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3 w

Johnson Pledges Not To Stall Floor Vote Over Epstein Records
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Johnson Pledges Not To Stall Floor Vote Over Epstein Records

Speaker Johnson Makes Pledge Over Epstein Records
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3 w

WATCH: Virginia Teens Plead Directly With Voters To End Boys-In-Girls Bathrooms Agenda
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WATCH: Virginia Teens Plead Directly With Voters To End Boys-In-Girls Bathrooms Agenda

'I just can't put up with it anymore'
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3 w

KJP Rages At Democrats Over Their Public ‘Betrayal’ Of Biden
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KJP Rages At Democrats Over Their Public ‘Betrayal’ Of Biden

'It was so disrespectful'
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3 w

Trump Admin’s Had Plan All Long To Dismantle Deep State Behind The Scenes
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Trump Admin’s Had Plan All Long To Dismantle Deep State Behind The Scenes

'Oversight is not the problem — abuse of power is'
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3 w

Karine Jean-Pierre Can’t Figure Out Why Democrats Lost Even As She Doubles Down On ‘Woke’
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Karine Jean-Pierre Can’t Figure Out Why Democrats Lost Even As She Doubles Down On ‘Woke’

'How did Dems lose?'
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3 w

America’s ‘Non Binary’ And ‘Trans’ Community Falling Apart At Seams
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America’s ‘Non Binary’ And ‘Trans’ Community Falling Apart At Seams

A few problems with the data
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
3 w

Vajra Chandrasekera’s Rakesfall Wins 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Award for Fiction
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Vajra Chandrasekera’s Rakesfall Wins 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Award for Fiction

News Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction Vajra Chandrasekera’s Rakesfall Wins 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Award for Fiction The award comes with a $25,000 cash prize By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on October 21, 2025 Vajra Chandrasekera photo by Sanjeewa Weerasinghe Comment 0 Share New Share Vajra Chandrasekera photo by Sanjeewa Weerasinghe Today, the Ursula K. Le Guin Foundation announced that Rakesfall by Vajra Chandrasekera has won the 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Award for Fiction, a $25,000 cash prize given to a writer for a single work of imaginative fiction. The prize recognizes those writers Le Guin spoke of in her 2014 National Book Awards speech—realists of a larger reality, who can imagine real grounds for hope and see alternatives to how we live now. A panel of authors—Matt Bell, Indra Das, Kelly Link, Sequoia Nagamatsu, and Rebecca Roanhorse—selected Rakesfall as the winner from a shortlist of eight books. They had this to say about the novel:  “As fluid and changing as water, Rakesfall funnels genre, narrative structures, characters, and our conception of time into a spiritual kaleidoscope. Rakesfall trusts us to follow, across the literary equivalent of light years, a deeply felt and moving story of grief, loss, and ultimately hope to savor in dark times. Like Le Guin, Vajra Chandrasekera writes about colonialism and power with a kind of moral clarity and strength that speaks to the heart as well as the mind. He has created a masterclass of the possibilities inherent in fiction. Rakesfall is an extraordinary achievement in science fiction, and a titanic work of art.” In his acceptance speech, Chandrasekera expressed his gratitude for receiving the award and said, “Rakesfall is a book about power, and it talks about the arrogance and undeserved self-belief of the powerful, their bottomless desire for more power, more wealth, until they shamelessly strive for not only a throne but godhood. This is actually the world we already live in, which is why our oligarchs are obsessed with longevity, AI, and transcending mere humanity. “Late capitalism’s death drive is so perfected that it is not only willing but eager to sacrifice the real present in pursuit of an imaginary future, and the language, the concepts they use to construct that imaginary, come from a vocabulary and a grammar built by science fiction.” Check out the video below of actor Ebon Moss-Bachrach announcing Chandrasekera receiving the award, as well as Chandrasekera’s full acceptance speech. [end-mark] The post Vajra Chandrasekera’s <i>Rakesfall</i> Wins 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Award for Fiction appeared first on Reactor.
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3 w

A Fine Specimen: Spread Me by Sarah Gailey
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A Fine Specimen: Spread Me by Sarah Gailey

Books book reviews A Fine Specimen: Spread Me by Sarah Gailey Martin Cahill reviews a sensual, horrifying, electrifying, and deeply human erotic horror novel. By Martin Cahill | Published on October 21, 2025 Comment 0 Share New Share This is one of those reviews that’s going to be incredibly on the nose, and I don’t mind leading with that. Why? Because if you love Sarah Gailey’s work, well, you’re going to love this. So please keep reading, I love having you here, but this is going to be worth adding to your shelves. And if you haven’t read anything by Gailey before, if this is your first experience with them and their delightful brain, then Spread Me, their newest horror book from Nightfire, is going to be your gateway drug. Sensual, horrifying, electrifying, this book is deeply human, and worse, incredibly fascinated by desire and bodies—the body itself, the shape our desires take, and what lengths we’ll go to in order to sate them.  Let’s get into the meat of it. Literally.  Kinsey is a scientist in isolation at a research station deep in the desert, where the only other living things around her aside from her teammates are the organisms in the cryptobiotic layer under the sand. Said organisms are exactly what she’s there to study and where her passion lies; most of the time, she’s thinking about how to extend her four year season of solitude because going back to civilization is so unappealing. Sure, she’s used to her teammates Jacques, Domino, Mads, Nkrumah, and Saskia, but she’s sure as hell not a part of their web of sex, desire, and complicated relationships, hell no. When Kinsey blows through protocol and brings in a specimen they find in the desert, a strange coyote-like entity with more legs than usual, she exposes all of them to some kind of fever that isolates each of them in quarantine, a fever that every member of the team burns with… except Kinsey. Not that she tells them that. Rather than own up to masturbating for days on end in isolation to a picture of a T2 bacteriophage (fun fact: this is a virus that kills E. coli!), she says she also was struck with illness. But as the six of them resume life after the virus races through them, not all of them are who they say they are. Kinsey and the crew are in for the lockdown of their lives, and it’s going to get messy.  Physically, emotionally, spiritually, mentally, Spread Me gets messy every which way at top speed. It is a sexy, haunting, jaw-clenching ride of a story. Obviously, John Carpenter’s The Thing is a massive influence on this story, to the point that Kinsey and her teammates have the equivalent of a Swear Jar for even mentioning the movie or the titular creature. But take that level of claustrophobia, deception, and paranoia, and then introduce the language of sex and consent, probing and pulsing, the sharing of bodies in small, confined spaces, and you will have an idea of Spread Me. Much like Sam J. Miller’s “Thing With Beards,” Spread Me is a piece of fiction that looks at those themes inherent to The Thing and reexamines them through lenses of queerness, sexual non-conformity, desire, attraction, love, and self. And the Covid-19 Pandemic has certainly raised the dramatic stakes on discussions of trust, exposure, assuring others you’re safe, and lying when you’re not. As this virus moves through the station, we see how each researcher reacts to it, how it reacts to and changes them, and how each of these factors into how Kinsey is treated throughout.  Buy the Book Spread Me Sarah Gailey Buy Book Spread Me Sarah Gailey Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget Because Kinsey is attracted to the virus. Like the bacteriophage she masturbates to, the thought of this virus—its own motivations, its purpose and function—are intoxicating to consider. And as it begins to move through her teammates, it causes them to act in a way Kinsey has never seen them act towards her: flirtatious, sexy, invading personal space, reaching out with eager hands and lips. While Kinsey is horrified to witness the takeover of her teammates from an outside entity, she realizes: The virus is merely acting through those it infects. For some reason, it wants her the way she wants it. Gailey never provides easy answers, and watching Kinsey wrestle with what her body wants versus fighting to preserve her teammates, to study this virus and understand it, all while desperately keeping herself apart from it is some incredibly compelling character work, and Gailey does not disappoint. And that’s before we get into the discussion of whether or not it’s moral to let anyone in the base live, to prevent spreading it. (::looks at title ominously::)  Neither does Gailey disappoint with Jacques, Saskia, Nkrumah, Domino, and Mads. Each of these people are more than their function at the base; they all harbor contradictions and deeply held beliefs that fuel their own side of the story, as we see from multiple angles what the virus means to them, and how the loss of comrades affects each throughout the story.  There are surprises in this book, no doubt. Gailey pushes body horror to new limits, to the point that at several points I went, “AAAH,” out loud while reading. If you’re familiar with The Thing or work borne from its influence, you may think you have an idea of where and how this book ends (not that I’ll whisper a word about it), but Gailey will keep you guessing until the very end. Spread Me shines best, viscous and captivating as an oil slick, when we see the contradictory machine of lust, desire, intelligence, and self-preservation that is the human body and mind at odds against an intelligence that, in many ways, wants the same thing. To survive. To be seen. To live on.  I’m still thinking about this book and cannot recommend it highly enough. It continues to cement Gailey’s status as one of the leading voices in fiction and horror, using their talent to not only weave thoughtful stories of identity, community, culture, and society, but also freak you out while doing it. I can’t wait to see what dark corners of the heart they take us next! [end-mark] The post A Fine Specimen: <i>Spread Me</i> by Sarah Gailey appeared first on Reactor.
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3 w

9th Circuit Clears Way for Trump to Deploy National Guard in Portland
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9th Circuit Clears Way for Trump to Deploy National Guard in Portland

The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals cleared the way Monday for President Donald Trump to mobilize the National Guard to protect federal buildings in Portland.  A three-judge panel ruled 2-1 to reverse a federal district court ruling that prevented Trump from deploying National Guard troops in the state. The ruling allows the deployment to continue while the case moves forward in the courts.  The majority of the panel agreed with the Trump administration that the threat from protesters to federal facilities could not be addressed by existing law enforcement. “Considering the totality of the circumstances, there is a colorable basis for the president’s determination that he is unable with regular forces to execute the laws of the United States,” the majority opinion says. Protesters have targeted the Portland Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility and law enforcement for months. In June, police arrested 10 protesters outside the facility for charges that included second-degree arson, assault of a public safety officer, harassment, and resisting arrest. Earlier that month, police arrested three anti-ICE protesters, two for alleged reckless burning and one for allegedly assaulting an officer. In a demonstration in early October, anti-ICE protestors stormed the facility and allegedly assaulted law-enforcement officers. One officer was reportedly hospitalized. Police made six arrests.   Police also made three arrests during a protest on Oct. 18, including charging one person for allegedly assaulting and harassing ICE agents. The court majority determined the Trump administration is likely to ultimately prevail in the case. Federal law allows the president in certain circumstances to federalize National Guard troops who are usually under the purview of governors.  “The statute delegates the authority to make that determination [to mobilize troops] to the president and does not limit the facts and circumstances that the president may consider in doing so,” Judges Ryan Nelson and Bridget Bade, both Trump appointees, wrote in the majority opinion.  Judge Susan Graber, a President Bill Clinton appointee, dissented.  A similar case is playing out in Illinois over the president’s deployment of troops in Chicago.  The state of Oregon could appeal for a hearing before the full 9th Circuit or directly to the Supreme Court. It has argued the deployment is part of a nationwide campaign to assimilate the military into civilian law enforcement. The post 9th Circuit Clears Way for Trump to Deploy National Guard in Portland appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Vance Asks Christians, People of Faith to Pray for ‘Prince of Peace’ to Work in Middle East
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Vance Asks Christians, People of Faith to Pray for ‘Prince of Peace’ to Work in Middle East

Vice President JD Vance made an appeal to Christians and people of faith across the world during a visit to Israel on Tuesday.   “And I know that Christians have many titles for Jesus Christ, and one of them is the Prince of Peace,” Vance said. “And I’d ask all people of faith, and in particular my fellow Christians, to pray that the Prince of Peace can continue to work a miracle in this region of the world.”   “I think we have made incredible strides over the past week. We’re going to have to make a lot more, but I think with your prayers, with God’s providence, and with a very good team behind me, I think we’re going to get it done,” Vance said while speaking at a press conference just a few hours after arriving in Israel.   Vance is vocal about his faith, having converted to Catholicism in 2019.   Vice President Vance is in Israel and is asking Christians to pray for peace in the region:“I would ask all people of faith, and in particular my fellow Christians, to pray that the Prince of Peace can continue to work a miracle in this region of the world. “I think we have… pic.twitter.com/7OKQVskjw0— Virginia Allen (@Virginia_Allen5) October 21, 2025 The vice president is in Israel just about a week after the formal signing of a peace deal that started a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas after two years of war. The deal is based on President Donald Trump’s 20-point peace plan and includes the release of all hostages. All living hostages and 13 deceased hostages have been returned to Israel, but the remains of 15 hostages are still in Gaza.   Hamas’ failure to return all the remains of the deceased hostages within the allotted time frame, and reported incidents of ceasefire violations, including an attack on Israeli troops in Gaza that left two soldiers dead, have raised concerns over the future of the peace deal.   While Vance said he is not certain the ceasefire will hold, he expressed confidence in a future of peace in the Middle East.   “But look, right now, I feel very optimistic. Can I say with 100% certainty that it’s going to work? No, but you don’t do difficult things by only doing what’s 100% certain,” Vance said while speaking at the new Civilian Military Cooperation Center in Israel, a joint U.S.-Israeli facility aimed at upholding the ceasefire.   Vance pushed back on claims that the ceasefire is ending, arguing the tension is not unusual given that the peace deal is being carried out between peoples who “who hate each other, who have been fighting against each other for a very long time.”   “We are doing very well. We are in a very good place. We’re going to have to keep working on it, but I think we have the team to do exactly that,” Vance said.   Steve Witkoff, U.S. special envoy to the Middle East, and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law who helped to broker the peace deal between Israel and Hamas, stood behind Vance as he spoke. Both Witkoff and Kushner are expected to continue playing a significant role in the peace deal as it unfolds. The second phase of the deal is expected to include the complete disarmament of Hamas and a permanent end to the war.   “Our warning to Hamas is very straightforward,” Vance said. “The terms of the 20-point plan that the president put out there is very clear. It’s supported not just by Israel, by all of our Gulf-Arab friends. It’s that Hamas has to disarm. It’s that Hamas has to actually behave itself, and that Hamas, while all the fighters can be given some sort of clemency, they’re not going to be able to kill each other, and they’re not going to be able to kill their fellow Palestinians.”   After the ceasefire took effect, Hamas terrorists began carrying out public executions of Gazans who were perceived to have cooperated with Israel.   Vance said he does not know who will rule Gaza in the future, but the administration is focused now on ensuring the people of both Israel and Gaza can “live in some measure of security and stability.”  Vance addresses the future of Gaza: "If we get to the point where we are arguing exactly what the governance structure in Gaza is long-term, we should pat ourselves on the back. That’s a very good problem to have." pic.twitter.com/MOuROHUtL2— Virginia Allen (@Virginia_Allen5) October 21, 2025 “I think once we’ve got to a point where both the Gazans and our Israeli friends can have some measure of security, we will worry about what the long-term governance of Gaza is. Let’s focus on security and rebuilding and giving people food and medicine,” Vance said. “If we get to the point where we are arguing exactly what the governance structure in Gaza is long-term, we should pat ourselves on the back.”  The post Vance Asks Christians, People of Faith to Pray for ‘Prince of Peace’ to Work in Middle East appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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