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The AFP has begun prosecuting people that show behaviour that could escalate into "Hate crimes"
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Intel Uncensored
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Katie Miller Interviews Elon Musk
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The best gig The Doors ever played, according to Ray Manzarek
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The best gig The Doors ever played, according to Ray Manzarek

"Was a killer!” The post The best gig The Doors ever played, according to Ray Manzarek first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Unheralded and Autonomous: The Army–Navy Game
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Unheralded and Autonomous: The Army–Navy Game

Take the military academies out of the college football equation, and what remains is a host of systemic challenges that threaten the game’s integrity and long-term stability. NIL money defines the business of the game that has transformed recruiting into a financial arms race for players, where fidelity is replaced by whoever cuts the biggest check. Moreover, the notorious transfer portal can dissolve a roster quicker than an Alka-Seltzer tablet, undermining team cohesion and depriving fans of the opportunity to connect with developing players. (RELATED: Figures Flip the Field) Meanwhile, conference realignment continues to sacrifice generational rivalries and regional identity in pursuit of lucrative broadcast deals, eroding the sport’s cultural roots. Any thoughts about equity and competitive balance are quickly dismissed. As witnessed on Dec. 7, the playoff expansion that continues to grow still ignites arguments as if an accurate assessment of the rankings will please everyone. Together, these issues paint a picture of a sport at a crossroads, struggling to balance tradition, fairness, and player well-being against the gravitational forces of an ever-deepening money pool, marketplace, and outside influencers. (RELATED: The Spectacle Ep. 305: Lane Kiffin Exposes College Football’s Stupid System) In recent times, it feels like the soul of college football is being deflated, leaving many yearning for the cherished rituals and rivalries that at one time felt more genuine and even timeless. This is not just another football game; it is a cultural event that transcends sport, symbolizing service, sacrifice, and the enduring spirit of competition between two military academies steeped in history, honor, and pageantry. That won’t be the case Saturday afternoon in Baltimore as college football turns back the clock as the 126th version of the Army–Navy game kicks off at 3 p.m. This is not just another football game; it is a cultural event that transcends sport, symbolizing service, sacrifice, and the enduring spirit of competition between two military academies steeped in history, honor, and pageantry. Beyond the mere pride of the contest rests a trophy that is seemingly a relic of college glory, a piece of hardware that has lingered in the shadows, rarely discussed and often overlooked by a media obsessed with the sports’ politics. The Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy stands apart from other college football rivalry trophies because it represents not just athletic competition, but service, sacrifice, and national pride. The CIC Trophy is awarded annually to the winner of the round-robin football series played between the three U.S. service academies: Army, Navy, and Air Force. Established in 1972, the trophy is named for the president of the United States. The winner not only earns bragging rights but receives formal recognition at the White House, underscoring the trophy’s unheralded but national significance. The Commander-in-Chief Trophy at the 120th Army–Navy Game in Philadelphia in 2019 (Army Staff Sgt. Nicole Mejia/U.S. Secretary of Defense/CC-BY-2.0/Wikimedia Commons) The trophy is an audacious 170-pound symbol of service academy omnipotence. Standing two and a half feet, the trophy features three silver footballs and the mascots of each academy: the Army mule, Navy goat, and Air Force falcon, adding another layer of intensity to an already storied tradition. While the Army–Navy game commands the national spotlight, matchups with Air Force often decide the trophy’s fate, making this tri-service rivalry college football’s most unique and meaningful. Overall, Air Force has won the trophy 21 times, Navy 17, and Army 10. Since Army and Navy both defeated Air Force earlier this season, the trophy is on the line. Navy won it last year, the first time since 2019, by upsetting No. 22 Army 31–13. A win today would secure back-to-back victories for the first time for the midshipmen since 2012-13. Navy has won the CIC Trophy 12 times in the last 22 years. In a season flooded with bowl games and playoff debates, the Army–Navy game remains the most profound, being a stark reminder that the fiercest battles on the field are played by those who will soon shoulder the responsibility of leading our troops defending the nation. Navy enters the game ranked 23rd in the Associated Press poll and 25th in the AFCA Coaches poll. This is Navy’s highest ranking since being ranked No. 20 in the final AP poll in 2019, a season in which they tied a school record with 11 wins. Navy leads the all-time series with Army 63-55-7. This will be the seventh time that this storied game is played in Baltimore, with both teams winning three games each. No matter what happens on the gridiron today, both teams have secured bowl berths. The AutoZone Liberty Bowl will host Navy and Cincinnati on Friday, Jan. 2, in Memphis. Army West will face UConn in the Wasabi Fenway Bowl on Saturday, Dec. 27, at Fenway Park in Boston. READ MORE from Greg Maresca: The First Snowfall’s Bitter Welcome Importing Chaos: The Paradox of Nation-building When Sanctuary Policies Hit the Highway
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The Optics of Accommodation: Pope Leo’s Audience with Pro-Abortion Illinois Governor J. B. Pritzker

The recent meeting at the Vatican between Governor JB Pritzker and Pope Leo raises troubling questions about the Church’s moral witness. It is difficult for faithful Catholics to understand why the pope would choose to sit down with a politician who has so strongly embraced the culture of death surrounding abortion and euthanasia. Earlier this year, Pritzker expanded state taxpayer complicity in abortion by allocating 23 million dollars to expand abortion services and support funds for those traveling to Illinois for abortion, making his state of Illinois a regional hub for patients traveling from restrictive states. This means taxpayer funds are directly used to subsidize abortion for the state’s residents — and those traveling from other states. Illinois is one of the few states where Medicaid covers all abortions, including elective procedures, not just cases of rape, incest, or life endangerment. Planned Parenthood of Illinois reports that 30 percent of its revenue (about $16 million) comes from Medicaid reimbursements. To help meet that need, Pritzker announced more than $23 million in new funding for abortion access, including a hotline and expanded services to handle the influx of patients traveling from restrictive states. Since Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022, Illinois has become a regional hub for abortion, with clinics reporting a 40–45 percent increase in patients, about 25 percent of whom come from out of state. Apparently committed to becoming the most “pro-abortion” governor in the country, American Spectator reported that earlier this year, Pritzker signed into law a mandate that requires public colleges and universities to provide medication abortions on campus to any student who requests them. Illinois House Bill 3709, which passed with a House vote of 7 to 4 on March 19, 2025, and was signed into law on Aug. 22, 2025, by the governor, mandates that if a public college or university’s student health services include a pharmacy, the school must make medication abortion available at a physical location on campus. (RELATED: Illinois Law Mandates On-Campus Abortion Services) And now Governor Pritzker claims to be considering whether to sign Illinois’s pro-euthanasia bill, which was passed on Halloween. This bill was passed surreptitiously by attaching the deadly suicide measure to Senate Bill 1950, a once uncontroversial bill that originally focused on food preparation safety. Lawmakers made a calculated decision to block open debate and advance the legislation while shielding the bill’s true nature from public view. The governor has not said whether he will sign it or not, but in an interview earlier this month, Pritzker told a reporter that “Every time I talk to somebody, it has a little bit of an effect. You’re sort of cumulatively gathering information … I know there are people who feel passionately on both sides. I have said before that I have friends who’ve gone through this with their relatives. It’s painful for the person who’s experiencing the pain in the last six months of their lives, as well as for the entire family.” (RELATED: ‘Death’ by Deception on Halloween in Illinois) Claiming that whatever he decides on the bill, “it will come down to compassion … It’s a hard issue. And I don’t want anybody to think that making up your mind about this is very easy. It’s no … I think there’s a lot to consider, but most of all, it’s about compassion. There’s evidence and information on both sides that leads me to think seriously about what direction to go.” According to the published interview, Pritzker said that he brought the issue up in his meeting last month with Pope Leo XIV, when he met privately with him at the Vatican, but Pritzker didn’t say what the Pope’s response to the issue was: “Obviously, we are members of different religions [and] don’t really disagree so much as just have differences in that way,” Pritzker, who is Jewish, said. “So it was kind of a brief part of a conversation in which we were dismissing all those things and then getting to the things that we really have so much in common. And I so much respect who he is and what he represents.” Most believe that Pritzker will reject anything that Pope Leo might have cautioned on the immorality of assisted suicide. The fact that the governor has already said he will “come down to compassion” is a signal that he believes that assisted suicide is the “compassionate choice.” Such a meeting risks signaling tacit approval of Pritzker’s policies that directly contradict Catholic teaching on the sanctity of life, undermining the credibility of the Church’s stance in the public square. And this is really why it was such a problem for Pope Leo to meet with someone like Governor Pritzker.  Such a meeting risks signaling tacit approval of Pritzker’s policies that directly contradict Catholic teaching on the sanctity of life, undermining the credibility of the Church’s stance in the public square. But it is likely that the reason Pope Leo met with Pritzker in the first place is that they have become allies in what they both view as the problematic deportation policies of the Trump administration. According to the governor’s office, the private audience with the pontiff was arranged by Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich. (RELATED: Catholic Cognitive Dissonance) As a progressive democrat, Governor Pritzker has consistently voiced opposition to what he views as inhumane deportation policies, emphasizing their destructive impact on families and communities. Pope Leo likewise condemns such measures, framing them as violations of human dignity and moral responsibility. Their shared stance highlights a powerful alignment between political leadership and moral authority, reinforcing the call for more compassionate approaches to immigration. (RELATED: Is the Pope Woke?) Yet this alliance also raises a troubling paradox: when the pope aligns himself with a leader who resists Catholic teachings on nearly every other issue — especially the life issues, it risks diluting the Church’s moral coherence. Such selective partnership can confuse the faithful, suggesting that agreement on a single humanitarian cause outweighs deep divisions on fundamental doctrine and may weaken the credibility of Catholic witness in the public sphere. In the end, the Vatican meeting between Pope Leo and Governor Pritzker illustrates the peril of selective alliances. While agreement on immigration may appear noble, it risks obscuring the governor’s radical opposition to Catholic teaching on life itself. By lending moral credibility to a politician so deeply invested in the culture of death, the Church jeopardizes its witness, leaving the faithful to question whether its defense of human dignity is consistent or compromised. READ MORE from Anne Hendershott: Bowdoin College: Finishing School for a Socialist ‘Death’ by Deception on Halloween in Illinois Electing the Image: Mamdani and the Mimetic Turn in Democracy
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Hallmark of Culture Rot

Comfortingly predictable plots, trite yet charming storylines, guaranteed happy endings, and unrealistically glamorous decorations, wardrobes, homes, villages, and actors made Hallmark Christmas movies the white noise of my holiday season for over a decade. In fact, the lack of intellectual stimulation required to consume this entertainment is the allure itself. Like most billion-dollar organizations, Hallmark has been swept up by the waves of progressivism and social justice virtue signaling. Despite a steady introduction of gay supporting characters, I admired the Hallmark Channel’s overall commitment to wholesome productions that never included divorce, cohabitation, or an explicit redefinition of marriage. Progressivism is never satisfied until it has won the full soul. That was true until Hallmark Christmas 2025. The 2025 Hallmark Christmas movie season proves to be the nail in the coffin of the slippery slope of yet another corporate sell-out to malignant wokeism. It is no surprise that the progressive agenda was not sated by a few gay characters. Progressivism is never satisfied until it has won the full soul. This year, the perverse took center stage. (RELATED: Where’s the ‘Christian’ in Hallmark Christmas Movies?) A mother in my small group lamented her experience watching a 2025 debut, A Keller Christmas Vacation, starring Eden Sher from The Middle. She was elated to see “Sue Heck” in a Hallmark movie and invited her elementary-aged sons to enjoy what would surely be a family-friendly, feel-good show. The feel-good was abruptly shattered when two male leads proposed and kissed in what anyone with toddler-level deductive reasoning skills could conclude was their shared home together. Perhaps Hallmark took criticism about its lack of originality too far. A storyline redefining marriage was certainly new for the channel! The cohabitation theme began earlier than A Keller Christmas Vacation with Christmas Above the Clouds, including not-so-subtle clues of extramarital living arrangements. My disgust with this season of Hallmark is not limited to its own productions. I have watched in horror a variety of tasteless commercials aired on the Hallmark Channel whose punchlines are thinly veiled and frankly gross innuendos. Target Commercial #7 (2025) and Phillips Sonicare Commercial (2025) are the epitome of lowest common denominator material. It makes anyone consider The Benedict Option when even 30-second commercials on a supposed family channel are hypersexualized. My disdain culminated last Saturday night. After a laborious day slaving over five batches of Christmas cookies, I was thrilled to sprawl supine on my couch, anticipating a mindless Hallmark debut. She’s Making a List was Hallmark’s 2025 crown jewel, with top stars Lacey Chabert and Andrew Walker. The premise is charming. Lacey Chabert, as “Isabel Haynes,” works as an inspector for Santa’s naughty or nice list. All is well until the resolution of the movie is Isabel’s Rousseauian revelation that all children are nice. No children are naughty. The criteria of naughty or nice is a social construct. The scorecard of right or wrong is randomly determined by adults. From now on, no children get coal. This heavily humanistic theme killed my evening plan of mindless consumption. The message conveyed through what could have been a refreshing, innocent plot was one that championed Rousseau’s humanism, gentle parenting, participation trophies, and moral relativism. Social conservatives no longer have the luxury of passively consuming secular entertainment, for the media is far from thoughtless in its relentless, strategic, and patient desensitization of erosive ideology. It is no surprise that the cultural decline of Hallmark began when Wharton MBA graduate, CNN and NPR veteran, and Peabody Board of Jurors member, Wonya Lucas, took the helm as CEO of Hallmark Media in 2020. Though Lucas left Hallmark in 2023, she successfully advanced the progressive ideals of her alma mater and the radical Peabody organization. John Matts filled Lucas’s open role in June 2025 and has followed well in her footsteps. Despite Hallmark’s cultural nosedive, I am consoled by the free market. Regardless of what the billion-dollar corporations push, the average American family would still rather watch a Christmas movie without explaining same-sex attraction to a six-year-old. Hallmark’s viewership has declined in direct correlation with its morality. 2024 marked nearly a quarter reduction in viewership, and 2025 is on track for another down year. (RELATED: New Film Might Just Be the Next Christmas Classic) Instead, many viewers are flocking to Great American Family (GAF), where they can enjoy a movie without rejecting moral absolutism. Great American Family is led by Bill Abbott, Wonya Lucas’s Hallmark predecessor. GAF claimed a handful of Hallmark stars whose values became incongruous with Hallmark’s, including Candace Cameron Bure, who serves as GAF’s chief creative officer. GAF was 2023’s fastest-growing linear cable television network and made the top 25 cable networks in the fourth quarter of 2024. Though it pains me to divorce Hallmark from my Christmas traditions, I will vote with my viewership and switch to Great American Family. In 2025, not even a Christmas movie can be consumed without discernment. The progressives don’t take a holiday vacation from their fight, and neither can we. Danielle Henry is a freelance writer living in Pittsburgh who enjoys cooking for friends and family, being active outdoors, and serving in her church community. Danielle is interested in policy relating to economics and religion and is committed to reclaiming the American Dream for younger generations.
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Gymnasts’ Lawsuits Show That Safeguarding Protocols Are No Substitute for Justice

Two gymnasts are suing USA Gymnastics, the U.S. Center for SafeSport, their former training facility, and the facility’s owners after their former coach was indicted on multiple counts of child pornography. The gymnasts allege that USA Gymnastics and the Center received complaints about Sean Gardner’s sexualized behavior towards minor athletes as early as 2017. Because these governing bodies did not fulfill their duty of care — including their duties as mandatory reporters — Gardner was able to get another job in another state, where he sexually abused the plaintiffs and other athletes for several years. The federal charges against Gardner stem from images he recorded in 2017 and 2018 while coaching in Mississippi. After leaving that gym, he started working in Des Moines in September 2018. Almost immediately, according to the lawsuits, he began coaching, grooming, and abusing the plaintiffs. Just as rapidly, gymnasts and parents started informing the gym’s owners of Gardner’s inappropriate behavior. Because the owners did not “investigate, [report] the abuse to the law enforcement authorities, remove Gardner as a coach, or take any other action,” Gardner continued to abuse the plaintiffs (and other gymnasts) until they left the gym in 2020 and 2021. The U.S. Center for SafeSport received complaints about Gardner from the gym in Mississippi in December 2017 and from minor athletes and the parents of minor athletes at the gym in Des Moines in September 2020, March 2022, and August 2022. The gym fired Gardner in July 2022 after the Center issued a “temporary suspension,” which immediately barred him from all sporting activities. Despite remaining in a temporary status for three years until his arrest this summer, the Center’s sanction removed him from sport. The U.S. Center for SafeSport is a non-profit that is the national sport safeguarding organization under the Ted Stevens Act of 2018. Over 11 million Americans — from youth athletes to professional coaches — fall under its jurisdiction through their membership or employment by a sport’s governing body. The crux of the suits is that the Center could have sanctioned Gardner at any point in the preceding four and a half years. The Center can impose a temporary suspension — which, for all practical purposes, is indistinguishable from a permanent ban while it is in place — on the basis of an allegation alone: no investigation or adjudication was necessary. The suits are the latest evidence that the national sport safeguarding apparatus is not fit for its federally designated purpose: “prevent the abuse, including emotional, physical, and sexual abuse, of amateur athletes participating in amateur athletic activities through national governing bodies.” However, the suits also bring to light several thornier issues. First, they illustrate how the perception of a duty of care — one that Congress created in the aftermath of the Larry Nassar scandal — can generate a false sense of security. (RELATED: Washington’s Reverse Midas Touch) The U.S. Center for SafeSport has “exclusive jurisdiction” over accusations of sexual misconduct in sport. When it chooses to do so, the Center can wield extraordinary power for a nominally private entity. The Center can ban someone from sport, which, even on a temporary basis, can end their career as an athlete, coach, or other role in the industry. Such bans are public. The Ted Stevens Act requires the Center to “publish and maintain a publicly accessible internet website that contains a comprehensive list of adults who are barred by the Center.” This immediately and permanently associates banned sports people with Larry Nassar himself, one of the most notorious pedophiles in American history. That is a blow to one’s reputation that extends the damage beyond the sports industry. Yet even if the Center bans and blacklists someone erroneously, Congress granted them immunity from defamation suits. (RELATED: Defending Reputation From Defamation-by-Blacklist) Knowing that Congress gave the Center both great power and great responsibility, many people think that it has equally great effectiveness. Knowing that Congress gave the Center both great power and great responsibility, many people think that it has equally great effectiveness. They therefore trust that the Center will act promptly to investigate and adjudicate a complaint in order to protect youth athletes. However, both advocates and critics of the Center agree, with plenty of evidence to support them, that it does not. Second, these suits show the danger of outsourcing personal responsibility. Time and again, the plaintiffs fault USA Gymnastics, the Center, the gym, and the gym owners for not informing law enforcement of the complaints against Gardner. They inadvertently paint a picture of concerned individuals saying, “Well, I did all I could. I told a responsible party and a mandatory reporter.” It should go without saying that the Center’s “exclusive jurisdiction” only refers to the sporting context. Indeed, Gardner’s arrest proves that criminal law applies to the sports industry; and, obviously, so does civil law. (RELATED: The Limits of Delegation to the Private Sector) Likewise, coaches, volunteers, and employees of youth sports organizations are all mandatory reporters. That is a unique responsibility that we carry. But it is not a unique power. Neither the Center’s “exclusive jurisdiction” nor someone’s status as a mandatory reporter precludes anyone from bypassing the safeguarding system and picking up the phone to call the police, or going online to file a suspicious activity report with local, state, or federal law enforcement. For all of the imprecations over the last 25 years of “If you see something, say something,” Americans’ ready use of tip-and-snitch lines during COVID, and the perilous ease of calling someone out on social media, these suits suggest a disturbing level of passivity around one of the few behaviors that is universally condemned. Yet no one seems to have reached the necessary threshold of concern, impatience, or anger to go directly to law enforcement. If the police were informed and failed to act, then that is a separate and serious scandal. But that brings us to the third point: the entire Sean Gardner situation shows that there is no substitute for the criminal justice system. The criminal justice system is far from perfect — some of the long lags in the Gardner case raise their own questions. But when you need to get a monster off the streets — and if Gardner did the things he is accused of, he is a monster — you need police with guns, courts with judges and juries, and prisons with walls. Not a 501(c)3 in Denver. Nearly five years passed between the Center and USA Gymnastics’ first learning that Gardner might be a sexual abuser and the Center informing law enforcement. In that time, there were at least three separate complaints to the Center about Gardner. The complaint of March 2022 seems to have spurred something, as the Center informed the West Des Moines Police Department of the situation in May. The Center took its own action, the “temporary suspension,” two months later, in July. According to an FBI affidavit, another two years went by before the police interviewed a potential victim, and yet another year had passed before West Des Moines police searched Gardner’s property in May 2025. But things took off from there, leading to his arrest in August. Those lags will be frustrating, infuriating, or agonizing, depending on your perspective. If you’re idealistic, you might aver that such delays are sometimes the cost of due process and the protections we provide the accused. But the U.S. Center for SafeSport is encumbered by no such due process strictures, yet it still took them nearly twice as long to do anything as the police. Only when the proper law enforcement bodies were brought into the case did the wheels start turning to truly protect children from Sean Gardner and try him for these crimes. Even if it worked perfectly, a sport safeguarding system could do neither. The actual safeguarding system we have, exclusively led by the U.S. Center for SafeSport, can barely go through the motions. And even though the criminal justice system does not in any way work perfectly, it is the best we have. Delayed justice for Sean Gardner and his victims is evidence of all of that. READ MORE from George M.J. Perry: Maintain the Separation Between Sport and State British Sports Scoop the NCAA in Protecting Female Athletes The Limits of Delegation to the Private Sector
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Qatar Is Everything It Accuses Israel of Being

For years, Qatar has positioned itself as a neutral mediator and champion of human rights in the Middle East. Its state-funded media apparatus, Al Jazeera, broadcasts a steady stream of accusations against Israel while the emirate’s diplomats shuttle between Western capitals preaching moderation. Yet a sober comparison reveals an uncomfortable truth: every accusation Qatar levels at Israel describes Qatar itself with far greater accuracy. It is a matter of tu quoque, but in spades. The Myth of Jewish Control Versus Qatari Reality Anti-Israel activists frequently invoke the old canard that Jews control governments, wealth, and key institutions. Meanwhile, Qatar has quietly assembled one of history’s most concentrated portfolios of foreign influence and ownership. Qatar operates as an absolute monarchy where political dissent is crushed, where wealth is hoarded, but not earned, by one family. Consider London. Qatar owns more real estate in the British capital than the British royal family. The emirate holds major stakes in Heathrow Airport (20 percent), The Shard (95 percent ownership, Western Europe’s tallest building), the entire Harrods department store, Canary Wharf properties, and the Olympic Village. Its portfolio contains percentages of multiple Premier League football clubs, including Paris Saint-Germain outright. Qatar Holding, the investment arm of the state’s sovereign wealth fund, controls assets worth over $450 billion globally. In the United States, Qatar has inserted itself into elite universities through donations that shape research agendas, hiring decisions, and campus politics. Between 2001 and 2021, Qatar gave American universities at least $4.7 billion, with much of it undisclosed until recently. Carnegie Mellon, Georgetown, Northwestern, Texas A&M, and Cornell all operate Qatar-funded campuses in Doha, where academic freedom takes a back seat to the host country’s sensitivities. This represents real, concentrated influence backed by state money and coordinated strategy. Nothing in the Jewish or Israeli world approaches this level of systematic foreign ownership and control. Political Influence: Who Really Buys Power? Critics routinely claim that Israel manipulates American foreign policy through lobbying and campaign donations. The facts tell a different story. Qatar operates one of the most expensive foreign lobbying operations in Washington. Since 2017, Qatar has spent approximately $250 million on lobbying and public relations in the United States. The emirate retains multiple firms simultaneously, including powerhouses like Brownstein Hyatt and Sonoran Policy Group. It pays former senior officials, cultivates think tanks, and funds academic centers that reliably produce Qatar-friendly analyses. The results are visible. Qatar has systematically purchased favorable media coverage and cultivated influential voices. In 2019 and 2020, a Qatari royal invested approximately $50 million in Newsmax, the pro-Trump conservative outlet. Following the investment, Newsmax employees reported being explicitly told by management to “soften” coverage of Qatar and avoid criticizing the emirate’s human rights record. “We were told very clearly from the top down, no touching this,” one staffer revealed. More recently, Foreign Agents Registration Act documents revealed that Qatar paid the firm Lumen8 Advisors $180,000 per month to facilitate a March 2025 interview between Tucker Carlson and Qatar’s prime minister. While Carlson has denied receiving direct payment from Qatar, the arrangement exemplifies how the emirate uses intermediaries to secure favorable platform access and messaging. Conservative figures, from Carlson to various social media influencers, have emerged as defenders of Qatar, presenting the emirate as either a victim of unfair criticism or a benevolent actor misunderstood by the West. Compare this to AIPAC, whose entire annual budget hovers around $100 million and whose donors are American citizens making individual choices. Qatar’s influence operation is state-directed, massively funded, and designed to purchase outcomes rather than advocate for shared values. Bankrolling Terror While Playing Peacemaker Perhaps no charge against Israel rings more hollow than accusations of supporting extremism, especially when those accusations come from Qatar. Qatar directly finances Hamas. This is not speculation or propaganda but a documented fact acknowledged by U.S. officials. Since 2012, Qatar has funneled an estimated $1.8 billion to Gaza, much of it directly supporting Hamas’s governing apparatus, salaries, and infrastructure projects. The emirate hosts Hamas’s political leadership in luxury in Doha, providing them with diplomatic protection and a platform for international engagement. Qatar is the only country on earth that bankrolls a designated terrorist organization responsible for the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre of 1,200 Israelis while simultaneously maintaining full diplomatic relations with the United States and housing the largest American military base in the Middle East. This arrangement would be called “playing both sides” if we were being generous. A more accurate description would recognize it as state sponsorship of terrorism with a diplomatic veneer. When Qatar positions itself as a “mediator” between Israel and Hamas, it is mediating between a democratic state and a terrorist organization it funds. This is like an arsonist volunteering to mediate between firefighters and the building he set ablaze. The Al Jazeera Information Weapon Israel stands accused of spreading propaganda and hiding truth. Yet no Israeli media outlet, not even those with clear political orientations, operates with the discipline, reach, or state direction of Al Jazeera. Al Jazeera functions as an arm of the Qatari state. It does not operate independently. Its editorial line follows the interests of the ruling Al Thani family with precision. During the Arab Spring, Al Jazeera championed uprisings in Libya, Syria, and Egypt while maintaining radio silence about any dissent in Qatar itself or in allied Gulf monarchies. The network shapes narratives across the Arab world, Europe, and increasingly in the United States through AJ+, its social media subsidiary designed for Western audiences. Its reach and editorial discipline exceed every Israeli media outlet combined. When Al Jazeera broadcasts accusations against Israel, it does so as an instrument of state policy, not as independent journalism. There are, of course, many Israeli periodicals that often support the government of that country, but sometimes not. Often, their coverage is mixed. However, there are also dozens, if not scores of them, that are bitter critics of Benjamin Netanyahu in particular and of the Likud Party in general. When can this be truly said of Al Jazeera and Qatar? Systematic Violation of Individual Rights Critics claim Israel mistreats vulnerable populations. The comparison with Qatar’s treatment of migrant workers reveals who actually engages in systematic rights violations. Qatar built its glittering modern skyline through systematic breach of contract and property rights. A 2021 investigation by The Guardian found that at least 6,500 migrant workers from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka died in Qatar during the decade of infrastructure projects leading to the 2022 World Cup. The actual number is likely far higher, as many deaths were attributed to “natural causes” without proper investigation. The Qatari system operates through state-sanctioned coercion. Workers had their passports confiscated upon arrival, a direct violation of property rights that eliminated their freedom of movement and ability to leave. They entered into employment contracts that were then systematically breached by employers who delayed or withheld agreed-upon wages. They were denied access to independent legal recourse or arbitration when contracts were violated. When workers died, their families received minimal restitution for the breach of contract that led to the unsafe working conditions. This represents systematic violation of individual liberty, property rights, and contract enforcement at a scale Israel has never approached. Yet Qatar faced minimal consequences, hosting the World Cup on schedule while lecturing others about human rights. The Real Apartheid: Qatar’s Tiered Citizenship System Israel faces relentless accusations of apartheid despite its Arab citizens voting, serving in parliament, taking positions as doctors, lawyers, professors, engineers, and holding positions on the Supreme Court. They even have their own political parties, with representation in the Knesset. Qatar, meanwhile, operates an actual apartheid system that would make the architects of South Africa’s racial hierarchy blush. Approximately 90 percent of Qatar’s population consists of non-citizens with no political rights whatsoever. Children born in Qatar do not acquire citizenship by birth. Even after 25 years of continuous residence, foreigners almost never receive citizenship, with applications capped at just 50 per year for a population of nearly three million. But the discrimination extends beyond non-citizens. Qatar’s 2005 nationality law creates a formal two-tier citizenship system dividing Qataris into “native” citizens (those whose families settled before 1930) and “naturalized” citizens. This distinction perpetuates through generations, with children of naturalized citizens inheriting their parents’ second-class status regardless of where they were born. The restrictions on “naturalized” Qataris are extensive and codified. They cannot vote or run for office in Shura Council elections. They cannot work in many government positions for five years after naturalization. They cannot apply for housing loans until 15 years after naturalization. Unlike “native” Qataris, they cannot receive government housing grants or funds to purchase land. Their citizenship can be revoked more easily than that of “native” citizens. Non-citizens face even harsher restrictions. They cannot own property except in designated zones. They cannot open businesses without Qatari partners. They have no access to subsidized healthcare, education, or government benefits, for which they pay through taxation. They cannot vote or participate in politics. The government caps citizenship applications at 50 annually while maintaining a population where fewer than 10 percent hold citizenship. Women face additional discrimination under Qatar’s nationality laws. Unlike men, Qatari women cannot transmit citizenship to their foreign husbands or children. A Qatari woman married to a non-Qatari man can only apply for residency for her family, not citizenship, creating families where mothers are citizens but their children are not. Compare this to Israel, where Arab citizens constitute 21 percent of the population, vote in every election, serve in the Knesset, sit on the Supreme Court, teach at universities, and practice medicine in hospitals. Israeli Arabs own property, operate businesses, and enjoy full legal equality. No such comparison is possible in Qatar, where the overwhelming majority of residents have no rights, and even citizens are divided into legal castes. Yes, it cannot be denied that Israel, too, has a system with two different levels of rights. Jews from abroad can become citizens, but this does not apply to non-Jews from elsewhere. Israel is, after all, a Jewish state. However, Arabs in Israel are treated far more decently than they would be if they were to emigrate to Israeli neighboring countries. This is demonstrated by the almost total lack of emigration on the part of these peoples. As for homosexuals, there are gay parades in Israel, but not anywhere else in the Middle East. Queers for Palestine, yes, actually, there is such an organization, is rather an anomaly, since if these folk were to ever visit Qatar, they would be summarily put to death. Their very existence dramatically illustrates the widespread lack of knowledge about this so-called civilized nation. When Qatar or its defenders accuse Israel of apartheid, they are projecting their own systematic discrimination onto a democratic state with far greater equality. The Colonial Project Qatar Won’t Acknowledge Israel is routinely condemned as a colonial project imposed by outside powers, an accusation that ignores 3,000 years of continuous Jewish presence in the land and the democratic institutions Israelis built. Qatar itself is a British creation. The Al Thani family was placed in control by British colonial administrators who drew lines in the sand and designated rulers. Unlike Israel, Qatar has no functioning democracy. Citizens cannot vote to change their government. Political parties are banned. The immense wealth generated by natural gas belongs to one family, which distributes it according to dynastic priorities rather than democratic accountability. The state’s current borders, its ruling family’s authority, and its very existence as a separate entity rather than part of Saudi Arabia or another neighbor, all flow from British imperial decisions. Yet Qatar faces no criticism for its colonial origins or its authoritarian structure, while Israel fought free from the British mandate in order to build a parliamentary democracy with competitive elections and an independent judiciary, is condemned as illegitimate. The Diplomacy of Duplicity Israel is accused of moral hypocrisy, of claiming high standards while acting otherwise. But Qatar’s diplomatic strategy makes Israeli conduct look transparent by comparison. Qatar sells liquefied natural gas to anyone with money. It maintains close relations with Iran, the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism. It funds groups designated as terrorist organizations by the United States, the European Union, and numerous other countries. It plays all sides simultaneously while presenting itself as neutral. The emirate hosts both the largest American military base in the region and the leadership of Hamas. It brokers deals between the Taliban and Western governments while funding Islamist movements across the Middle East and North Africa. It positions itself as a victim of a blockade by neighboring Arab states while those same states cite Qatar’s support for extremism as justification. Qatar has elevated duplicity to the level of state strategy. The Israeli Response: Precision Versus Capitulation Qatar’s role as Hamas’s patron came into sharp focus in September 2025, when Israel assassinated five Hamas leaders in Doha. The operation killed Khalil al-Hayya’s son and other negotiators, along with a Qatari security officer. Media coverage was revealing. The New York Times characterized the strike as “brazen,” as if Israel’s surgical targeting of terrorist leaders represented greater aggression than Qatar’s years of hosting them. The criticism revealed a telling double standard. Israel stands accused of using excessive force in Gaza, with critics pointing to high civilian casualties among the roughly 70,000 Gazan deaths in the conflict. Yet when Israel employs the precision its critics claim to demand, eliminating specific Hamas leadership with minimal collateral damage, the operation is condemned as a violation of Qatari sovereignty. The message appears clear: Israel may defend itself neither wholesale nor retail, neither with conventional military operations nor with targeted strikes. Israel is entitled to achieve a decisive victory over organizations committed to its destruction. The Allied powers in World War II did not forego targeting Nazi leaders because some were engaged in diplomatic discussions. They pursued total victory and unconditional surrender. The notion that Israel alone must negotiate with terrorists who refuse to lay down their arms, who reject surrender, and who continue attacks while claiming to negotiate, represents a standard applied to no other nation facing existential threats. Qatar’s role in hosting these leaders was not neutral mediation but active participation in Hamas’s war effort. A truly neutral broker does not provide years of comfortable residence, diplomatic protection, and billions in financial support to one side. Qatar was not mediating between equals but enabling Hamas’s continued operations while shielding its leadership from consequences. The analogy is straightforward: if a supposedly neutral country hosted Nazi leaders during World War II, providing them sanctuary, funding, and diplomatic cover, Allied strikes against those leaders would have been justified acts of war, not violations of neutrality. Qatar’s relationship with Hamas operates on the same principle. The emirate cannot claim neutral status while serving as Hamas’s patron, banker, and safe haven. The Projection Problem The gap between Qatar’s carefully managed image and its actual conduct is wider than anything the emirate tries to project onto Israel. When Qatar condemns Israel for behavior that Qatar itself practices on a larger scale, it engages not in moral criticism but in psychological projection. Israel, for all its flaws and policy disputes, operates as a democracy where citizens can vote leaders out of office, where courts check executive power, where a free press criticizes government daily, and where minority communities participate in political life. Qatar operates as an absolute monarchy where political dissent is crushed, where wealth is hoarded, but not earned, by one family, where foreign workers have no rights, and where state interests dictate all public discourse. The next time Qatar or its media arms level accusations at Israel, observers should ask a simple question: Which country does this description actually fit? The answer, more often than not, will be the accuser rather than the accused. READ MORE: When Seeing Race is Helpful It’s Not Fair! Disproportionate Deaths in the Middle East Who Is to Blame for Civilian Deaths in Gaza?
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Conservative Voices
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Trump’s First Year of His Second Term Lacks the Drama of 2017. Good.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is a better boss the second time around. You can see it in his staffing. Trump is putting the right people in top jobs. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is flexing his foreign policy chops. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is selling Trump’s policies to Wall Street and Main Street. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy isn’t trying to paper over problems on American roads and in the skies. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon is taking on the education bureaucracy. (RELATED: America, Please Put Some Pants On) The first year of Trump’s first term was chaotic: The turnover of his “A-Team” hit 35 percent, according to an analysis by Brookings Institution visiting fellow Kathryn Dunn Tenpas. Former President Barack Obama’s first year turnover was 9 percent; according to Tenpas, the closest modern predecessor to Trump was Ronald Reagan, with 17 percent turnover in his first year. Given that Trump had never served in public office until he was elected president, hiccups were predictable. Given that Trump had never served in public office until he was elected president, hiccups were predictable. In that first year, Trump spit out his first chief of staff (Reince Priebus), press secretary (Sean Spicer), and national security adviser (Michael Flynn). Tenpas has a term for such departures: RUP, for “resigned under pressure.” As you look at Trump’s picks this go-round, you see how his four years in the wilderness paid off, and with Susie Wiles serving as chief of staff, there’s a stability you didn’t see in 2017. There has been “no publicly announced firing” among senior staff in the Executive Office of the President, Tenpas told me. Trump’s first second-term national security adviser (Michael Waltz) was caught adding a journalist to a Signal chat group that discussed plans for a U.S. attack on Houthis in Yemen. But rather than outright firing Waltz, Trump moved the former Army Special Forces officer to the United Nations, where he serves as U.S. ambassador. Waltz’s replacement? Rubio, who is acting national security adviser and the archivist of the United States. Trump is “double and triple hatting people,” is how Tenpas put it. “When one of them leaves, he likes to hire from within.” Also, Tenpas wrote, “The share of women and non-whites holding the most senior government positions is the lowest of the past four administrations.” While I see the lesser turnover as a sign that Trump has seasoned, Tenpas credits the administration’s “far more intense focus on loyalty.” When Trump first became president, he had never served in office, so he didn’t have a stable of long-term operatives. At times, it seemed Trump picked some top staff and Cabinet members for their news (and entertainment) value. Remember Secretary of State Rex Tillerson? Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had recommended the former CEO of ExxonMobil. A newbie president and a newbie secretary of state. What could go wrong? In March 2018, Trump announced he was firing Tillerson on Twitter. “Mike Pompeo, Director of the CIA, will become our new Secretary of State. He will do a fantastic job!” Trump posted. “Thank you to Rex Tillerson for his service!” The most theatrical firing of 2017 came when then-FBI Director James Comey learned he was unemployed during a recruitment event in Los Angeles. Awkward. Nearly a year into Trump’s second term, America has not witnessed a similar public shaming/firing. And some Trump picks — most notably Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth — don’t exactly have the heavyweight personas you would expect for their positions. Trump should have put them on Mediterranean or Baltic Avenue, but somehow they landed on Park Avenue and Boardwalk. READ MORE from Debra J. Saunders: Keep On Truckin’ — If You Are Rightly Licensed Sleepy Donald Trump? Umm, No, He’s Not Joe Biden. Yes, the New York Times Really Ran a Story About Social Services Fraud by Immigrants Follow @debrajsaunders on X. To find out more about Debra Saunders and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2025 CREATORS
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Intel Uncensored
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Hispanic Brothers Arrested for Threatening to Torture, Hang Top DHS Official Tricia McLaughlin

"Shoot ICE on sight," both men reportedly wrote in X posts
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