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3 w

ABC Doubles Down On Decrying 'Alarming' And "Harrowing' ICE Operations
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ABC Doubles Down On Decrying 'Alarming' And "Harrowing' ICE Operations

One night after hyping “disturbing images” out of Florida during a Border Patrol operation, ABC’s World News Tonight was at it again on Friday. This time, anchor David Muir and correspondent Pierre Thomas labeled the videos “alarming” and “harrowing” despite each of the three examples having a perfectly reasonable explanation. Muir kicked off the segment by declaring, “We move on to the alarming new images this evening. A woman seen being chased by federal agents near New Orleans, screaming to be left alone. She’s a U.S. citizen being chased by Border Patrol, but Homeland Security is now saying tonight it comes amid similar scenes playing out across the country as President Trump's immigration crackdown grows. Pierre Thomas with the images tonight.”     Thomas began his report with “harrowing video showing a woman frantically running away from federal agents in Louisiana. President Trump's nationwide immigration crackdown intensifies.” As it turns out, the episode was just a case of mistaken identity, “Masked border agents chasing that woman on foot as she screams in fear. Running into her house as her stepfather races outside. Initially thinking she was being kidnapped. Demanding answers. That woman was a 23-year-old U.S. citizen. DHS saying in a statement, “All agents left the area as soon as they determined the individual in question was not who they were looking for.’” Not deterred, Thomas tried again with the same video from Thursday's show, “That incident comes after federal agents pulled this woman out of a car during a border operation in Florida as she screamed she was a U.S. citizen.” However, that too had an innocent reason behind it, “Authorities placing her in handcuffs, briefly detaining her. Officials say she was driving her undocumented boyfriend's car and refused to comply with orders to identify herself.” Literally every person in America who is pulled over has to show law enforcement their driver’s license, but apparently this woman thought she was special and didn’t have to. Still not ready to let the issue go, Thomas highlighted, “Newly elected Arizona Congresswoman Adelita Grijalva claiming she was assaulted by ICE When she joined protesters who blocked a street in Tucson. She released this video of the alleged incident.” Grijalva herself then claimed, “This is the restaurant I come to literally once a week and was sprayed in the face by a very aggressive agent.” Thomas then concluded by reporting, “But tonight, Homeland Security officials pushing back, saying Grijalva was not targeted, but near someone who was pepper sprayed as they were obstructing and assaulting law enforcement. Critics say the immigration campaign has been too aggressive, but David, tonight Homeland Security officials are unapologetic.” According to the video that ABC showed, it was DHS that was being truthful. The officer did not target Grijalva, as her fellow activists broke the law by blocking the road. As Thomas was forced to admit, each of the incidents he showed were not videos that showed an increasingly dystopian society of ICE and Border Patrol operations targeting U.S. citizens, but operations that either had legitimate goals or ceased once it was clear there had been a mistake. Therefore, ABC should retire the sensationalist “disturbing,” “alarming,” and “harrowing” labels. Here is a transcript for the December 5 show: ABC World News Tonight 12/5/2025 6:34 PM ET DAVID MUIR: We move on to the alarming new images this evening. A woman seen being chased by federal agents near New Orleans, screaming to be left alone. She’s a U.S. citizen being chased by Border Patrol, but Homeland Security is now saying tonight it comes amid similar scenes playing out across the country as President Trump's immigration crackdown grows. Pierre Thomas with the images tonight. JACELYNN GUZMAN: Leave me alone! PIERRE THOMAS: Tonight, harrowing video showing a woman frantically running away from federal agents in Louisiana. President Trump's nationwide immigration crackdown intensifies. GUZMAN: Leave me alone! THOMAS: Masked border agents chasing that woman on foot as she screams in fear. Running into her house as her stepfather races outside. Initially thinking she was being kidnapped. Demanding answers. That woman was a 23-year-old U.S. citizen. DHS saying in a statement, “all agents left the area as soon as they determined the individual in question was not who they were looking for.” That incident comes after federal agents pulled this woman out of a car during a border operation in Florida as she screamed she was a U.S. citizen. WOMAN: I'm a U.S. citizen! Please help me! This is unfair, why are you doing this to me? THOMAS: Authorities placing her in handcuffs, briefly detaining her. Officials say she was driving her undocumented boyfriend's car and refused to comply with orders to identify herself. And tonight, newly elected Arizona Congresswoman Adelita Grijalva claiming she was assaulted by ICE When she joined protesters who blocked a street in Tucson. She released this video of the alleged incident. ADELITA GRIJALVA: This is the restaurant I come to literally once a week and was sprayed in the face by a very aggressive agent. THOMAS: But tonight, Homeland Security officials pushing back, saying Grijalva was not targeted, but near someone who was pepper sprayed as they were obstructing and assaulting law enforcement. Critics say the immigration campaign has been too aggressive, but David, tonight Homeland Security officials are unapologetic.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
3 w

Mark Levin drops the hammer: America isn’t rigged — your ideology is
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Mark Levin drops the hammer: America isn’t rigged — your ideology is

One of the great beauties of America, says Mark Levin, is her lack of fixed social classes. With grit and determination, anyone from any background can rise in the ranks and become successful. That’s why America is the top country of origin for self-made millionaires and billionaires.Now compare that to Marxist regimes, where the mantra is “you are what you are, and that's where you're going to stay.” Work ethic, intelligence, ambition don’t get you anywhere, unless, of course, you’re part of the government machine that crushes the people.And yet the radical left and the neofascist right alike are pushing similar grievance politics that echo Marxist tactics — demanding more government to “fix” a rigged system. Progressives say, “If you're a minority, the system is out to get you,” while “the neofascists [say] if you're white, the system is out to get you,” says Levin, accusing both groups of “racializing” economics to the detriment of all.“They want more and more government, which is the biggest problem we have,” he says. But this push for more federal power is the folly of ideologues. “We conservatives are motivated by reality. ... Our principles are based on knowledge and information and experience and reality — not a fanatical ideology,” says Levin.“This ideology of Marxism and socialism, it's been imposed on one society after another — imposed. And it's a disastrous outcome in every case: poverty, often genocide, no civil liberties.”But because the government holds all the power, the blame can’t be placed on the ruling class when everything inevitably goes to hell in a handbasket. Rather the people — powerless and crushed economically and in spirit — shoulder the blame.But even though history lessons in failed socialism abound, still people like Robert Reich make capitalism the villain. Levin plays a clip of the former secretary of labor under Bill Clinton whining about McDonald’s high prices — the same complaint he made in 1994 — as proof that corporations are deliberately creating a permanent underclass.Levin’s response is brutal and simple: “You were an idiot in 1994, and you’re an idiot today.” In the 31 years since Reich’s prophecy, millions of supposedly “left-behind” Americans started businesses, bought homes, and invested.“Your life isn't static. The economy is not static. Nothing is static. The fact is things keep turning along. Sometimes they go over a cliff; sometimes up to the stars,” says Levin, noting that his life has changed tremendously since 1994.But if you really want to buy Reich’s argument that McDonald’s and “processed foods” are the problem, go ahead and ban them, he says.Get rid of the Big Macs, the canned beans, the frozen pizzas, the mass-produced bread, the snacks — everything affordable and convenient. The result won’t be social justice; it’s “people starve to death,” says Levin.The ideological war on private enterprise always ends up punishing the very people it claims to help — exactly the pattern Marxism has repeated from Moscow to Havana. America works, Levin concludes, precisely because we let people solve their own problems instead of letting utopian grifters in Washington or on social media tell them the system is rigged and only total government control can save them.To hear more of his commentary, watch the video above.Want more from Mark Levin?To enjoy more of "the Great One" — Mark Levin as you've never seen him before — 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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3 w

Killing drug ads won’t lower prices — it will kill innovation
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Killing drug ads won’t lower prices — it will kill innovation

The United States is one of the few countries that allows prescription drugmakers to speak directly to patients. That simple fact now fuels political calls to “ban the ads.” But restricting direct-to-consumer advertising would do more than change what runs during football games. It would shrink the flow of information to patients and push our system toward the bureaucratic throttling that has turned other countries into innovation laggards.Advertising is part of a dynamic market process. Entrepreneurs inform consumers about new products, and when profits are high, firms have every incentive to improve quality and expand access.The pattern is clear: The more Washington intervenes, the fewer cures Americans get.New, cheaper treatments need to be brought to consumers’ attention. Otherwise, people stay stuck with older, more expensive options, and competition falters. Banning pharmaceutical advertising would hobble innovative firms whose products are not yet known and leave those seeking medical care less informed.Critics warn that “a growing proliferation of ads” drives demand for costly treatments, even when less expensive alternatives exist. Yet a recent study in the Journal of Public Economics finds that exposure to pharmaceutical ads increases drug utilization across the board — including cheaper generics and non-advertised medications. In short, advertising pushes people who need care to make better, more informed decisions.A market-based system rewards risk-taking and innovation. Despite the many flaws in American health care, the United States leads the world in medical breakthroughs — from cancer immunotherapies to vaccines developed in record time. That success wasn’t created by government decree. It came from competition: firms communicating openly about their products, fighting for patients, and reinvesting earnings into the next generation of lifesaving discoveries.Sure, some regulations are adopted with good intentions. But drug ads are already heavily regulated, and a full ban would create serious unintended consequences — including the unseen cost of innovative drugs that will never reach patients because firms won’t invest in developing treatments they are barred from promoting.American health care is now regulated to the point of satisfying no one. Patients face rising costs. Physicians navigate a Kafkaesque maze of top-down rules. Taxpayers foot the bill for decisions made by distant bureaucracies. Measures associated with socialized medicine continue creeping into the marketplace.Price controls in the Inflation Reduction Act are already cutting into pharmaceutical research and development. One study estimates roughly 188 fewer small-molecule treatments in the 20 years after its enactment. The pattern is clear: The more Washington intervenes, the fewer cures Americans get.RELATED: Trump faces drugmakers that treat sick Americans like ATMs Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty ImagesThe answer to the problems in American health care isn’t more government. It’s less. Expected profitability drives investment in biomedical research. Imposing new advertising bans or European-style price controls would mean lower-quality care, higher mortality, and the erosion of America’s leadership in medical innovation.The United Kingdom offers a warning. Once a global leader, it drove investment offshore through overregulation and rigid price controls. Today, only 37% of new medicines are made fully available for their licensed uses in Britain. Americans spend more, but they also live longer: U.S. cancer patients outlive their European counterparts for a reason.Discovering new drugs is hard. Every breakthrough begins with the freedom to imagine, to compete, and to communicate. Strip companies of the ability to inform patients, and you strip away the incentive to develop the next cure. Competitive markets — not centralized control — will fuel tomorrow’s medical miracles.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
3 w

‘Where 1960s Flower Power Blossomed’: 55 Vintage Photos Of Haight-Ashbury’s Counterculture
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‘Where 1960s Flower Power Blossomed’: 55 Vintage Photos Of Haight-Ashbury’s Counterculture

In the mid-1960s, a neighborhood in San Francisco underwent a historic transformation that placed it at the center of the counterculture movement. Haight-Ashbury, named for the intersection of Haight and Ashbury Streets, was now the hippie capital of the United States. Of course, that change didn’t happen overnight. It started as an enclave of bohemians and artists drawn to the neighborhood because of its cheap Victorian housing and close proximity to Golden Gate Park. However, the convergence of several large cultural forces — psychedelia, opposition to the Vietnam War, and a young generation that questioned mainstream American values — turned Haight-Ashbury into fertile ground for the hippie movement. Haight-Ashbury offered something new: a space where young people could create an alternative society based on the principles of peace, love, and communal living. See what it was like in its heyday through our gallery below. Click here to view slideshow Inside The Rise Of The San Francisco Hippie Movement In Haight-Ashbury Throughout the 1960s, San Francisco had been gaining traction as a creative hub. With media attention focused on the city, thousands of young artists and creatives poured in, many of whom found the affordability and community of Haight-Ashbury enticing. The newcomers had many shared interests: music, art, psychedelic drugs, free love, and antiwar sentiment. As researcher Anthony Ashbolt explained in a piece for the Australasian Journal of American Studies, those who flocked to Haight-Ashbury "sought refuge from an American dream that was crumbling quickly in suburban wastelands and urban hothouses, as well as the jungles of Vietnam." The "flower children" in San Francisco shared much in common with the Beatniks, who mostly settled in New York's Greenwich Village, but while Beatniks had a deeper appreciation for jazz and coffee shops, the community in San Francisco was more interested in growing their hair out, listening to folk music, and embracing the evolution of rock 'n' roll. That community also led to some of the era's most influential rock bands, such as the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, and Janis Joplin with Big Brother. Indiana University Digital CollectionsHippies photographed in Haight-Ashbury. One other thing slightly separated the hippies from the Beatniks, too: drugs. Beatniks were known to partake in drugs like marijuana, of course, but never before the hippie movement had drug use been such a prominent symbol of an American subculture. LSD in particular was common — and legal until 1966. Haight-Ashbury's Psychedelic Shop provided information on LSD and other drugs, and became a sort of support center for the hippie movement. "Suddenly, there was a common fact that everyone could identify with. It was right in the middle of town, and it was called the Psychedelic Shop," said its co-founder Ron Thelin. "And then more people started coming in and then pretty soon it was like the whole Haight-Ashbury was the community." For many hippies, LSD wasn't just a recreational drug — they saw it as a tool for spiritual awakening. Aldous Huxley's writings on psychedelics were also highly influential, while people like Timothy Leary — a psychologist who strongly advocated for psychedelic drugs — became countercultural heroes. Alongside these "awakening" drugs, hippies often pulled from Eastern philosophies and meditation practices, which drew in even more people who had become disillusioned with Western materialism and Cold War anxiety. The result was a peace-emphasizing, creative community that ultimately proved to be largely unsustainable. The movement had simply grown too big, and that was made apparent in 1967, especially during the Summer of Love. The Summer Of Love And The Death Of Hippie San Francisco Public Library ArchivesA man carrying a sign for a Grateful Dead show,. In January 1967, up to 30,000 people gathered in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park for an event called the Human Be-In, a celebration of countercultural ideals. It was partly organized in response to California's ban on LSD just months earlier. Media coverage of the event was constant, broadcasting images of flower children, free love, and what seemed to be a utopian community to countless young people across the country. Upon seeing this celebration, tens of thousands of people made pilgrimages to San Francisco — and Haight-Ashbury, specifically. But according to SF Heritage, these pilgrims didn't exactly find what they were hoping to find. Yes, the creative, communal spirit was there. But the neighborhood itself wasn't prepared for such a massive influx of people — or the growing pains that accompanied it. Housing became scarce, and crash pads overflowed. The once-plentiful resources of free food and medical services became strained under increased demand. And harder drugs began infiltrating a scene that was previously focused on psychedelics and marijuana. As a result, crime increased, and the darker elements of counterculture — exploitation, addiction, and mental health crises, to name a few — became impossible to ignore, as the rest of the country observed the aftermath of the Summer of Love through photographs and television screens. By the fall of 1967, many of Haight-Ashbury's original residents recognized that the movement was starting to outgrow its roots. Some locals even held a mock funeral procession, "The Death of Hippie," signaling that the authentic spirit of the community had been largely commercialized and corrupted. Ruth-Marion Baruch/University of California Santa Cruz ArchivesGraffiti that reads "Let's Smoke Dope." The Psychedelic Shop closed its doors. Some who wished to continue their hippie lifestyles dispersed to communes in rural California and Oregon, hoping to preserve their ideals away from media attention and tourism. But even if the movement was considered "dead" by some, its legacy wasn't. The community that formed in Haight-Ashbury challenged American norms and forced people across the country to reconsider and interrogate conventional values about work, success, sexuality, and community. It had proven that young people could create alternative institutions and ways of living. The status quo was not necessarily set in stone. Haight-Ashbury today is a far cry from what it was in the 1960s. Victorian houses still stand, though many of them command prices unimaginable to the young squatters of the hippie era. Vintage stores cater more to nostalgic tourists hoping to re-live the era's rebellious spirit, but that only speaks to how commercial the movement became. The true legacy of Haight-Ashbury in the 1960s isn't found in nostalgia or merchandise, though. Its true legacy is an enduring belief that society's structures aren't fixed, that community can be chosen rather than inherited, and that young people have the power to imagine and create new ways of being in the world. After this look at Haight-Ashbury in the 1960s, read the wild story of Abbie Hoffman, one of the most iconic faces of counterculture. Or, check out these photographs from Woodstock, the 1960s' most famous music festival. The post ‘Where 1960s Flower Power Blossomed’: 55 Vintage Photos Of Haight-Ashbury’s Counterculture appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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Twitchy Feed
3 w

Then and Now: Nicole Wallace Decries 'Cheap Fakes' About Biden, Laments Trump's 'Decline'
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Then and Now: Nicole Wallace Decries 'Cheap Fakes' About Biden, Laments Trump's 'Decline'

Then and Now: Nicole Wallace Decries 'Cheap Fakes' About Biden, Laments Trump's 'Decline'
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3 w

Greg Gutfeld Counts Ways the Pipe Bomber Arrest Blew Up Narratives (Something STILL Doesn't Add Up)
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Greg Gutfeld Counts Ways the Pipe Bomber Arrest Blew Up Narratives (Something STILL Doesn't Add Up)

Greg Gutfeld Counts Ways the Pipe Bomber Arrest Blew Up Narratives (Something STILL Doesn't Add Up)
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
3 w

Again? Illegal Alien Allegedly Stabs Rider in Attack on Charlotte, NC Light Rail Train
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Again? Illegal Alien Allegedly Stabs Rider in Attack on Charlotte, NC Light Rail Train

Again? Illegal Alien Allegedly Stabs Rider in Attack on Charlotte, NC Light Rail Train
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
3 w

12 Major Headphones Brands Ranked Worst To Best By Customer Satisfaction
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12 Major Headphones Brands Ranked Worst To Best By Customer Satisfaction

The right pair of headphones makes a world of difference whether you're traveling, working, or enjoying your favorite tunes. Here's how major makers stack up.
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
3 w

Does It Matter Which USB Port You Use On Your Computer?
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Does It Matter Which USB Port You Use On Your Computer?

Computers have so many USB ports that picking one to use can be hard. With a simple inspection, you can easily decide which one is best for your device.
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
3 w

4 Ways To Prevent OLED Burn-In On Screens
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4 Ways To Prevent OLED Burn-In On Screens

While OLEDs offer an excellent viewing experience, the faint burn-in you may notice on your screen is a notable drawback. Here's how to prevent it.
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