocates for Buchanan have included Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts and Rep. Riley Moore, R-W.Va. Notable recent recipients of the medal include Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, Olympic gymnast Simone Biles, anthropologist Jane Goodall, and Pope Francis.  In his letter, Schmitt describes Buchanan as “a courageous intellectual and political trailblazer.” The Missouri senator praised the adviser to three Republican presidents, three-time presidential candidate, and founder of The American Conservative magazine for “challenging the elite consensus on behalf of the Americans he famously described as the ‘conservatives of the heart’—the working men and women who shared our beliefs and convictions, but had been abandoned by both parties in Washington.” Buchanan, now 86, was an adviser to Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford and served as White House communications director from 1985 to 1987 under President Ronald Reagan. He is also known for his three presidential bids in 1992, 1996, and 2000. After losing the Republican presidential nomination in 1992, Buchanan delivered a speech at that year’s Republican National Convention about America’s culture war that arguably proved prescient about American society for decades to come. “There is a religious war going on in this country. It is a cultural war, as critical to the kind of nation we shall be as the Cold War itself. For this war is for the soul of America,” Buchanan declared in his 1992 address.  Schmitt’s letter states that Buchanan’s commentary was a precursor to the MAGA movement that would propel Trump to the White House. “His prolific columns, books, speeches, and television appearances reminded countless ordinary Americans that they were not alone in their beliefs—and provided the intellectual scaffolding for the America First movement that would go on to reshape the Republican Party under your [Trump’s] leadership,” the Missouri senator wrote.  Buchanan made another unsuccessful presidential bid in 1996, failing to beat Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., who went on to lose the general election to Democrat Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton. In 2000, Buchanan made his final presidential run as a member of the Reform Party, a political group founded by American businessman Ross Perot and which briefly also included Trump among its ranks. Buchanan co-founded the influential noninterventionist magazine The American Conservative in 2002. Its contributors have included conservative leaders like now-Vice President JD Vance and Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. “In awarding him with our nation’s highest civilian honor, you [Trump] would not only be recognizing the service of one man, but vindicating the cause he fought for—a cause which finally found its champion in your person. Such an honor would formally affirm that Mr. Buchanan is one of the great patriots of our time—a man who championed the forgotten Americans and laid the intellectual groundwork for the political realignment you led,” Schmitt explained.  In a time of arguably ascendent Catholic influence on American political life, Buchanan was also a prominent member of the faith for decades in the public square. “I think the Catholic faith is consistent with the kind of conservatism I believe in. You know, I’m a traditionalist, I’m a Latin Mass Catholic, and I hold to traditional views of responsibility,” Buchanan told the Jesuits’ America magazine in 2014. The post Missouri Senator Urges Trump to Award Medal of Freedom to Conservative Stalwart Buchanan appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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21 hrs

Bureaucrat Who Touted Efforts to ‘Empower’ ‘LGBTI Activists’ Still Has Policymaking Role at State Department Under Trump
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Bureaucrat Who Touted Efforts to ‘Empower’ ‘LGBTI Activists’ Still Has Policymaking Role at State Department Under Trump

A career bureaucrat who celebrated how the State Department would “empower” “LGBTI activists” in other countries remains in a senior leadership role at State under President Donald Trump. At a 2016 Atlantic Council event, State bureaucrat Kerri Hannan celebrated “all of the people-to-people engagement that the State Department has taken on in order to reach out to civil society and LGBTI activists on the front lines.” “LGBTI” refers to people who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex. Hannan, now deputy assistant secretary for public diplomacy, policy, planning, and foreign assistance at State, then added, “I have seen such an enormous amount of work done to find those activists and to empower them through alumni, through networking, to find ways so that they can be stronger and give them the tools and the connections that they need.” According to the Washington Blade, she served as president of the group Gays and Lesbians in Foreign Affairs Agencies in 2016. At the time, she pledged to work with Trump’s team in his first term. “We do not yet know to what degree LGBT rights abroad will be a priority under President-elect Trump’s administration but are ready to work with his transition team and the new administration to address important issues that impact LGBT employees of foreign affairs agencies,” she said at the time. A person with knowledge of the situation confirmed to The Daily Signal Friday that Hannan is currently at State. Trump has taken steps to prioritize merit over the culture of “diversity, equity, and inclusion” and to reframe U.S. foreign policy to stop advocating gender ideology (the idea that a man can become a woman, or vice versa, just by saying so). The Daily Signal does not have any evidence that Hannan has acted to oppose Trump’s policies from within, but her past support for “LGBTI activists” may raise red flags. “The State Department leadership is following [President Trump’s] order and expects every employee to do the same – they are public servants implementing the president’s agenda, not their own,” a State Department spokesperson told The Daily Signal in a statement Monday. “We will continue to hold every employee to that standard.” Under the leadership of Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the State Department has embarked on significant reforms to root out leftist ideology and prevent foreign aid funding from propping up transgender causes. Rubio famously merged the functions of the U.S. Agency for International Development into the main State Department. While State has engaged in reductions in force to encourage potential deep state actors to resign, civil service protections can frustrate these efforts. An April poll found that 75% of Washington, D.C.-based federal employees making $75,000 or more per year who voted for Democrat presidential nominee Kamala Harris in November said they would not follow a lawful Trump order if they considered it bad policy. Furthermore, a February Foundation for Government Accountability study found that Democrat employees outnumber Republican employees by a 2-to-1 margin across federal agencies and that 84% of federal employees’ political contributions went to Harris in the 2024 election. The Daily Signal reached out to Gays and Lesbians in Foreign Affairs Agencies, and to Hannan’s verified LinkedIn account for comment, but did not receive a response by publication time. The post Bureaucrat Who Touted Efforts to ‘Empower’ ‘LGBTI Activists’ Still Has Policymaking Role at State Department Under Trump appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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21 hrs

EUREKA! Bloomberg News Admits Carmakers to ‘Save Billions’ from Trump Nuking Eco Regs
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EUREKA! Bloomberg News Admits Carmakers to ‘Save Billions’ from Trump Nuking Eco Regs

Who knew that removing ridiculous eco-extremist regulations could help auto manufacturers save money? Even the green freaks at Bloomberg News had to concede that point to President Donald Trump. Bloomberg News reporters David Welch, Keith Naughton, and Keith Laing admitted in an eye-popping September 7 story that Trump’s “push to cut federal sales incentives and roll back emissions standards is shaping up to be a multibillion-dollar gift to Detroit’s automakers as they shift investments into gasoline-fueled cars.” Specifically, according to the report, the deregulatory push “is clearing the way for Detroit’s legacy automakers and their traditional rivals to reallocate billions of dollars earmarked for EVs and other costs linked to pollution rules.”  Ford Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley reportedly told Bloomberg News that the Trump deregulation agenda had “the potential to unlock a multibillion-dollar opportunity over the next two years.” Contrast this with the media's support for the Green New Dealers of Team Biden over the past four years. Almost two years ago, Reuters reported that automakers were facing $14 billion in fines as a result of then-President Biden’s proposal to hike fuel-economy standards. Now, automakers have the ability to allocate much-needed resources towards production as opposed to government mandate compliance. For example, Welch, Naughton and Laing estimated that Ford was reallocating a whopping $1.5 billion it was spending this year alone on regulatory credit-purchase commitments to produce “gas-powered models and hybrids.”  But of course, the Bloomberg News reporters couldn’t resist trying to get in a jab at Trump for dismantling the climate change activists’ woke pipe dream to nix gas cars from the American economy: Critics have assailed Trump for attacking policies to curb pollution from automobiles, one of the largest contributors of planet-warming emissions. Under President Joe Biden, the EPA said the rules would reduce carbon dioxide emissions by about 7 billion metric tons over the life of the program — more than the US emits in a year — and save drivers about $6,000 in fuel and maintenance costs. Drivers would "save" fuel costs if they were pushed to purchase more expensive EVs? It’s worth pointing out that pushing EVs, which Biden had made a hallmark of his climate boondoggle, was always a worthless, “ineffective” eco scheme to begin with, as Hoover Institution Visiting Fellow Bjorn Lomborg noted in an April 2025 column. Effectively, swapping gas cars for EVs simply just changes the source of where carbon is emitted without doing much to lower that carbon footprint: The main environmental selling point of electric cars is that they don’t pollute. But although it’s true their engines don’t produce CO₂ while driving, they do emit carbon in other ways. Manufacturing them generates emissions — especially producing the batteries, which requires lots of energy, mostly achieved with coal in China. As a result, even an electric car recharged with clean power in B.C. will, over its life, emit about one-third what an equivalent gasoline car does. When recharged in Alberta, it will emit almost three-quarters.
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21 hrs

Indiana’s sellout, Iowa’s stand
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Indiana’s sellout, Iowa’s stand

Over the weekend, Indiana’s lieutenant governor decided to show his cards. On social media, he boasted of supporting the importation of 40,000 Haitians into his state. Then, in a tacit admission that he knew how wrong this was, he shut off the comments, then deleted the post.If he’s so proud of turning his state into a third-world dumping ground, why silence the people who elected him? Because he knows his constituents — Trump voters in a state the president won by 20 points in 2024 — vehemently reject it. He tried backtracking with another post, but that was too little, too late.America’s culture comes from Americans. Indiana deserves leaders who understand that. Iowa will have one.When a Republican openly advocates something his base opposes, he’s telling you whom he serves. Not the people of Indiana. Not the voters of the GOP. He serves the corporatist and globalist interests that see middle America as expendable.The real divideThis fight is no longer Republican versus Democrat. It isn’t conservative versus liberal. The real question is simple: Do you believe America is for Americans or not?Do landowners in Iowa actually own their land, or are they just maintaining it and paying taxes on it until some globalist interest comes along and decides to take it? Do the people of Indiana get to pass on their heritage, or must they watch it be erased by forced demographic change?Democrats like Tim Walz in Minnesota and Rob Sand in my home state of Iowa are eager to impose that future. But too many Republicans are playing along, including Indiana’s lieutenant governor.What’s at stakeI’m running for governor because part of a governor’s job is to protect and preserve the culture of his state. And culture begins with people — families and communities who built the heartland on hard work, dedication, grit, integrity, and a belief that a holy and righteous God still rewards such things with peace and prosperity.That means ending the punishment of Americans who play by the rules, only to be undercut for cheap labor and political power. Donald Trump understood this, which is why he became the most successful Republican leader of the modern era. Yet too many in the party haven’t learned the lesson — or refuse to.RELATED: A storm is brewing in Iowa — and Republicans should take note: ‘There are danger signs’ Photo by Dee Liu via Getty ImagesIowa’s fightHere is what must be done to preserve our way of life.We need an economy that works for families — not for Wall Street. As governor, I will launch the largest skilled-trade expansion in Iowa’s history. These are good jobs AI won’t erase, jobs that don’t require sending our kids off to universities that saddle them with six figures in student loan debt and leftist indoctrination.Our communities must shape government, not the other way around. They are not cogs in the globalist-corporatist machine. They are the bedrock of America’s culture, traditions, and faith. They built the greatest nation in history, and they deserve protection.America’s culture comes from Americans. Indiana deserves leaders who understand that. Iowa will have one. If elected governor, I will use every power vested in me to protect and preserve Iowa’s culture — a culture rooted in Iowans themselves.
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21 hrs

Trump to combat anti-Christian bias, bolster prayer in public schools
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Trump to combat anti-Christian bias, bolster prayer in public schools

President Donald Trump announced the latest steps his administration is taking to protect the right to pray in schools across the nation.Trump pointed out the tremendous, and often underreported, anti-Christian bias that has become commonplace in American schools during a speech Monday at the Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C. In order to protect millions of Christians across the country, Trump announced that his Department of Education will soon issue a new guidance to protect prayer in public schools. 'I know what you went through.'"For most of our country's history, the Bible was found in every classroom in the nation," Trump said. "Yet in many schools today, students are instead indoctrinated with anti-religious propaganda, and some are even punished for their religious beliefs.""It's ridiculous," Trump added. RELATED: Trump defends religious faith, says Tim Kaine 'should be ashamed' for equating the Declaration of Independence to IranPresident Trump: "I'm pleased to announce this morning that the Department of Education will soon issue new guidance protecting the Right to prayer in our Public Schools. TOTAL protection." pic.twitter.com/dkyGeZHXqL— TheBlaze (@theblaze) September 8, 2025 Trump went on to tell the story of Hannah Allen, a student at Honey Grove Middle School in Texas who tried to gather a group of friends to pray for an injured classmate in 2018. The school's principal reportedly told Allen not pray publicly but to instead pray behind a curtain, in an empty gym, or outside where she is out of view. Due to pressure from religious liberty groups, the Honey Grove Texas Independent School District eventually reversed its decision and allowed students like Allen to pray in public. "I know what you went through," Trump said. "I know what you went through."RELATED: Mainstream media turns a blind eye to vicious stabbing of young Ukrainian woman Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images"To support students like Hannah, I'm pleased to announce this morning that the Department of Education will soon issue new guidance protecting the right to prayer in our public schools," Trump added. Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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Tim Walz pretends 'disgusting' Nazi Germany comparison isn't divisive
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Tim Walz pretends 'disgusting' Nazi Germany comparison isn't divisive

In a recent interview, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) urged Americans to tone down violent and divisive rhetoric — emphasizing unity and civil debate as core to the nation’s strength.“The president has done this, knowingly divided. He uses words like, ‘the enemy,’ ‘the enemy within,’ and we’ve never used that language,” Walz said in the interview.However, Walz has contributed to much of the inflammatory rhetoric himself, and BlazeTV host Pat Gray has the receipts.“Think about how easy it would be to be a damn Republican,” Walz shouted on stage at a DNC summer meeting. “Oh, what should I wear today? This stupid, freaking, red hat. What should I say today? I don’t know, just make sure it’s cruel. Who do we listen to? That guy, oh, the felon in the White House.”“That’s not divisive at all,” Gray says sarcastically on “Pat Gray Unleashed.”“And neither is this,” he adds, before playing another damning clip of Walz.“My record is so pro-choice, Nancy Pelosi asked me if I should tone it down. I stand with Planned Parenthood, and we won!” he yelled.In yet another clip, Walz is confronted in a congressional hearing about calling ICE agents under the orders of Trump “a modern-day Gestapo.”“Do you realize how disgusting that is considering the history of Nazi Germany? Would you like to recant that statement?” Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) asked Walz.“What I said congressman, and I have a long history of supporting law enforcement, I said President Trump was using them as his modern-day Gestapo,” Walz answered.“Right,” Gray says in disbelief. “That’s the problem.”Want more from Pat Gray?To enjoy more of Pat's biting analysis and signature wit as he restores common sense to a senseless world, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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