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4 w

Hegseth Reportedly Fires Defense Intelligence Agency Head
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Hegseth Reportedly Fires Defense Intelligence Agency Head

'Loss in confidence'
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
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Astronomers Capture Jaw-Dropping New Image of a Hand Amid the Stars
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Astronomers Capture Jaw-Dropping New Image of a Hand Amid the Stars

A coalition of telescopes have allowed astronomers to produce an image of the nebula MSH 15-52 in unprecedented color and detail. Centered in the middle of the nebula is a pulsar, or the rapidly-spinning, extremely dense remnant of an exploded star. Captured together, some astronomers see in the mixture of the two the image of […] The post Astronomers Capture Jaw-Dropping New Image of a Hand Amid the Stars appeared first on Good News Network.
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'Boring'! Even MSNBC's 'Morning Joe' Crew Whacked Cracker Barrel's New Logo
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'Boring'! Even MSNBC's 'Morning Joe' Crew Whacked Cracker Barrel's New Logo

Q. How can you tell that the new Cracker Barrel logo is a classic woke catastrophe? A. When even the Morning Joe crew mocks it. You might think that the show would applaud the redesign. After all, it eliminates the image of an old, white, Southern male—and you know what, in liberal minds, those guys stand for! But no! On today's show, Jonathan Lemire led off the discussion by sardonically saying, "Let's be clear. It's now Cracker Barrel with no sign of a barrel." That got the panel, Eugene Robinson in particular, laughing [see screencap.] Katty Kay tried at first to be supportive, saying, "Looks fine to me," but then honesty got the better of her, and she had to admit: "I think the barrel looks kind of nice, too. The new logo looks kind of boring, actually. I'm going to be honest: looks kind of boring." Lemire piled on!  "Loses the phrase [Old Country Store], loses the character, loses the barrel." Ouch! Lemire and Kay both acted bewildered and said they were "not quite sure" about Don Jr. casting the rebranded logo as a DEI move. Ignorance is bliss? There was a very good reason for his comment. As has been reported: "Cracker Barrel launched its Diversity and Inclusion Strategy in June 2021, which included an effort to 'better identify, recruit and advance strong, racially and ethnically diverse talent.'"  That was just one of several woke Cracker Barrel moves, which included encouraging employees to join one of eight in-house identity groups, including LGBTQ+ Alliance, Hola, and Women's Connect. Note: In a painful, grinning-past-the-graveyard appearance on Good Morning America, Cracker Barrel CEO Julie Felss Masino claimed: "People like what we're doing . . . The buzz is so good, not only from our customers, but from our team."  Yup! So good, that the company's stock plunged 12% in one day! Place your bet: Which will last longer: the new logo, or the CEO? Here's the transcript. MSNBC Morning Joe 6:29 am EDT JONATHAN LEMIRE: Some logo rebranding is garnering a lot of attention this week. Cracker Barrel shares plummeted yesterday after the restaurant chain unveiled its new logo. The image no longer shows a man leaning against a barrel, and gets rid of the phrase Old Country Store. Conservatives criticized the move. The president's son even slammed it as a DEI effort—not quite sure why.  Meanwhile, the University of Notre Dame is switching up its Fighting Irish logo.  . . . But Katty, it's the Cracker Barrel one that got a lot of attention yesterday, even impacting its stock price. Not quite sure the DEI part of it, in terms of its attack. But let's be clear. It's now Cracker Barrel with no sign of a barrel [panel members laugh.]  KATTY KAY: Just a cracker, maybe. And would a cracker be a DEI thing? There's the whole backstory is, the Cracker Barrel was associated with Southern cooking, and was a place that was, you know, associated with the South, and now they're trying to modernize and DEI themselves, I guess, in the parlance of MAGA.  And I guess the consumers didn't like that. They still want the barrel. They still want the good old South-looking image of Cracker Barrel. That's what I read. That's what I read.  Looks fine to me. Although, I don't know. I think the barrel looks kind of nice, too.  LEMIRE: Well, as we've talked about -- KAY: The new logo looks kind of boring, actually. I'm going to be honest. It looks kind of boring.  LEMIRE: Loses the phrase, loses the character, loses the barrel.  And we've spent a lot of time this week talking about how Governor Gavin Newsom of California has been at the vanguard on social media right now, attacking Trump. He was, I'll note, the one Democrat, the first Democrat, anyway, who weighed in on this, saying he didn't like the rebranding either. Of course, doing so in a Trumpian tone. 
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4 w

Atoms to atoms, dust to dust
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Atoms to atoms, dust to dust

What Jack Huttner misses most is the feeling that he and his ragtag band of activists, the SHAD Alliance, “could do anything.” The SHADs — shorthand for Sound-Hudson Against Atomic Development — were among the more visible of the 1970s environmentalists who took on energy modernity head-on. In Shoreham, New York; Seabrook, New Hampshire; Avila Beach, California; and dozens of other sites across the country, the SHAD Alliance and groups like it channeled the passions of young adulthood to deliver a simple message: No nukes.By the late '70s, resisting nuclear power had become a cultural fever, and at Shoreham, 60 miles east of New York City, the SHADs waged one of the era’s great battles. As New York Times coverage from June 4, 1979, depicts, the Shoreham protest drew an estimated 15,000 people airing their discontent with the building of a new nuclear power plant on the banks of Long Island Sound. From among the 15,000 demonstrators, police arrested more than 600 for breaching the construction site and, according to the Times, bombarding utility company workers with “dirt, stones, and soda cans.” At Seabrook, 50 miles north of Boston, similar scenes had played out in 1977 and 1978, with 10,000 protesters on hand and more than 2,000 arrested.Compounding the environmental drawbacks of purging our grid of nuclear power, the alternatives bring dire geopolitical risks.Emblematic of the cultural milieu from which the protests sprang, folk singers like Pete Seeger and Arlo Guthrie (Woody’s kid) were mainstays, enlivening the demonstrations with song. The anti-nuclear movement had by then become the rallying point for the counterculture — a magnet for activists without a cause.As the Washington Post described amid the June 1978 Seabrook demonstrations, the core of the movement was “made up in part of antiwar activists who dropped out of middle-class life during the Vietnam war days and moved to the hills of New England and elsewhere.” One protester told the Post that the anti-nuclear movement was a feminist and lesbian issue. “The struggle against the rape of our earth by rich, white males,” she said, “is the same struggle as the struggle against the rape of our bodies and the rape of our lives.” Another admitted that he joined the movement not on account of environmental concerns, but for the “feeling of camaraderie and good vibrations.”RELATED: Nuclear energy is clean and safe, so why do climate doomsayers ignore it? Photo by Giannis Alexopoulos/NurPhoto via Getty ImagesSeeger’s lyrics offer a window into the cloudy thinking of the day. For Seeger and the activists he inspired, humans had gone too far along the path to transforming nature. Driven by greed and conformity (give “Little Boxes” a listen), we’d become, in Seeger’s eyes, detestable. To Seeger, nuclear power was something of a culmination of our worst bourgeois impulses, emerging out of the war machine and promising a future of ever-greater consumption. Despite the fundamental differences in the technologies that enable them, Seeger slipped between opposition to nuclear weapons and opposition to peaceful nuclear energy without drawing any distinction. Splitting the atom, for Seeger, was a violation of the natural order.Seeger’s perspective was consonant with that of academic Paul Ehrlich, who said in the 1980s that the achievement of nuclear fusion would be like “giving a machine gun to an idiot child” and of once-prominent environmentalist Jeremy Rifkin, who asserted that fusion technology would be “the worst thing that could happen to our planet.” Seeger, though, captured in his music the emotional foundations of nuclear resistance, invoking, if somewhat clumsily, both Hamlet and the book of Genesis in his song “Talking Atom”:The question is this, when you boil it down:To be or not to be!That is the questionAtoms to atoms, and dust to dustIf the world makes A-bombs, something's bound to bust.Victory securedFive decades on, it appears that Pete Seeger and Jack Huttner’s SHADs have won the long game.Though certainly an international phenomenon, 1970s anti-nuclear activism has had particularly lasting effects in the United States. Between 1970 and 1990, the U.S. installed 95 gigawatts of nuclear power at plants in more than 20 states. But the eventual victory of the anti-nuclear activists had long since been sown. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, planned nuclear capacity additions began to slow in the late 1970s and were truncated further by fear surrounding the incident at the Three Mile Island plant in 1979. While the incident gave the movement wider visibility, it is crucial to note that it was in full swing well before Three Mile Island, as the Post’s 1978 coverage of Seabrook shows. By inculcating the American public with images of nuclear hellscapes, capitalizing on ignorance, and mastering procedural slowdowns, the movement ensured that the nuclear industry’s flowering would be brief. From 1979 through 1988, 67 power plant plans were canceled.In the 20 years from 1996, not a single nuclear reactor came online in the U.S. In 2012, when there were 104 operating nuclear reactors, U.S. nuclear electricity generation capacity peaked at about 102 gigawatts. Today, only 93 reactors with a combined generation capacity of about 95 gigawatts remain in operation. Despite 10% of American reactors shutting down since 2012, nuclear has maintained a consistent share of total annual U.S. electricity generation (around 20%) through uprating, i.e., increasing generating capacity at existing reactors.Even with uprating and re-licensing, nuclear power's days could be numbered. U.S. reactors average more than 40 years of age, and crucial plants are being retired each year. The examples include California's Diablo Canyon, which makes up 9% of the Golden State's power but is slated for retirement. According to the EIA’s 2022 Annual Energy Outlook, nuclear’s contribution to U.S. power generation will be 50% lower than today by 2050. It is a tragic and ironic denouement, considering nuclear’s now-well-articulated energy advantages of density and dispatchability and its environmental advantage of being emissions-free.But the strangling of nuclear energy directly causes innumerable problems.The nuclear plateau and its subsequent decline is, one might argue, representative of the wider American economic stagnation. But far from being inevitable, as charges of “late-stage capitalism” would suggest, the great stagnation as represented by the nuclear stall-out is a product of evidence-be-damned cultural impulses — vibrations, as the 1978 Seabrook protester might say — aligned against human economic and technological advancement.The SHAD-led action at Shoreham was perhaps the movement’s greatest triumph. Despite the investment of $5.5 billion and completion of construction and testing, Shoreham never opened. As the New York Times reported, “a lengthy dispute between the company and state and Suffolk County officials over emergency evacuation plans delayed issuance of a federal operating license until April 1989. By then, the company had agreed with Gov. Mario M. Cuomo to abandon the plant in exchange for rate increases and other financial compensation.”The fate of the nuclear plant at Shoreham, the ruins of which can still be visited an hour east of the city, is an avatar of a persistent social plague.From anti-war to anti-nuke to anti-houseWhile the SHADs concretized the movement with their siege of Shoreham, Connie Hogarth brought to the anti-nuclear fight a deeper philosophy, transcendentalism, that offered justification for the means. Like many of the anti-nuclear agitators, Hogarth earned her stripes in the anti-war movement, scoring her first arrest at a “die-in” outside the White House. Just two years after the U.S. was chased out of Saigon, Hogarth would find a more durable purpose waging what would become a lifelong crusade against nuclear energy.Writing in the Times in 1977, Hogarth compared her arrest for trespassing at the Seabrook nuclear plant to Henry David Thoreau’s imprisonment for tax evasion. There was a moral imperative, Hogarth argued, to disrupt in any way possible the nuclear enterprise. Like Seeger, she did not distinguish between nuclear weapons and nuclear power, writing, explicitly, that both “are storing up the unthinkable potential for creating hell on earth.”Hogarth’s career as a provocateur would endure far beyond Seabrook, with transcendentalist motivations underlying much of what she would accomplish — or, more accurately, prevent others from accomplishing. In 1979 she was arrested and imprisoned for 12 days for trespassing at New York’s Indian Point plant. Another dozen arrests would follow, as Hogarth acted out against a range of perceived injustices well into the 21st century. Though it would take four decades, Hogarth had the last laugh. Indian Point, which made up 13% of the Empire State's power in 2019, was shut down in 2021, a year before Hogarth herself passed on at the age of 95.Hogarth’s small-is-beautiful, back-to-nature, transcendental underpinnings continue to animate much of the anti-nuclear movement today, as they do the parallel social contagion that is commonly denoted as NIMBYism (Not in My Back Yard). While the fight against large-scale nuclear energy has come to a near-close, broader NIMBYism has become yet more prevalent — and damaging.The recent Times profile of Marin County activist Susan Kirsch delves into the not-in-my-backyard psychology. Kirsch’s activism, like Hogarth’s, began with opposition to McNamara’s war and has been in search of a big wave to surf ever since.Kirsch, now 77, is David Brooks’ archetypical bobo — the Bohemian turned bourgeoisie. She came of age when drifting from place to place railing against the powers that be didn’t preclude upward mobility. Once she’d had her fun, she settled into middle-class comfort, buying a house in what is now an unfathomably expensive zip code for all but the wealthiest Americans.RELATED: Plugged in, checked out: The Dept. of Energy needs a reality surge Photo by Walter Leporati/Getty ImagesFrom that amenable perch, she has made life miserable, in her own small way, for others. With her personal pressure group Livable California, Kirsch has almost single-handedly prevented the development of new housing in her neighborhood, blocking one project for 18 years running.As it was for Hogarth, smallness is a touchstone for Kirsch. “Using the language of centralized power is what charges me to do this,” Kirsch told the Times, “I think small is beautiful.” For Kirsch, unable to realize that she’s no longer the scrappy underdog, the fight is against what she sees as the tyranny of powerful outsiders. She wraps her opposition to development, the Times explains, in a “small c” conservative philosophy that a local government is better and more responsive to its citizens than a bigger one farther away.In this perspective, of course, there is a kernel of truth. It’s natural to feel loyalty to your way of life and to want to uphold your aesthetic experience against the central planner’s bulldozer. Indeed, Kirsch’s strain of conservatism is consonant with some of the themes championed by English philosopher Roger Scruton and his environmental philosophy of oikophilia, or a love of one's home. But approbation for Kirsch and her fellow travelers can only be but mild.What began as a moral crusade to stop the napalming of villages and then channeled its attention against nuclear power has morphed into a banal procedural battle to secure community stagnation and the comfort of a privileged few. The error of those like Huttner, Hogarth, and Kirsch, who have gummed up our 21st-century economy, is that they have never trained a critical eye on their own beliefs. The anti-nuclear and anti-housing sentiments latent in today’s environmental movement are byproducts of Kirsch’s generation’s unbearable hubris. It is a generation that believes it never was, and can never be, wrong.But wrong it is.Stagnation’s costMyopia, complacency, and a curiosity deficit insulate Kirsch and her fellow travelers from the reams of evidence that their pet causes have harmful consequences that, if ever acknowledged, could only bring them shame.Rather than unleashing the “hell on earth” Hogarth presaged, nuclear energy has now established a half-century record of extraordinary safety. While generating one-fifth of U.S. power and even higher proportions in countries like France, South Korea, and Japan, nuclear can be credited with reducing thousands of deaths annually that would otherwise have resulted from fossil-fuel-related air pollution and has caused almost no harm to human beings from the ostensible concern of radiation poisoning.As Energy for Humanity explicates, the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi meltdown caused by a tsunami has yet to show severe lasting harm in the population. No deaths have been attributed to radiation exposure, nor have radiation-induced changes in cancer rates surpassed the level required for statistical detection.The 1986 Chernobyl accident, conversely, was a genuine disaster. According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, 28 emergency workers died in the first three months after the explosion from acute radiation sickness; two workers died in the explosion itself, and another emergency worker died of cardiac arrest. Lasting effects can be seen in Ukrainian mortality rates, which show that in radiation-contaminated areas, 26 people per 1,000 died in 2007, compared with 16 for the entire country.Recent research, however, allays some of the gravest fears surrounding the long-term effects of radiation exposure. A 2021 study analyzing the genomes of 130 children conceived between 1987 and 2002 by at least one parent who had experienced gonadal radiation exposure related to the accident found no new germline mutations. And, hearteningly, two of the three engineers who volunteered to drain millions of gallons of water from beneath the burning reactor (an act of heroism dramatically portrayed in the 2019 HBO series) are still alive today. The third survived until 2005. When considering the tragedy of Chernobyl, it is important to recall that the disaster resulted from poor governance, not any inherent flaw in the technology.Three Mile Island, far from marring nuclear’s record, confirmed its safety. As the Institute for Energy Research’s Paige Lambermont has written, the 1979 incident sparked public fear, but, as monitoring has proven, it never posed a real threat. “Because of cancer concerns following the accident,” Lambermont explains, “the Pennsylvania Department of Health maintained a registry of people living within five miles of Three Mile Island when the accident occurred. The 30,000-person list was kept up until mid-1997, when it was determined that there had been no unusual health trends or increased cancer cases in the area immediately surrounding the accident.”Yet to this day, leading environmental groups like Greenpeace hold nuclear in the lowest regard possible. Greenpeace, in its own words, “has always fought — and will continue to fight — vigorously against nuclear power because it is an unacceptable risk to the environment and to humanity.” The only solution, it argues, “is to halt the expansion of all nuclear power, and for the shutdown of existing plants.”But the strangling of nuclear energy directly causes innumerable problems.On the energy side of things, it has cost states like California a dispatchable (i.e., you can use it when you need it) power source and made them overly reliant on the variable output that comes from wind and solar facilities, leading to grid instability. Environmentally, the loss of nuclear perpetuates the use of more polluting fossil-fuel power sources and eats into natural ecosystems, due to exorbitant land demands for dilute wind and solar.RELATED: Can RFK Jr. make conservatives environmentalists again? The control room simulator at the Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant in Avila Beach, California.Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesAccording to 2017 research from Strata, the nuclear sites in the U.S. require an average of 0.901 acres per megawatt. Utility-scale solar, meanwhile, requires more than eight acres per megawatt. California’s Solar Star facility, the largest solar power generation site in the U.S., takes up more than 3,000 acres to reach its capacity of 580 megawatts. The Diablo Canyon nuclear facility has four times the capacity yet is sited on just 1,000 acres. Moreover, Solar Star’s power only comes on when the sun shines, while Diablo Canyon’s can be relied upon day and night. Put another way, Solar Star disrupts three times more natural space than Diablo Canyon does, but can only generate a quarter of the power of Diablo Canyon in the best of circumstances — hardly an environmental bargain.The California housing blockade, similarly, yields perverse land-use outcomes. While NIMBYs tout low-density as low-impact, the opposite is true. Because of the stifling of developments like those Kirsch opposes in Marin County, more families find themselves settling in the warmer inland areas of the state, using additional power to cool their homes in the summer and additional fuel to commute by car to the economic hubs in the Bay Area. Throughout Southern California, and indeed much of the U.S., the same story is playing out.The issues have become so pronounced in the Golden State that even Governor Gavin Newsom (D), not one to regularly upset the progressive coalition, has suggested that state energy regulators rethink the planned closure of California’s last remaining nuclear reactors and has directed ire against the anti-housing NIMBYs he says are “destroying the state.”Compounding the environmental drawbacks of purging our grid of nuclear power, the alternatives bring dire geopolitical risks.On this point it is instructive to look across the Atlantic to Germany. Germany, like the U.S., experienced massive anti-nuclear protests in the 1970s, but saw nuclear energy grow in importance nevertheless. As late as 2011, Germany got a quarter of its power from nuclear reactors. Following the Fukushima incident, however, Germany’s anti-nuclear movement seized the upper hand. As part of the country’s Energiewende, it has reduced nuclear power generation severely and planned to phase it out entirely.But doing so has resulted in a paralyzing dependency on Russian natural gas. For the past decade, Germany has been the largest export market for Gazprom, a company in which the Russian state has a majority stake and effective control. Not exactly the position Germany would like to be in with Russia waging war just beyond NATO’s fringe.The United States, likewise, could find itself dangerously dependent if nuclear energy isn’t a centerpiece of any planned transition to low-carbon energy. In the U.S. case, China would be the most likely beneficiary, as it supplies the bulk of the key materials that go into batteries, wind turbines, and solar panels. “The rapid deployment of clean energy technologies as part of energy transitions,” the International Energy Agency wrote in its 2021 report on key energy inputs, “implies a significant increase in demand for minerals.” Across a wide swath of these so-called energy transition minerals, China sits in the driver’s seat. In the rare-earths category, for example, China produces 60% of the world’s total and processes 90%. IEA describes China’s position vis-à-vis rare-earths as “dominance ... across the value chain.”So in addition to causing environmental harm by blocking nuclear, the ostensible anti-authoritarians like Hogarth and Greenpeace are playing the United States into the hands of some of the world’s most repressive regimes.Compassion for Kirsch, Hogarth, and their somewhat quaint outlook gives way to horror when one considers their human and environmental costs: that California childhoods are spent in the back seats of cars despite the blessing of the world’s most salutary climate, that families are being broken and scattered across the inland West for want of living space, that the state’s inland desert ecology is being paved over for far-flung housing and plastered with miles of metal-and-glass solar arrays, that blocking nuclear provides de facto support to Moscow and Beijing.The refusal to grapple with these issues makes anti-nuclear, anti-housing NIMBYism reminiscent of the set of concepts University of Cambridge researcher Rob Henderson has called “luxury beliefs.” Interestingly, the Post’s 1978 coverage of the Seabrook protest involved a similar angle, quoting a refreshingly self-aware recent Dartmouth grad who recognized that “it's a luxury to be able to be concerned about nuclear power.” The way Henderson sees it, luxury beliefs are badges of identity that are worn by people who will never bear the cost of their implementation, but who can attain from them status among their in-groups.Henderson’s characterization fits squarely upon the anti-nuclear, anti-housing outlook. For the bobos, performative transcendentalism remains en vogue. As Huttner’s longing for the good vibrations of the '70s, Hogarth’s obituary, and the Kirsch profile reveal, activism on these issues is a defining feature, perhaps the defining feature, of the activists’ sense of self. They display as feathers in their caps the successful disruption of scientific, economic, and social advances. For an aging property owner in idyllic, temperate Marin County like Kirsch, stagnation is all upside.For the rest of us, however, a better course must be charted: an approach to energy, environmental, and local development questions that holds space for the proper love of home but that recognizes the evidence of NIMBYism’s costs and rejects the divine right of stagnation.By the light of a reasoned oikophilia, the twin veto crusades against nuclear and new housing wilt. Though the vibrations may say otherwise, the legalization of nuclear power and of residential density are perhaps the two most crucial planks in an agenda for improving environmental outcomes, improving the daily experience of Americans on the economic margins, and preserving the best elements of our shared home.
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Biden judge releases teens accused of savagely attacking Edward 'Big Balls' Coristine
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Biden judge releases teens accused of savagely attacking Edward 'Big Balls' Coristine

Edward Coristine, the young engineer known as "Big Balls" who previously worked for the Department of Government Efficiency, was beaten to a pulp during an attempted carjacking on Aug. 3 in the national capital.According to the incident report, a group of around 10 juveniles approached the 19-year-old and his girlfriend, making clear their intention to steal Coristine's vehicle.Coristine pushed his girlfriend to safety, then squared off with the thugs, who piled on and left him bloodied on the roadside. Police apprehended two suspects at the scene — a 15-year-old male and a 15-year-old female of Hyattsville, Maryland — and charged both with unarmed carjacking.Whereas President Donald Trump figured the incident was bad enough to finally bring an end to the lawlessness in Washington, D.C., federalizing the Metropolitan Police Department and deploying the National Guard, a Biden-nominated judge alternatively decided on Thursday it wasn't worth keeping two of the suspected attackers in custody.'School and home, that's it.'Kendra Briggs, an associate judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia, informed the female suspect that she would move to a youth shelter house and informed the male suspect that he would get to hang out at his mother's home, reported the Washington Post, which was granted access to the Thursday hearing on the condition that it not reveal the identities of the suspects.Up until this week, the suspects were being held at D.C.'s Youth Services Center, an 88-bed secure facility that keeps detainees under continuous supervision. Although the suspects will enjoy relative freedom, they will still be subjected to electronic monitoring and a 24-hour curfew.RELATED: The DC nobody talks about — and Trump finally did Photo by Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty ImagesThe Biden judge decided to let the male suspect stay with his mother because the shelter house was supposedly too far from his school."I don't want to put hardship on your family," Briggs said to the apparent thug."School and home, that's it," said Briggs, whose nomination was opposed by Republican Sens. Rick Scott (Fla.) and Josh Hawley (Mo.). "The fact that this court is stepping you down from Youth Services Center is a serious step."'The Law in D.C. must be changed to prosecute these 'minors' as adults, and lock them up for a long time, starting at age 14.'The attorney for the male suspect boasted that to his knowledge, his client had not yet misbehaved at the Youth Services Center.Prosecutors suggested that the female suspect, who faces trial next week for a separate case in Maryland, is a danger to the community and a flight risk.Despite the prosecutors' concerns and acknowledging that the female suspect had "major truancy issues," the Biden appointee still decided to reduce her level of detention.Briggs told the suspects that they are not allowed to possess weapons and are to stay out of other people's vehicles unless they have permission from the owner.The judge's order flies in the face of Trump's expectation.Following Coristine's attack, Trump noted, "Local 'youths' and gang members, some only 14, 15, and 16-years-old, are randomly attacking, mugging, maiming, and shooting innocent Citizens, at the same time knowing that they will be almost immediately released.""They are not afraid of Law Enforcement because they know nothing ever happens to them, but it’s going to happen now!" the president continued. "The Law in D.C. must be changed to prosecute these 'minors' as adults, and lock them up for a long time, starting at age 14."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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Is Caitlin Clark really injured — or just 'tapping out'?​
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Is Caitlin Clark really injured — or just 'tapping out'?​

The story surrounding Caitlin Clark’s mysterious injury keeps evolving, yet Clark has been physically active while she’s supposedly in recovery.BlazeTV host Jason Whitlock believes that like other female sports stars before her, she may be suffering from a mental health decline.“Caitlin Clark has disappeared and vanished. She doesn’t talk to reporters. We’re getting no legitimate information from anybody in the Indiana Fever organization. This is the biggest star in sports, and other than a Sue Bird podcast, we hear nothing,” Whitlock says.“And so, in my view, they’ve put out some information to throw us off the trail. This is part of the cover-up of, like, there’s something weird going on with Caitlin Clark. ... I don’t think this is all physical,” he continues.Whitlock believes mental issues are a far more common reason for female athletes to “disappear” than the physical issues the public is sold.“You remember Simone Biles, Tokyo Olympics in 2021, due to COVID, withdrew from the final team event because of pressure. You remember Naomi Osaka, 2021 French Open, withdrew because of pressure, dealing with media, and fan abuse,” Whitlock explains.“Do you remember Ronda Rousey — gets her butt kicked UFC 193, 2015, admits she was suicidal after losing to Holly Holm. Raven Saunders, shot-putter 2016 Rio Olympics — mental health deteriorated, considered suicide. Serena Williams — several occasions depression and later postpartum depression,” he continues.“This is commonplace. I’m not ridiculing; I’m not belittling. I’m throwing it out there for you to consider. These women trying to be men in sports, trying to deal with all the pressure that comes with carrying a lead, negotiations for TV rights, living up to your responsibilities to Nike as a spokesperson, dealing with the social media pushback and feedback and toxicity and negativity that goes along with it,” he says, “they tap out.”Want more from Jason Whitlock?To enjoy more fearless conversations at the crossroads of culture, faith, sports, and comedy with Jason Whitlock, 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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Exclusive: ICE targets illegal alien who allegedly assaulted a pregnant woman
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Exclusive: ICE targets illegal alien who allegedly assaulted a pregnant woman

Immigration and Customs Enforcement is continuing its efforts to deport the most dangerous, violent criminal illegal aliens from the United States.ICE issued an immigration detainer against Noel Gerardo Niz-Marroquin after he was accused of assaulting a pregnant woman in Florida this week, according to a Friday press release from the Department of Homeland Security obtained by Blaze News.'What kind of depraved individual beats on a pregnant woman?'Niz-Marroquin, a 19-year-old illegal alien from Guatemala, illegally crossed the southern border on March 14, 2022, and was subsequently released into the country by the Biden administration, the press release stated.ICE placed a detainer against Niz-Marroquin to ensure that he would “not be released into American communities to terrorize more innocent victims." This action follows his arrest and charges of aggravated battery against a pregnant woman due to an altercation that took place over the weekend.During the incident that resulted in his arrest, the victim stated that she used a kitchen knife to defend herself. She claimed that Niz-Marroquin repeatedly beat her. RELATED: ‘Flood the zone’: ICE fires back at Boston Mayor Wu’s sanctuary defiance Photographer: Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesNiz-Marroquin, who sustained non-life-threatening stab wounds, was treated at a nearby hospital before being transferred to the Martin County Jail. He is being held on a $20,000 bond, according to WOFL. “What kind of depraved individual beats on a pregnant woman?” a senior DHS official stated. “Criminal illegal aliens who endanger and victimize the most vulnerable in our society must never be allowed to remain free to harm American citizens. ICE’s swift actions to issue an arrest detainer ensure this individual is never allowed to terrorize American communities again.” RELATED: Illegal alien accused of killing 3 dodged deportation, stayed in US claiming fear of India; DHS slams Newsom's 'asinine' rule Photographer: Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesThe DHS noted that 70% of ICE arrests are “illegal aliens charged or convicted of a crime in the U.S.”“ICE continues to prioritize the arrest and removal of violent offenders and criminal aliens who pose the greatest threat to public safety,” the press release read. “DHS law enforcement is protecting American communities every day from another senseless tragedy like this taking place in another town, to another family.”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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