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3 w

'After the Hunt': A Hollywood Mea Culpa for Kavanaugh?
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'After the Hunt': A Hollywood Mea Culpa for Kavanaugh?

'After the Hunt': A Hollywood Mea Culpa for Kavanaugh?
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3 w

Morning Joe Whines About Drug Strikes, Demands Congressional Oversight
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Morning Joe Whines About Drug Strikes, Demands Congressional Oversight

On Wednesday morning, MSNBC’s melodramatic Joe Scarborough echoed Senator Rand Paul’s (R-KY) concern over military strikes against narcotic-trafficking boats originating from Venezuela. This came a day after President Trump announced the sixth strike of its kind during his second term. The Morning Joe co-host first lamented the military’s typical efforts at traffic-prevention: … Rand Paul’s concerns are so legitimate. He talks about how — you know, the Coast Guard, at their best, sometimes they board ships and maybe only two out of four, or three out of four, actually have drugs on them. That means a quarter of the time they’ve made a mistake. The Coast Guard was doing too thorough of a job! Being safe and not sorry was outdated, apparently. And one of the reasons the strikes were so deplorable was that “we don’t know who’s on those boats […] which of course we don’t know because this is based on intel maybe from rival gangs, maybe from people who want the people killed on the boat. We don’t know. We’re literally killing people, shooting first and asking questions later, when we can just board the boat.” The strikes weren’t simply about stopping drug trafficking. They’re about sending a message to the perpetrators. Criminal suspects operating in international waters aren’t entitled to inspection-first privileges.     Scarborough started to concede the usefulness of stopping drug mules in their tracks, but couldn’t do so without demanding details that compromise the whole mission: Listen, if these are drug dealers, if these people are coming to bring poison to the United States and kill our children with their drugs, okay. As Rand Paul said, give us the names, give us the organization. […] Give us the evidence that you had that had you commit this extrajudicial killing without telling members of the House and the Senate Armed Services Committee. We're not asking you to embrace narco-terrorists. Maybe, just maybe, the Pentagon wasn’t going to expose its strategy and tactics to the enemy just yet. The weakness of congressional oversight was the resulting lack of secrecy, which would undermine the entire campaign. Scarborough ended by sarcastically alluding that the Republican Party holds unyielding devotion to Trump’s agenda: We're asking you to follow the Constitution […] Not because you don't like the administration, not because you're not being loyal to Donald Trump. But because you're being faithful to the Constitution and you need answers. […] This is not even hard. You can like Donald Trump and like the Constitution at the same time if you're a member of Congress. Get the oversight like you're supposed to do based on the Constitution. Simply put, Scarborough hated the fact that Trump had taken unilateral action against the flow of dangerous substances the federal government had long failed to stop, so he had to rely on a non-MAGA Republican to create a semblance of any real opposition. The transcript is below. Click "expand" read: MSNBC’s Morning Joe October 15, 2025 6:03:34 a.m. EST (…) MIKA BRZEZINSKI: Also ahead, the Trump administration carried out another deadly strike on a boat it claims was carrying drugs. We’ll bring you the latest on that, and the comments from a Republican Senator calling out the administration — it happened again, Joe. But appears some Republicans — JOE SCARBOROUGH: It did. Yeah, I think Rand Paul, Senator from Kentucky, Rand Paul’s concerns are so legitimate. He talks about how — you know, the Coast Guard, at their best, sometimes they board ships and maybe only two out of four, or three out of four, actually have drugs on them. That means a quarter of the time they’ve made a mistake. Rand Paul legitimately asks the question, if we don’t know who’s on those boats, if we don’t board those boats, and if we’re only getting it right half the time, if we’re only getting it right three quarters of the time — which of course we don’t know because this is based on intel maybe from rival gangs, maybe from people who want the people killed on the boat. We don’t know. We’re literally killing people, shooting first and asking questions later, when we can just board the boat. This is something that I know is causing Republican Senators, Democratic Senators, everybody a lot of concern. The question is, when will more people speak out like Rand Paul. (…) 6:36:17 a.m. EST JOE SCARBOROUGH: Well, in that case, we know who the target was. It was Pete Madeira, we would understand who the target — we have no idea who these people are who are getting killed. These are extrajudicial killings. You've said it. It's why Duarte is facing the problems that he's facing right now, the former leader of the Philippines, because just went out and started killing people who he suspects or who look like they could be drug dealers. And there's a problem, and John Heilemann — let's think about all the Venezuelans, think about all the people who were rounded up in the United States of America and taken to just one of the grimmest prisons in this hemisphere down in El Salvador. We find out — again, the government tells us, “Oh, well these are all gang members.” And the White House kept telling us these are all gang members. “Oh, they're members of gangs. They're gang” — no. We found out so many of those people that they just rounded up off the streets were not gang members. If they're wrong, the same percentage of these extrajudicial killings that they were in rounding up all of those people and sending them to the high security prison in El Salvador, those are very bad percentages for the number of innocents killed in these strikes. JOHN HEILEMANN: Right, very bad percentages, Joe. And also, I mean, look, I mean, we played that Rand Paul clip earlier. The question is — there's questions about the justification, questions about the evidence and the pretext for these killings and whether — and the extent to which there's been any kind of outside the executive office, outside there's — outside the executive branch whether there's been any real kind of rigorous review or what's really going on here. But this is, you know, clearly a question that there should be some kind of Congressional consultation on. It's the kind of thing where if there was this kind of a pattern in any other administration, where at least with the senior members of House and Senate leadership, you would have some kind of consultation. I think there's a — this goes back to this question we've been facing for the last — since the start of Trump 2.0, which is the abdication of the role, the rolling over of Congress for the Trump administration. There's Rand Paul and some others who look at this and say, “Um, if this is a pattern of practice here, if this is part of some kind of a campaign, there's got — it may not be a declared war, but there's got to be some kind of Congressional consultation here. Because other than that, without that, there's just the President that — the administration acting essentially on its own with no oversight and no kind of accountability whatsoever.” SCARBOROUGH: Marjorie Taylor Green has been talking about weak men in Congress. I will tell you old chairman that I worked for on the Hill, that chairman of the Armed Services Committee, would not be so weak. If things like this were happening, they wouldn't care who the president was, they wouldn't care who the SecDef was. They would call them before the committee and they would do their constitutional duty, and that is they would provide oversight. Where are these men? Where are these women on Capitol Hill? BRZEZINSKI: This is a great question. SCARBOROUGH: At what point does oversight, constitutionally mandated oversight that every real man running a committee back when I was in Congress and real woman back when I was in Congress would be conducting basic oversight? Listen, if these are drug dealers, if these people are coming to bring poison to the United States and kill our children with their drugs, okay. As Rand Paul said, give us the names, give us the organization. BRZEZINSKI: Proof. SCARBOROUGH: Give us the evidence that you had that had you commit this extrajudicial killing without telling members of the House and the Senate Armed Services Committee. We're not asking you to embrace narco-terrorists. We're asking you to follow the Constitution, and especially members of the Armed Services Committee – BRZEZINSKI: Absolutely. SCARBOROUGH: - members of the Foreign Affairs Committee, Foreign Relations Committee. Call them to the Hill and get answers. Not because you don't like the administration, not because you're not being loyal to Donald Trump. But because you're being faithful to the Constitution and you need answers. You need answers, I deserve answers. Exactly. It's like a scene from A Few Good Men. The Constitution says they deserve those answers. This is not even hard. You can like Donald Trump and like the Constitution at the same time if you're a member of Congress. Get the oversight like you're supposed to do based on the Constitution. (…)
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3 w

Politico tries to cancel Young Republicans over out-of-context private jokes
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Politico tries to cancel Young Republicans over out-of-context private jokes

The left has launched a cancellation campaign against members of the Young Republican National Federation after Politico released an article exposing leaked out-of-context messages between members.BlazeTV host Sara Gonzales points out that the left is not angry about the violent text messages sent by Virginia attorney general candidate Jay Jones, in which he called for the murder of innocent children.“No, Democrats are actually pissed about leaked Republican messages where the people were clearly making jokes, which is so crazy 'cause I thought liberals were supposed to love it when people made edgy jokes,” Gonzales says.“Let’s see those liberals protesting in the streets now for free speech,” she adds.The group chat messages consisted of what Gonzales considers to be the participants simply “goofing off” and “joking in private where they never thought that anyone publicly would see their messages.”“Would I choose to joke about these things? No, probably not. But it’s a far cry from the actual serious rhetoric that the Democrats engage in literally every day. And they’re not joking,” Gonzales says.“Now, you also have the Young Republicans organization, who are now — it’s this big production where ‘we have to cancel everyone’s lives because they were joking in private group chats and never thought that these chats would see that light of day,’” she continues.“And I have to ask everyone in the organization that is calling on all of these people to resign and trying to get them fired from their jobs and all of these things. I just have to ask: What do your group text messages look like? What do your private text messages look like? What do your private DMs look like?” she asks.“If I just took your phone right now and just was able to just freely scroll through it and go back as many years as I wanted to, I wouldn’t find anything that you’ve said that might be spicy or inappropriate or off-color or anything? It’s just totally PC? I don’t buy it,” Gonzales continues.“There is no one alive who doesn’t have something in their text messages that they would be embarrassed if it went public because that’s just how people are,” she adds.And in the case of these Young Republicans, the jokes were completely taken out of context in the first place.“The headline example, right there, ‘I love Hitler.’ Right there in the headline. Oh, my gosh. Okay. Well, if you keep reading, they’re talking about a meeting with Michigan’s Young Republicans to score more votes,” Gonzales explains.“And in the message, he said, ‘My delegates I bring will vote for the most right-wing person.’ And then he was like, ‘Great. I love Hitler.’ It was a joke. It was a joke that was completely taken out of context,” she continues.“I’m not going to condemn it. I honestly don’t care. ... Nobody should care about a group chat with dudes joking around,” she adds.Want more from Sara Gonzales?To enjoy more of Sara's no-holds-barred takes on news and culture, 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

Make-A-Wish exec resigns and loses job after threatening to call ICE on Dodgers fan at Brewers baseball game
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Make-A-Wish exec resigns and loses job after threatening to call ICE on Dodgers fan at Brewers baseball game

A military veteran attending a championship baseball game recorded a woman threatening to call immigration officials on him and sent her to the unemployment line.Ricardo Fosado said the exchange between him and several Milwaukee Brewers fans began as a friendly rivalry at Game 2 of the National League Championship Series at American Family Field.'Call ICE, call ICE. I'm a U.S. citizen, war veteran. ... ICE is not gonna do nothing to me, good luck!'Fosado said it got heated after the Los Angeles Dodgers got a lead late in the game, and he began recording and cheering while mocking Brewers fans. A woman got into his face and called him a "p***y" for drinking a cocktail instead of a beer.She then joked to a man in front of her, "You know what, let's call ICE." "Call ICE, call ICE. I'm a U.S. citizen, war veteran, baby girl! ... ICE is not gonna do nothing to me, good luck!" Fosado responded while laughing. The woman takes a swipe at his phone, to which he responds with an expletive.Video of the interaction was posted online, where it went viral.The woman was identified as Shannon Kobylarczyk, who then resigned as a board member of the Make-A-Wish foundation in Milwaukee. She also lost her job as an attorney at Manpower Group."As soon as we became aware of this video, the individual was placed on immediate leave, and we began an investigation," the company said. "As a result of this process, the employee is no longer with the organization."RELATED: LA Dodgers say they blocked ICE agents at stadium after campaign to pressure team to condemn deportations Fosado, however, also faced some consequences for his behavior at the game.On Thursday, the Brewers released a statement saying that Fosado had been ejected from the game over the behavior he exhibited in the video, including "disorderly conduct and public intoxication."The statement said that both he and Kobylarczyk were notified that they were banned from the park. Kobylarczyk was banned because she "became physical" in her interaction with Fosado. "The Brewers expect all persons attending games to be respectful of each other, and we do not condone in any way offensive statements fans make to each other about race, gender, or national origin. Our priority is to ensure that all in attendance have a safe and enjoyable experience at the ballpark," continued the statement from the team. WISN-TV reported that Kobylarczyk declined to comment on the story. The Dodgers went on to win the game and go up two games on the Brewers. Whoever wins the series will go to the World Series.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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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
3 w

Ace Frehley, Guitarist Who Co-Founded Kiss, Dead at 74
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Ace Frehley, Guitarist Who Co-Founded Kiss, Dead at 74

[caption id="attachment_177175" align="alignleft" width="258"] Ace Frehley (photo by Jayme Thornton, used with permission)[/caption] Ace Frehley, the original lead guitarist of Kiss, has died. His death, at age 74, stemming from The post Ace Frehley, Guitarist Who Co-Founded Kiss, Dead at 74 appeared first on Best Classic Bands.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
3 w

An Ancient Scorpion Mound Measuring 200 Feet Across Has Been Uncovered In Mexico’s Tehuacán Valley
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An Ancient Scorpion Mound Measuring 200 Feet Across Has Been Uncovered In Mexico’s Tehuacán Valley

J. Neely et al.The effigy mound was built in the shape of a scorpion, its stinger and claws aligned with the sunrise and sunsets on the solstices. A new study suggests that a giant, scorpion-shaped mound built hundreds of years ago in Mexico may have been created to track the winter and summer solstices. Originally documented in 2014, the scorpion mound sits in the Tehuacán Valley, about 160 miles southeast of Mexico City. Artifacts found at the mound allowed archaeologists to estimate that it was created sometime between 600 C.E. and 1100 C.E. The existence of the scorpion mound not only indicates that pre-Columbian Mesoamericans were tracking astronomical events, but that this wasn’t exclusive to the elite or ruling class. Archaeologists also uncovered multiple buried objects near the stinger of the well-intact effigy mound that suggests fertility rituals were once carried out here as well. How This Scorpion Mound Was Used — And Linked To An Important Deity J. Neely et al.Some of the artifacts, believed to be used in fertility rituals, found near the scorpion mound. The scorpion mound is about 205 feet long and once stood almost three feet tall. It’s one of 12 mounds that were part of a ceremonial complex. According to a new study published in Ancient Mesoameria, this complex may have been used to ritually observe both the winter and summer solstices. The scorpion was formed with piled dirt in addition to some stone, making the site an effigy mound. This further adds to the rarity of the site, as effigy mounds are uncommon in Mesoamerica. Alongside the effigy mound, archaeologists uncovered many artifacts that likely would’ve had ritual use, such as an incense burner and the fragment of a hollow figurine. They also unearthed bowls, jars, plate fragments, and molcajetes, bowls used for grinding food. Researchers believe the scorpion mound was meant to depict Tlāhuizcalpantēcuhtli, a prominent deity in Aztec mythology that represented the planet Venus and was associated with rain and fertility. Wikimedia CommonsA 16th-century rendering of Tlāhuizcalpantecuhtli, the Mesoamerican god associated with scorpions. Further adding to its astronomical significance is the mound’s relationship to the solstices. The Importance Of The Solstices In Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica The summer solstice was an important event for Mesoamericans, especially as it relates to agriculture. It signified the beginning of the rainy season, meaning it was time to start planting. The researchers concluded that in the days leading up to the solstice, the Sun would rise between the scorpion’s claws. This likely helped farmers know when to start getting their fields ready for the next season of crops. J. Neely et al.A diagram of the scorpion mound found in Mexico’s Tehuacán Valley. The winter solstice was also tracked using the scorpion mound. If a person stood at the edge of the northern or left claw on that day, they’d be able to see the sunset over the stinger. It’s not uncommon for Mesoamerican architecture to be aligned with the solstices. What makes this particularly notable is its location. The mound sits among irrigation canals and agricultural fields, meaning it was used by farmers and not elite rulers. “It is the first indication that knowledge and control of astronomical phenomena based on solar observations was not totally in control of the elite class,” James Neely, lead author of the study, told Live Science. “This points to the prehistoric campesinos [countryside farmers] having lived a life way of greater independence and self-determination from elite/state control as do their modern counterparts.” After reading about the rare scorpion mound found in Mexico, take a look at these 25 photos of the Aztec pyramids. Then, learn about the Olmec Head statues of Mesoamerica. The post An Ancient Scorpion Mound Measuring 200 Feet Across Has Been Uncovered In Mexico’s Tehuacán Valley appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
3 w

A German Woman Just Turned In An Ancient Greek Relic From Olympia — 50 Years After She Stole It
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A German Woman Just Turned In An Ancient Greek Relic From Olympia — 50 Years After She Stole It

Greek Ministry of Culture/FacebookThe stolen fragment of a column, which the woman had kept for decades. During a visit to a recently excavated part of the ancient Greek city of Olympia in the 1960s, a German tourist saw something that caught her eye. She picked up the object, took it back to Germany, and kept it for the next five decades. But after reading about the repatriation of other relics in recent years, she decided to return her “souvenir” to Greek officials as well. The relic, a fragment of a capital — or the upper decorative element of a column — is a priceless piece of the story of Olympia, the site of the first Olympic Games. Greek officials have praised the “sensitivity and courage” of the woman who returned it. The Story Of The Stolen Greek Relic According to a press release from the Greek Ministry of Culture, the capital was picked up by the German woman at some point in the 1960s, while she was visiting Olympia. At the time, a guesthouse for Olympic athletes and other important figures known as the Leonidaion had just been excavated, and the woman was touring the ancient ruins when she stole the capital. George E. Koronaios/Wikimedia CommonsThe Leonidaion, where Olympic athletes once gathered, as seen in 2020. The woman took the Ionic capital, made of limestone and measuring about 10 inches tall and 13 inches wide, back to Germany. She kept it for the next five decades, but, after reading about the repatriation of other relics back to Greece by the University of Münster, she decided to give the capital to university officials so that it could be returned as well. The university, in turn, reached out to Greek officials to return the ancient artifact. “This is a particularly moving moment,” Georgios Didaskalou, the Secretary General of Culture, stated. “This act proves that culture and history know no borders but require cooperation, responsibility, and mutual respect. Every such return is an act of restoration of justice and at the same time a bridge of friendship between peoples.” According to the press release, the University of Münster has become a “steadfast partner” for the Greek Ministry of Culture and has helped repatriate a number of objects. In 2019, it returned the “skyphos of Louis,” an ancient cup dating back to the sixth century B.C.E. that was awarded to Spyros Louis, the winner of the first modern Olympic marathon. And in 2024, the university returned a marble bust from the Roman era that once adorned a cemetery in Thessaloniki. Eleutherios GalanopoulosThe skyphos of Louis, which the University of Münster helped return to Greece in 2019. “It is never too late,” Dr. Torben Schreiber, curator of the Archaeological Museum of the University of Münster, noted, “to do the right, the moral, and the just thing.” And, indeed, this column fragment is just the most recent in a string of ancient objects that have been returned to their place of origin over the years. The Long History Of Stolen Relics John Karakatsanis/Wikimedia CommonsRuins in Olympia, Greece, where the German tourist stole the capital in the 1960s. The capital returned by the German tourist to Greece fits into part of a larger trend, as there’s been a push in recent years to repatriate objects to their place of origin. Many of these objects are ancient and — like the capital taken from the Leonidaion — were pocketed by tourists. In the early 2000s, for example, a Canadian woman visited Pompeii and stole a number of artifacts, including two parts of an amphora, mosaic tiles, and a piece of ceramic. Unlike the German woman, who simply wanted to do the right thing, the Canadian woman returned the relics because she began to suspect that stealing the objects had “cursed” her. The Pompeii relics, she wrote when she returned them in 2020, had “so much negative energy… linked to that land of destruction.” Another relic returned to Pompeii in recent years was an erotic mosaic, which was seemingly taken by a Nazi captain during World War II. When he died, his heirs handed the mosaic back over to Italian officials. Pompeii Archaeological ParkThe erotic mosaic that was stolen by a Nazi captain during World War II and returned by his heirs 80 years later. Not all of these repatriated objects are European or particularly ancient, however. In 2019, Michigan State University returned a 500-year-old mummy to Bolivia after storing it on campus for over a century. And in 2022, Harvard gave Chief Standing Bear’s tomahawk pipe back to the Ponca Tribe. For tourists — or even soldiers or anthropologists — taking objects from ancient ruins may be tempting. But such artifacts make up small pieces of cultural and historical puzzles, and removing them from their homes means taking a piece out of the site’s larger story. After reading about how a German woman just returned a stolen Greek relic more than 50 years after she first took it, enjoy these facts about life in ancient Greece. Or, go inside the thrilling stories of some of the most powerful gods in the Greek pantheon. The post A German Woman Just Turned In An Ancient Greek Relic From Olympia — 50 Years After She Stole It appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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3 w

Federal FAFO: DOJ Levies First Domestic Terrorism Charges Against Antifa Attackers
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Federal FAFO: DOJ Levies First Domestic Terrorism Charges Against Antifa Attackers

Federal FAFO: DOJ Levies First Domestic Terrorism Charges Against Antifa Attackers
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3 w

Trump Says ‘Great Progress’ Was Made in Phone Call With Putin, Meets With Zelensky Friday
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Trump Says ‘Great Progress’ Was Made in Phone Call With Putin, Meets With Zelensky Friday

Trump Says ‘Great Progress’ Was Made in Phone Call With Putin, Meets With Zelensky Friday
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RedState Feed
3 w

Trump Unveils Plans for Massive Monument in DC to Honor Our 250th Birthday, Has Fun With Announcement
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Trump Unveils Plans for Massive Monument in DC to Honor Our 250th Birthday, Has Fun With Announcement

Trump Unveils Plans for Massive Monument in DC to Honor Our 250th Birthday, Has Fun With Announcement
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