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Key Houthi Military Leader Killed Amid Israeli Strikes
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Key Houthi Military Leader Killed Amid Israeli Strikes

'We will reach all of them.'
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The Witcher Showrunner on What Will (and Won’t) Change in Season 4 With Liam Hemsworth as the New Geralt
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The Witcher Showrunner on What Will (and Won’t) Change in Season 4 With Liam Hemsworth as the New Geralt

News The Witcher The Witcher Showrunner on What Will (and Won’t) Change in Season 4 With Liam Hemsworth as the New Geralt It turns out one can smile AND do monster murders. By Molly Templeton | Published on October 16, 2025 Image: Netflix Comment 0 Share New Share Image: Netflix Last week, fans got their first real look at the fourth season of The Witcher—the first to star Liam Hemsworth as Geralt of Rivia, the role previously played by Henry Cavill. The action-packed trailer visits all the major players, including Anya Chalotra’s Yennefer and Freya Allan’s Ciri, but the biggest spotlight is on Hemsworth, and the question of how well he fits into Geralt of Rivia’s leather pants. IGN has an in-depth conversation with Hemsworth and Witcher showrunner Lauren Schmidt Hissrich about the upcoming season: what’s changed, what hasn’t, and what the recasting means for the show as a whole and for its new star. It’s a really interesting, thoughtful piece, one that gives Hemsworth and Hissrich a chance to really dig into how they think about Geralt, and what an actor may bring to—or discard—from a role as iconic as this one. What Hissrich saw in Hemsworth was soul. She tells IGN: What I really loved about Liam’s work that I had seen is that he was able to organically blend those two things. He didn’t have physical scenes and then emotional scenes. He was able to really carry this specific, I guess I call it soul. He has a soul that he brings into the role… To have that present even through action scenes when he’s fighting monsters, and it’s the same thing that’s present when he’s having conversations with Ciri or with Yennefer, that was a really special thing that we were able to capture. And when I had watched some of his work, specifically going back to Hunger Games, that’s something that I felt from him. She notes that recasting is not just a matter of getting the new guy into the right costume; it affects everything about the role, right down to how the lines are written: “Even once we wrote all the scripts, once we started filming them, we started making adjustments to make sure that things sounded more natural coming out of Liam’s mouth.” And this season, what comes out of Geralt’s mouth might be a little wordier than before, and he may be a little more likely to smile. Hissrich says that the upcoming episodes see Geralt opening up a bit with his newfound friends. “We brought back some grunting and some sighing and some humming and certainly some ‘fucks’ now and then. But we also allowed Geralt, specifically, in these emotional moments, to have lengthier… I don’t want to call them speeches, but lengthier conversations with his comrades.” Hemsworth was also interested in exploring what Hissrich calls Geralt’s “dry wit.” He says: My interpretation of this character is Geralt is a deeply empathetic person. As much as he’s lived a very isolated life, and is reluctant to open up to people or be vulnerable with people, apart from, say, Ciri and Yen and Jaskier… [At] this point in the story, we’re really seeing him go through a lot of changes. So I wanted to earn those moments. Because when we find him, he’s dealing with doubt. He’s struggling. He’s really unsure about himself… He’s injured right now, so he’s unsure whether, even if he does find Ciri, if he’s actually going to be able to save her, if he has the strength and the ability to save her. It is purely the fact that he actually is able to be vulnerable with his friends and meet this chosen family that he’s able to lean on them and find the courage and find the strength… This idea of chosen family is what really pushes him forward and motivates him to go on. There’s chosen family, and there’s also monster hunting, massive fight sequences, and the fate of the Continent. Hissrich says, “Fantasy oftentimes, and The Witcher fell into this… It becomes very earnest. Everything is carried with the weight of the world. And personally, when I turn on the television at night after work to watch something, you do want to have moments of hope and optimism. You do want to have moments of beauty. It was so important to bring that back to the Witcher world.” Beauty? Optimism? Cheeky grins? You can see how this new Witcher plays out when season four debuts on Netflix on October 30th.[end-mark] The post <i>The Witcher</i> Showrunner on What Will (and Won’t) Change in Season 4 With Liam Hemsworth as the New Geralt appeared first on Reactor.
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BREAKING: How the Senate Voted on Bill Funding Paychecks for Troops
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BREAKING: How the Senate Voted on Bill Funding Paychecks for Troops

On Thursday, the Senate failed to pass bipartisan legislation to fund the Department of War for the next fiscal year, putting military personnel and operations in jeopardy as the government continues to be shut down. “Senate Democrats just voted to block the Defense Appropriations bill that would pay our service members, with a raise, and fund our national defense so that the USA has the best military in the world,” posted Rep. Mario Diaz Balart, R-Fla., on X. Senate Democrats just voted to block the Defense Appropriations bill that would pay our service members, with a raise, and fund our national defense so that the USA has the best military in the world. @HouseGOP already passed this bipartisan bill. Senate democrats continue to… https://t.co/YDWyGs8aCa— Mario Díaz-Balart (@MarioDB) October 16, 2025 With a final vote of 50 to 44, the measure did not meet the 60 votes needed for passage. Three Democrats voted with Republicans to pass the bill: Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada; Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire and John Fetterman of Pennsylvania. Sens. Tim Sheehy, R-Mont., wrote on X, “Dems just voted against funding our military even though this was a bipartisan appropriations bill.” Dems just voted against funding our military even though this was a bipartisan appropriations bill. The Schumer Shutdown continues to be an embarrassing spectacle for our republic. Let’s get back to work! https://t.co/vxSFeqlPXO— Tim Sheehy (@TimSheehyMT) October 16, 2025 Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.V., decried Democrats’ “continued political games.” In the minds of Senate Democrats, voting for the Defense appropriations bill that PAYS OUR TROOPS “relinquishes some of the party's leverage over shutdown negotiations.”Really?Their continued political games are going to deeply hurt our brave men and women in uniform.…— Shelley Moore Capito (@SenCapito) October 16, 2025 Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., had said this week that it was the Democrats’ best interest to back the troops by supporting the GOP legislative measure. If Democrat senators “want to stop the Defense bill, I don’t think it’s very good optics for them,” Thune explained.  The legislation titled the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2026 provided federal dollars for military expenditures like personnel, operations, procurement, as well as research and development. The defense bill did not include expenditures for military family housing, military construction, or civil works projects by the Army Corps of Engineers. Still, the bill would be a crucial step for providing for the military as the current government shutdown threatens federal operations. Thousands of federal workers deemed nonessential have been furloughed because of the government shutdown, which began on Oct. 1. Essential personnel, whether in the Department of War or elsewhere, still come into their workplaces. Federal employees will receive back pay once the shutdown ends. President Donald Trump has sought to pay military personnel despite the shutdown by redirecting $8 billion of unobligated research development testing and evaluation funds from the prior fiscal year. Thune also expressed a wish that funding for the Department of Labor, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Education would be voted on as well, essentially bringing back miniature funding legislation. “We would like to do a package. We’d like to do a mini, like we did before,” the Republican leader stated.  On Thursday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., had responded to speculation about Democrat support for such an effort. “Right now, the only thing that is on the floor is just the defense bill. Thune needs unanimous consent to add anything else to it. We don’t even know he’ll get that,” the New York senator said. “It’s always been unacceptable to Democrats to do the defense bill without other bills that have so many things that are important to the American people, in terms of health care, in terms of housing, in terms of safety,” Schumer added.  Schumer then said, “So you all know, they need unanimous consent to add something to the defense bill. They don’t have it.” George Caldwell contributed to this report. This is a breaking news article and it may be updated. The post BREAKING: How the Senate Voted on Bill Funding Paychecks for Troops appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Trump and Putin to Meet in Hungary to Discuss End to War Between Russia, Ukraine  
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Trump and Putin to Meet in Hungary to Discuss End to War Between Russia, Ukraine  

The ceasefire between Israel and Hamas could help negotiations to end the war between Russia and Ukraine, President Donald Trump said following a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin.   “I have just concluded my telephone conversation with President Vladimir Putin, of Russia, and it was a very productive one,” Trump wrote on Truth Social on Thursday afternoon, adding that he and Putin will soon meet in Hungary to discuss an end to the war.   Russian and U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, will meet next week, according to the president, following by a meeting between Putin and Trump in Budapest, Hungary, aimed at bringing “this ‘inglorious’ war, between Russia and Ukraine, to an end,” Trump said.  Trump held a summit with Putin in Alaska in August. While Trump said at the time that progress was made at the summit, Russia has continued to wage an aggressive war campaign in Ukraine following its initial invasion of Ukraine in late February 2022.   The call Thursday between Putin and Trump comes just days after the Trump administration succeeded in finalizing a deal for peace between Israel and Hamas.   “President Putin congratulated me and the United States on the great accomplishment of peace in the Middle East, something that, he said, has been dreamed of for centuries. I actually believe that the success in the Middle East will help in our negotiation in attaining an end to the war with Russia/Ukraine,” Trump said.   Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire and hostage deal last week based on Trump’s 20-point plan to permanently end the war in Gaza and disarm Hamas. Phase one of the peace deal is underway, and all the living hostages have been returned to Israel, but Hamas has returned the remains of only nine deceased hostages, leaving the bodies of the other 19 still in Gaza. Israel argues Hamas is in violation of the agreement for failing to immediately return all remains, but the ceasefire has continued to hold.    Trump campaigned on ending the war in Gaza and the war between Ukraine and Russia. Following the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, Trump has been open about his desire to now see the conflict between Russia and Ukraine likewise come to an end.   Trump’s call with Putin included discussion of the Ukrainian children who have been abducted to Russia. “We also spent a great deal of time talking about trade between Russia and the United States when the war with Ukraine is over,” the president said.   Trump has put pressure on a number of nations to stop buying Russian oil. On Wednesday, Trump said India has agreed to stop purchasing oil from Russia.   Trump will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the Oval Office of the White House on Friday to “discuss my conversation with President Putin, and much more,” he said, adding, “I believe great progress was made with today’s telephone conversation.”   The post Trump and Putin to Meet in Hungary to Discuss End to War Between Russia, Ukraine   appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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3 w

UK Speech Regulator Ofcom Claims First Amendment Doesn’t Protect Americans From Its Censorship Law
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UK Speech Regulator Ofcom Claims First Amendment Doesn’t Protect Americans From Its Censorship Law

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. If you’re going to cross an ocean to tell Americans what speech they can and can’t allow, the least you can do is not trip over your own jurisdictional nonsense on the way in. Ofcom, the UK’s media regulator, which has lately decided to try and become an international speech cop, managed to do exactly that. But when the regulator began sending enforcement letters to small US platforms under its sweeping online censorship law, the Online Safety Act, it probably didn’t expect to trigger a constitutional ambush. But that’s exactly what it got. Preston Byrne, one of attorneys representing 4chan, Kiwi Farms, and two other American companies, said Ofcom had been sending “frankly asinine letters under English law.” His clients, he explained, “are entirely American. All of their operations are American. All of their infrastructure is American, and they have no connection to the UK whatsoever.” Despite this, Ofcom threatened the companies with “a £20,000 fine plus £100 daily penalties for 60 days thereafter.” Byrne responded to Ofcom’s pressure by filing a federal lawsuit in Washington, D.C. The lawsuit was designed not only to challenge Ofcom’s jurisdiction but to force a contradiction into the open. Byrne said the purpose of the lawsuit was threefold. One, to show the global censors that the resistance in the United States is now prepared to fight back, and they don’t have freedom of action. Two, to assert hims client’s claims and defenses in a US court, and make the argument in front of a US federal judge. And the third one was to provoke Ofcom into “doing something stupid, which is exactly what they did.” After the case was filed, Ofcom sent what Byrne called “a 40-page letter of tremendous length, which is deeply unserious.” Ofcom’s written response delivered exactly what Byrne says was needed: an explicit admission that Ofcom doesn’t “think US law applies on US soil and that they’re going to use [the argument of] sovereign immunity.” This was more than a legal contradiction; it was a political one that directly undercuts the British government’s public assurances. “This rather undermines the British government’s assertions that it’s made time and again, including to the President, to his face, that the British government is not using its sovereign power to censor American citizens,” Byrne said. In its official notice to 4chan, Ofcom made an extraordinary admission which, in trying to assert its authority, effectively undercut its entire legal position. The regulator wrote: “We also note 4chan’s claim that it is protected from enforcement action taken by Ofcom because of the First Amendment to the US Constitution. However, the First Amendment binds only the US government and not overseas bodies, such as Ofcom, and therefore, it does not affect Ofcom’s powers to enforce the Act in this case.” This reveals the fundamental flaw in Ofcom’s claim to authority over American companies. By asserting that the First Amendment “binds only the US government,” Ofcom admits it stands entirely outside the US constitutional order, yet it simultaneously claims the right to enforce UK speech law against US entities operating solely on US soil. Ofcom cannot have it both ways: it cannot disclaim the reach of US law while insisting that British law somehow extends across the Atlantic. If the First Amendment has no force on Ofcom’s actions in the United States, then neither does the UK’s censorship law, the Online Safety Act, which has no legal effect beyond the UK. By saying the First Amendment does not limit it because it is “an overseas body,” Ofcom concedes it operates as a foreign power. But that very status means it has no jurisdiction within the United States, no legal foundation to compel compliance, levy fines, or demand risk assessments. The notice collapses under its own logic: Ofcom disavows being bound by US law while simultaneously asserting the ability to act within the United States. For Byrne, the case is as much about principle as it is about law. “Ultimately, from a global free speech resistance standpoint, and this is something that I think Ofcom really doesn’t understand. We don’t care what the UK thinks in the United States…And our objective is really to demonstrate the toothlessness of these global regimes in the United States where most of the internet is based.” The lawsuit has also become a rallying point for lawmakers. “We’ve also contacted the White House, both houses of Congress,” Byrne said. “I’m advised that there are a number of senators in Congress and representatives in Congress who are looking at introducing a bill to put a stop to this.” He added that he was in New Hampshire proposing a state law that “basically creates a cause of action against a foreign censor seeking to enforce foreign censorship law on US soil with penalties of $1 million per occurrence and a waiver of sovereign immunity in the New Hampshire courts.” *** In the pages of its decision notice, Ofcom makes a confident declaration. Actually, it makes two: “There is no requirement in the Act for Ofcom to use the MLAT procedure to serve notices issued under the Act.” “The MLAT procedure is not an appropriate method of service for administrative investigations, but reserved for obtaining assistance in the investigation or prosecution of criminal offences.” That’s the rationale. Since Ofcom says it isn’t prosecuting a crime, it isn’t obligated to use the US–UK Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty, known as the MLAT. Instead of going through the formal channels of international cooperation, it decided to send enforcement letters directly to American companies, treating them as if they were UK-based firms with a bad compliance record. The MLAT is the process governments use when they want to legally compel evidence or cooperation across borders. It’s the official state-to-state channel, routed through justice departments, involving courts, treaties, and a trail of documentation. You don’t get to use it just because you’re nosy, and you can’t skip it just because paperwork is inconvenient. Ofcom treats its Section 100 information notices as administrative requests, not as judicial or criminal process. Under that view, the regulator is simply carrying out routine compliance monitoring that Parliament has authorized to have extraterritorial reach, much like how data protection or competition authorities contact foreign companies. Because the Online Safety Act says its duties apply “regardless of whether [providers] are based in the UK or not,” Ofcom considers itself entitled to bypass MLAT entirely and email companies directly. The US companies on the receiving end of these notices disagree. Strongly. In their federal lawsuit, they argue that Ofcom’s actions aren’t casual oversight; they’re enforcement disguised as paperwork. “None of these actions constitutes valid service under the US-UK Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty, United States law, or any other proper international legal process.” The lawsuit goes further: “Ofcom…may require United States citizens to comply with information notices and potentially incriminate themselves on demand without Ofcom first obtaining a judicial warrant or serving a request under the UK-United States Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty procedure.” X has also criticized another country, Brazil, for attempting to bypass the US–Brazil MLAT process, warning that the country’s efforts to force content takedowns and data disclosures without proper legal channels threaten both internet freedom and international law. In filings to US trade officials, X argued that Brazil’s unilateral actions set a dangerous precedent for extraterritorial censorship disguised as regulatory enforcement. The US government responded to Brazil’s censorship campaign by expanding sanctions against officials involved, including Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes. Citing threats to freedom of expression and the rule of law, the sanctions were part of a broader move to push back against politically motivated content takedown orders and judicial overreach targeting social media platforms. What the UK’s Ofcom calls routine administration, the plaintiffs call coercive extraterritorial power. The plaintiff’s argument is that, if Ofcom wants to gather evidence or compel information on US soil, it is supposed to file a formal request with the US Department of Justice under the MLAT, and then let the American courts decide how and whether to honor it. What it can’t do, at least under US law, is email a webmaster and demand records under threat of criminal penalty, then pretend that’s normal. *** In case Ofcom’s legal theory wasn’t already elastic enough, it turns out their definition of jurisdiction now includes any website that British people happen to use.  The regulator admits the Online Safety Act only applies within the UK, but then interprets the phrase “links with the UK” so broadly that the limitation ceases to exist. Take 4chan. According to Ofcom, it has “links with the UK” because a noticeable chunk of its users, precisely 7 percent, by their count, are from Britain.  That’s enough, in Ofcom’s view, to say the site “targets” the UK. It even goes further, claiming that “a UK user base in the hundreds of thousands is, of itself, a significant number.” By that logic, any global website with incidental British visitors can be declared under British jurisdiction. It’s a legal framework built on wishful thinking. *** Ofcom seems convinced that neither the First Amendment nor the US–UK Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) matters in its effort to shake down American websites. In its view, British law applies because Parliament said so, and enforcement is just a matter of sending strongly worded emails to companies with British users. Constitutional law, international procedure, and jurisdictional boundaries are treated as bureaucratic clutter. But there’s a problem with that fantasy. If Ofcom ever intends to actually collect on its threats, like slapping 4chan or Kiwi Farms with fines, it won’t be able to do it alone. It would need the help of the United States government to enforce a foreign penalty on American soil. And the odds of that happening are somewhere between zero and “not a chance.” The US government is not in the business of enforcing overseas censorship laws, especially ones that directly contradict the First Amendment. American courts don’t help foreign states punish speech that would be protected at home. If Ofcom thinks it can dodge the MLAT process and still expect cooperation from US authorities, it hasn’t been paying attention. And this isn’t theoretical, as the sanctions against Brazilian judges have shown. Ofcom’s current strategy, ignoring the US Constitution, dismissing MLAT, and issuing fines it can’t collect, is performance. At best, it’s a symbolic exercise in regulatory theater. At worst, it’s a self-inflicted embarrassment that exposes just how little leverage the UK actually has when it tries to export its outdated speech policies across the Atlantic. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post UK Speech Regulator Ofcom Claims First Amendment Doesn’t Protect Americans From Its Censorship Law appeared first on Reclaim The Net.
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BREAKING: Trump Declares Putin's On Board For a Summit on War In Ukraine
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BREAKING: Trump Declares Putin's On Board For a Summit on War In Ukraine

BREAKING: Trump Declares Putin's On Board For a Summit on War In Ukraine
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Segregation Is Back, With a Twist
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Segregation Is Back, With a Twist

Segregation Is Back, With a Twist
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Norwegian Nobel Socialists Snub Trump, Give Prize to Eco-Extremist Economist
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Norwegian Nobel Socialists Snub Trump, Give Prize to Eco-Extremist Economist

The Associated Press recently dug up some “experts” to diss President Donald Trump as being too nasty for the Nobel Peace Prize, since he -- gasp -- "does not believe in climate change." But one of the recipients of the elitist honors in the Nobel Economics Prize is is a climate-obsessed economist who advocates a distorted concept of “creative destruction” through green policies to wreck the fossil fuel industry. Climate organization Heatmap reported October 13 that Nobel winner Philippe Aghion views “carbon taxes” as just one instrument in a tool box to force the economy into a climate-friendlier era. Heatmap wrote that in a 2023 interview, Aghion viewed government “subsidies to green innovation, and more generally green industrial policy” as other necessities for a supposedly effective climate transition. As Heatmap summarized, “Aghion argues that climate policy needs to hit hard and hit quickly, precisely to induce the kind of competitive innovation that he thinks drives economic growth. ‘If you wait longer, firms will be even better at dirty technologies, and it will take longer before their skills on clean technologies catch up with their skills on dirty technologies, and so you need to act promptly,’ he said in 2023.” Bastardizing economist Joseph A. Schumpeter’s “creative destruction” theory built from a reliance on capitalist market forces by shoe-horning government policies into an attempt to dismantle an entire industry that American consumers rely on for energy doesn’t really sound Nobel-worthy. That’s, of course, if you take out the fact that the Nobel Committee itself is a collective of eco-fanatics masquerading as unbiased judges. Apparently the Nobel is just primarily earmarked for snobby academics and leaders who despise fossil fuels. Good grief: Aghion’s work supports this kind of "belt-and-suspenders" approach to climate policy, where fossil fuel emissions are made more expensive and subsidies are provided to advance green innovation. But nobody should be surprised. After all, the Nobel Committee once gave a prize to former Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev as the Cold War ended, but not to President Ronald Reagan. In fact, as NewsBusters executive editor Tim Graham pointed out, “Republicans haven't been honored since Henry Kissinger in 1973.” This is also the same Committee that gave then-President Barack Obama a prize in 2009 for doing — well, nothing really. Do lefty outlets like AP care? Of course not. Heatmap even noted that Aghion saw President Biden’s disastrous $739 billion "Inflation Reduction Act" as "a real life version of his ideas.” The CATO Institute estimated March 11 that the IRA’s ridiculous green subsidy provisions “will cost between $936 billion and $1.97 trillion over the next 10 years, and between $2.04 trillion and $4.67 trillion by 2050.”  This isn't a "level playing field" of market competition. It's using trillions of taxpayer dollars to force energy "progress." In honoring Aghion and trashing Project 2025, the left mangles the facts beyond recognition: "The choice isn't between regulation and freedom. It's between stagnation and innovation. Let's back the disruptors. Let's move forward."
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Joy Behar Tries to Claim Jay Jones Is GOP and 'Only Democrats Denounced'
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Joy Behar Tries to Claim Jay Jones Is GOP and 'Only Democrats Denounced'

After nearly two weeks of completely ignoring the Democratic scandal, ABC News’s The View finally mentioned Virginia Democrat Jay Jones’s text message scandal exposing his fantasies about killing Republicans and their kids, during Thursday’s episode. In her usual ghoulish and insane fashion, co-host Joy Behar attempted to insist that Jones was a Republican and touted that “only Democrats denounced him, no Republicans!” This all occurred because The View pounced on a GOP scandal where several young adult leaders and political operatives were found to have used disgusting language in a leaked group chat. Despite having nearly two weeks to bring up Jones, faux conservative co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin suggested his messaged were only coming up now as a distraction, when it was the other way around: But can I mention, because what's come up in this conversation is this individual, Jay Jones, who’s running for attorney general in Virginia. He’s about a 36-year-old man running for attorney general, who had some leaked text messages come out where he aspired to violence against Republicans. Of course, Farah Griffin omitted the heinous details of Jones’s sick fantasies, such as wanting to see GOP children die in their parents’ arms. This was when Behar interjected to erroneously link Jones to Republicans while trying to play up the Democratic Party’s reaction, but received push back from Farah Griffin and moderator Whoopi Goldberg: BEHAR: I saw that. But only Democrats denounced him, no Republicans! FARAH GRIFFIN: He's a Democrat. GOLDBERG: Yeah, he’s a Democrat. BEHAR: And the Democrats denounced him.     It was a boldfaced lie from the ABC News program that Republicans didn’t denounce Jones. It made no sense that they wouldn’t denounce an opponent who wanted them dead. Of course, Farah Griffin failed to add the important context that Democrats writ-large had fallen short of demanding Jones drop out of the race, and how many had refused to pull their endorsements. And while The View had highlighted and snickered at local coverage of Republicans having a hard time in debates and town halls, they never showed the now infamous video of Virginia gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger’s (D) stunning silence in a debate when pressed by Republican candidate Winsome Sears to pull her endorsement of Jones. Meanwhile, Behar was huffing about how Republicans needed to be better. “The only thing I want to say about this topic is that the Republican Party needs to deal with this. They need to find their better selves, find their better angels,” she said about the chat.     Staunchly racist co-host Sunny Hostin flaunted her usual racial grievances by ignoring how those in the group chat had been widely denounced by the Republican Party and claimed it represented the entire party. “[W]hen I say the future of the Republican Party embraces white supremacy, please believe me the first time. And only look at this chat as your proof that it is alive and well in the Republican Party,” she declared. “I'm not surprised that that chat exists. I wasn't surprised that men, adults ages 25 to 34 -- white men,” she chided. “Well, my lived experience as an afro-Latina in this country helps me tell the uncomfortable truths about this country with real clarity, and that's why I wasn't surprised. And I think many people would like to deny that lived experience.”     She also whined about those who called out her racism: “And that is the truth. And those of us who said that, when I said that, and those of my friends that said that were accused of hyperbole and racism ourselves. I wish that wasn't true. But it is true.” Co-host Sara Haines, in addition to denouncing those in the group chat, confronted Hostin. “And one clarification, though, Sunny on what you said about the right. There are some extreme problems with anti-Semitism on the left, which is a uniting force of that cause,” she pointed out. Behar also admitted to getting “a note” to counter Hostin’s racism. “I got to note. They were not all – They were not all guys. And we don't know that they were all white people. I just got a note,” she said.     The transcript is below. Click "expand" to read: ABC’s The View October 16, 2025 11:02:12 a.m. Eastern WHOOPI GOLDBERG: We're going to tell you what's been going on. So, a group chat featuring young Republicans from around the country was leaked that was full of racist, anti-Semitic, hateful rants, and many Democrats and Republicans are strongly condemning this. But not the Vice President. He sees things differently. (…) 11:04:45 a.m. Eastern JOY BEHAR: They also say – we’ve said this on the show that the frontal lobe does not get developed until you're 25. What's Trump's excuse? No. Anyway. [Applause] Anyway. Anyway. But I want -- the only thing I want to say about this topic is that the Republican Party needs to deal with this. They need to find their better selves, find their better angels, the way -- I come from the Eisenhower era. I mean, that's how old I am. And Eisenhower was a decent Republican, a good Republican. And Ronald Reagan too. And why not go back, find those young people who espouse that type of behavior instead of this crap, as he calls it? SUNNY HOSTIN: You know, I hate to say it, but I'm not surprised that that chat exists. I wasn't surprised that men, adults ages 25 to 34 -- white men. BEHAR: They're all white guys, by the way. Just point that out. HOSTIN: White men were speaking like that. You know, they checked every white supremacist bigot box. They were anti-Semitic. They were misogynistic. They were homophobic. They were racist. BEHAR: They were stupid. HOSTIN: And they were dumb. But my lifed [sic] -- Well, my lived experience as an afro-Latina in this country helps me tell the uncomfortable truths about this country with real clarity, and that's why I wasn't surprised. And I think many people would like to deny that lived experience. I'll say it again, because I've said it on the show many times. Trump's rise, in part, was based in racism and white supremacy. [Applause] And that is the truth. And those of us who said that, when I said that, and those of my friends that said that were accused of hyperbole and racism ourselves. I wish that wasn't true. But it is true. And when I say things like that, when I say that white supremacy is thriving on the right, when I say the future of the Republican Party embraces white supremacy, please believe me the first time. And only look at this chat as your proof that it is alive and well in the Republican Party. BEHAR: Well, it should be denounced. GOLDBERG: And they are doing it. I have to say, both sides have been – SARA HAINES: Denouncing it. GOLDBERG: Denouncing it. HAINES: And some of these people have lost their jobs, their positions, as they should, because these weren't just a dozen young Republicans. They were young Republican leaders within their states. (…) 11:08:11 a.m. Eastern HAINES: There were over 251 of the most -- I have never heard some of these things in my lifetime. About every group under the sun. And one clarification, though, Sunny on what you said about the right. There are some extreme problems with anti-Semitism on the left, which is a uniting force of that cause. But in this instance, I think it's dangerous that JD Vance would conflate sophomoric, immature behavior with pernicious, vile, unacceptable, unaccounted for -- BEHAR: I got to note. They were not all – They were not all guys. HAINES: There were a couple women. [Crosstalk] BEHAR: And we don't know that they were all white people. I just got a note. ALYSSA FARAH GRIFFIN: But can I mention, because what's come up in this conversation is this individual, Jay Jones, who’s running for attorney general in Virginia. He’s about a 36-year-old man running for attorney general, who had some leaked text messages come out where he aspired to violence against Republicans. I don't know why it's hard for people -- BEHAR: But only – I saw that. But only Democrats denounced him, no Republicans! FARAH GRIFFIN: He's a Democrat. GOLDBERG: Yeah, he’s a Democrat. FARAH GRIFFIN: But that’s my point – BEHAR: And the Democrats denounced him. FARAH GRIFFIN: If I can finish my point, denounce both. We don't need to equivocate. We don't need to say, ‘well, he did this, so -- both are terrible. Both are equally awful. (…)
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'Very Suspicious': Kathy Griffin Goes Full Election Denier
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'Very Suspicious': Kathy Griffin Goes Full Election Denier

On her Wednesday Talk Your Head Off YouTube show, actress and comedian Kathy Griffin continued the trend of liberal celebrities and talking heads trying to make election denial great again because, according to her, Elon Musk's support for Donald Trump contained an illegal scheme to bribe voters. Griffin started with her attacks on Musk, “I'm gonna say something that's gonna get me in trouble. I don't think he won in a free and fair election. You heard me. I'm coming out and saying it myself. I don't care if that means I look crazy because Elon Musk, who's this other Nazi guy running around town who owns X, and a lot of people think he's a genius, but he's not, he's like a fake genius.”     As for the alleged funny business, Griffin continued, “Anyway, he's a, but he's a professional Nazi in my humble opinion, and he's good friends with Trump, and at one point, I don't know if you remember, but he was giving out million dollar checks to people if they would vote for Trump. That's illegal. It's unconstitutional and illegal, so that was happening, and the fact that Trump won all seven swing states, which has never happened in the history of the U.S., makes it all very suspicious to me.” Fact-check: Musk never offered $1 million to people to vote for Trump. What he did was offer $1 million per day in a lottery-like system for people in swing states who signed a petition for his PAC that affirmed support for free speech and gun rights. That PAC is currently being sued by people who signed and allege that the random lottery was not actually random. Elon Musk did not pay people to vote for Trump. Theoretically, a swing-state liberal could’ve signed his petition hoping to win $1 million, turned around, and voted for Kamala Harris (who Griffin earlier hailed as “the shit”). Donald Trump won in 2024, fair and square. Perhaps liberals should spend more time in self-reflection than trying to cope with various conspiracy theories as to why. Here is a transcript for the October 15 show: YouTube Talk Your Head Off with Kathy Griffin 10/15/2025 KATHY GRIFFIN: I'm gonna say something that's gonna get me in trouble. I don't think he won in a free and fair election. You heard me. I'm coming out and saying it myself. I don't care if that means I look crazy because Elon Musk, who's this other Nazi guy running around town who owns X, and a lot of people think he's a genius, but he's not, he's like a fake genius. Anyway, he's a, but he's a professional Nazi in my humble opinion, and he's good friends with Trump and at one point, I don't know if you remember, but he was giving out million dollar checks to people if they would vote for Trump. That's illegal. It's unconstitutional and illegal, so that was happening, and the fact that Trump won all seven swing states, which has never happened in the history of the U.S., makes it all very suspicious to me.
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