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Daily Caller Feed
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38 m

Newt Gingrich Pinpoints Exact Date Next Year When He Says Americans Will Feel ‘Trump Boom’
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Newt Gingrich Pinpoints Exact Date Next Year When He Says Americans Will Feel ‘Trump Boom’

'biggest issues in the economy aren't groceries'
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Reclaim The Net Feed
Reclaim The Net Feed
39 m

House Lawmakers Unite in Moral Panic, Advancing 18 “Kids’ Online Safety” Bills That Expand Surveillance and Weaken Privacy
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House Lawmakers Unite in Moral Panic, Advancing 18 “Kids’ Online Safety” Bills That Expand Surveillance and Weaken Privacy

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The House Energy & Commerce Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade spent its latest markup hearing on Thursday proving that if there’s one bipartisan passion left in Washington, it’s moral panic about the internet. Eighteen separate bills on “kids’ online safety” were debated, amended, and then promptly advanced to the full committee. Not one was stopped. Ranking Member Jan Schakowsky (D) set the tone early, describing the bills as “terribly inadequate” and announcing she was “furious.” She complained that the package “leaves out the big issues that we are fighting for.” If it’s not clear, Schakowsky is complaining that the already-controversial bills don’t go far enough. Eighteen bills now move forward, eight of which hinge on some form of age verification, which would likely require showing a government ID. Three: App Store Accountability (H.R. 3149), the SCREEN Act (H.R. 1623), and the Parents Over Platforms Act (H.R. 6333), would require it outright. The other five rely on what lawmakers call the “actual knowledge” or “willful disregard” standards, which sound like legalese but function as a dare to platforms: either know everyone’s age, or risk a lawsuit. The safest corporate response, of course, would be to treat everyone as a child until they’ve shown ID. Rep. Frank Pallone (D) was pleased that the Safer GAMING Act (H.R. 6265) has become bipartisan. The bill targets online video games and would give the FTC authority to investigate or sue companies that “act in willful disregard” of a user’s age. Pallone also raised concerns that KOSA and COPPA 2.0, not because of the surveillance and censorship concerns but because they could “forever close the door on greater state protection for kids,” pointing out that they could override even stronger state laws. Even while praising some of the bills, Pallone offered the bare minimum of concern about “bills that mandate third-party access to children’s data or require an adult or kid to provide additional sensitive data like a government ID or biometrics before they can access content, send a message, or download an app.” Rep. Yvette Clarke (D) dismissed the whole bundle as “purely lip service and the weakest attempts at keeping people safe online.” Rep. Darren Soto (D), meanwhile, cited Florida’s own social media law as a model, praising its ban on anyone under 14 and parental consent rules for those under 16. That law is currently under heavy legal scrutiny. Rep. Neal Dunn (R) promoted the Safe Messaging for Kids Act with a bit of old-fashioned frontier imagery, saying his bill “puts an end to this Wild West sort of situation.” The bill’s focus is on “disappearing messages,” which Dunn thinks predators depend on. In reality, the legislation would likely mean platforms keeping more records for longer. Rep. Gus Bilirakis (D) started like a man eager to show his listening credentials. “To the parents who have shared their stories, we heard you, and we will continue to hear you, and these changes were a direct result of your testimony to us,” he said. That declaration came after Republicans reworked bill language, driven more by emotion than logic, following what they described as a week of heartfelt talks with parents. The result is a package stripped of one of its more contested parts, the so-called “duty of care” requirement that forced platforms to “exercise reasonable care” to prevent harm to minors. In its place, the new text simply asks companies to “establish and enforce reasonable policies.” Democrats immediately objected, arguing that the weaker standard effectively legalizes corporate shrugs. Their frustration grew sharper over the inclusion of language preempting state laws. For Democrats, this meant years of local experimentation in online safety could be erased by a one-size-fits-all federal fix. That same issue has already shadowed the Children and Teens’ Online Privacy Protection Act, which would expand COPPA to cover teenagers under 17. The state-versus-federal tension has become one of the defining battles in digital regulation, a clash between lawmakers who want to lead and those who want to control the leaders. Sen. Ed Markey, the Senate sponsor of COPPA 2.0, released a statement condemning the House version’s retreat. “Today’s partisan vote on COPPA 2.0 is further evidence that House Republicans have unnecessarily set back a multi-year, bipartisan process to protect children and teens online,” he said, calling the House edits a “weakening of COPPA 2.0 on behalf of Big Tech.” He urged Republicans to “return to the strong, bipartisan language in the Senate bill.” Rep. Kathy Castor (D) tried to keep the tone conciliatory. “I didn’t come in with my hair on fire today,” she said, before explaining that she wanted to restore the “strong, bipartisan version” that previously cleared the committee. Her call for “intestinal fortitude” to protect families was meant to rally cooperation, but it mostly highlighted how far the process has drifted from unity. Outside the committee room, Joann Bogard of ParentsSOS, whose son Mason died after reportedly participating in a online “choking challenge,” issued a warning of her own. She thanked lawmakers for listening but said, “If the House version of KOSA is not significantly strengthened, we will have no choice but to oppose it.” Parent groups like hers have become a driving force behind the legislative rush, their moral authority often serving as both shield and sword for policymakers eager to be seen as responsive. Bogard’s remarks also pointed to the broader political logic at work. The more Big Tech resists, the stronger the call for something resembling Australia’s new approach, which simply bans kids under sixteen from major platforms. That model, now in testing, has become the new fantasy of frustrated lawmakers who prefer a clean prohibition. As the subcommittee sent its full slate of bills forward, it did so under a familiar political spell, the conviction that a louder promise to “protect kids” can drown out every unresolved contradiction. Instead of fearing government surveillance, they’re demanding it, pushing for legislation that would make more data collection inevitable. Now that all 18 bills have advanced, the full House Energy & Commerce Committee will take its turn to edit, approve, or reject them. If approved, the next stage would be the committee report and eventual consideration on the House floor. The odds of at least some of these bills becoming law are rising, mostly because, free speech and privacy be damned, no one in Washington wants to be seen voting against “protecting kids.” If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post House Lawmakers Unite in Moral Panic, Advancing 18 “Kids’ Online Safety” Bills That Expand Surveillance and Weaken Privacy appeared first on Reclaim The Net.
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
39 m

The Bureaucratic Pace of the American Defense Industry
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The Bureaucratic Pace of the American Defense Industry

The Bureaucratic Pace of the American Defense Industry
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NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
39 m

Today's Highlights: What MRC's Media Watchdogs Are Saying
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Today's Highlights: What MRC's Media Watchdogs Are Saying

MRC Watchdogs churn out breaking news on a daily basis. Don't miss Today's Highlights, where you can keep up with the top MRC content, whether it's the latest study on media bias, a glaring omission from the elitist media, or how the Big Tech companies are serving up the same leftist spin as the media.  Top Stories: 1) CBS Finally Names Tony Dokoupil the New Anchor of the ‘CBS Evening News’ 2) Labeling Imbalance Persists at PBS After Trump Rescinded Federal Funding 3) Biden’s Immigration Debacle Is the Media’s, Too 4) Apple News Shows ONLY 1 Right-Leaning Outlet Out of 560 Articles Throughout November   1) CBS Finally Names Tony Dokoupil the New Anchor of the ‘CBS Evening News’ CBS's Long-Overdue Ditch of Liberal Smugness: After two flops with anchors John Dickerson and Maurice DuBois—who tanked ratings with their elitist, left-leaning spin in under a year—CBS is finally admitting defeat and handing the reins to Dokoupil, a proven performer who won't treat viewers like rubes. Dokoupil's Wake-Up Call from the Left: Starting his career in Obama-era echo chambers like Newsweek and MSNBC, Dokoupil has evolved into a centrist bulldog—grilling Ta-Nehisi Coates on anti-Semitism and defending Israel post-Hamas attacks—proving even network insiders can rediscover journalistic spine. Weiss's Bold Bet on Trust Over Bias: With Bari Weiss at the helm, this hire signals CBS's panic to claw back from rock-bottom media credibility by embracing "old-school" accountability; if Dokoupil delivers on hard questions to power (not just pals), Evening News could actually compete again. 2) Labeling Imbalance Persists at PBS After Trump Rescinded Federal Funding MRC analysts counted up the “left-wing” and “right-wing” style ideological labels used by anchors, reporters, and contributors on the PBS News Hour regarding American politics from December 1, 2024 through November 30, 2025. PBS News Weekend programs were not included. PBS staff used 44 variations of "far-right" labels and only 4 of "far-left" labels, a ratio of 11:1. PBS staff also used mere "right-wing" and "left-wing" labels at a disparity of 17-12. So overall, the labeling disparity was 61-16. The figures remained uneven after President Trump signed the bill rescinding federal funding from PBS and NPR on July 24, with 11 variations of “far-right” labels and 2 of “far-left” ones. Overall, the post-July 24 labeling disparity was 17-9. (Note: Coverage of the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk began September 10, 2025, which may have skewed the post-July 24 raw figures somewhat toward balance.) 3) Biden’s Immigration Debacle Is the Media’s, Too Biden's Ideological Folly Ignored Warnings, Unleashing Chaos: Despite pre-election memos from top aides in August 2020 warning of a massive border surge from lax enforcement and pent-up demand, the administration's partisan push flooded the U.S. with millions of illegal immigrants—proving ideology and incompetence trumped common sense, as admitted by former ICE official Deborah Fleischaker: "I don’t think we ever recovered." Mainstream Media's Delayed "Postgame" Coverage Betrayed the Public: Outlets like The New York Times buried the immigration crisis for years—treating it as yesterday's news only in late 2025—mirroring their silence on Biden's senility, leaving voters in the dark while conservative alarms rang unanswered and enabling Democratic denial until electoral disaster struck. Abbott's Busing Genius Exposed Blue-State Hypocrisy: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott's strategic transport of tens of thousands of migrants to sanctuary cities like New York and Denver shattered Democrats' plan to dump the crisis on red states, forcing elite voters to face the consequences and marking the turning point where Biden's team lost the immigration debate for good. 4) Apple News Shows ONLY 1 Right-Leaning Outlet Out of 560 Articles Throughout November Apple News Delivers Stark Ideological Imbalance: Throughout November 2025, Apple News showcased only one right-leaning outlet (The Telegraph, a British source) in its top 20 daily stories—out of 560 articles reviewed—exposing a near-total blackout on conservative perspectives in a platform reaching millions of users. Major U.S. Conservative Voices Silenced Despite Popularity: No prominent American right-leaning outlets like Fox News, Daily Mail, or New York Post cracked the top 20, even though they rank among the highest-traffic U.S. news sites—proving Apple News prioritizes curation over consumer demand. Left-Leaning Dominance Floods the Feed: Radical leftist sources like Vox, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, and Vice overwhelmed the top slots, alongside staples like The Washington Post, NBC News, and Al Jazeera—turning Apple News into an echo chamber for progressive narratives. Even Token Conservatism Is Locked Away: The solitary right-leaning article was buried behind an Apple News+ paywall, denying free users access and underscoring Big Tech's agenda to marginalize dissenting views—time to demand transparency and fairness for all.  
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NewsBusters Feed
39 m

Morning Joe Rides To CNN's Defense Over Trump Comments
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Morning Joe Rides To CNN's Defense Over Trump Comments

"Does Macy's Tell Gimbels?" Gimbels is no more, but back in the day, it was a fierce Macy's rival, and the phrase stood for the notion that competitors don't help each other. But it seems that for MS NOW's Morning Joe, liberal-media solidarity trumps competitive instincts. Today's episode devoted a long segment to defending CNN against President Trump's critical comments about the network, and his desire to see CNN sold to new ownership. Joe Scarborough was fiercely critical of Trump telling a CNN reporter that she works for the Democrats, and that CNN is "basically an arm of the Democrat party."  "Preposterous," sputtered Scarborough! But can anyone honestly doubt it? Here at NewsBusters, we document--day in and day out--CNN's slavish parroting of the Democrat party line. Let's have a look at some recent NewsBusters headlines demonstrating CNN's bias. Amid Chuckles, CNN Dumps Out Early From 'FIFA Peace Prize' Presentation To Trump CNN's Tapper, NPR's Martin Pamper Ilhan Omar, Skip Her Connections to Huge Somali Fraud OOPS: Jake Tapper Claims Black Pipe Bomb Suspect Is a ‘White Man’ CNN's Hunt And Guest Ignore Tom Cotton's Military Service During 'Ship Strike' Segment CNN Sports Reporter Compares U.S. ICE Operations To Russia and Qatar CNN's Cornish: Dems Can Win In Places Like Tennessee By Running to The Left of Mamdani! Case closed! And, contrary to Morning Joe's claim, Trump isn't trying to "destroy" CNN—he'd simply like to see it move into more fair 'n balanced hands. Funny, we don't remember Morning Joe moaning when in 2009, Brian Stelter [!] reported that Obama communications director Anita Dunn said of Fox News [emphasis added]: “We’re going to treat them the way we would treat an opponent. As they are undertaking a war against Barack Obama and the White House, we don’t need to pretend that this is the way that legitimate news organizations behave.” And in September 2009, "When the White House booked Mr. Obama on a round robin of Sunday morning talk shows, it skipped Fox and called it an “ideological outlet,” leading the “Fox News Sunday” anchor Chris Wallace to appear on Bill O’Reilly’s prime-time show and call the administration “the biggest bunch of crybabies I have dealt with in my 30 years in Washington." Here's the transcript. MS NOW Morning Joe 12/11/25 6:10 am ET MIKA BRZEZINSKI: And President Trump is inserting himself even further into the current drama surrounding the sale of Warner Bros. Discovery, saying its cable network, CNN, should be sold off as part of any deal.  PRESIDENT TRUMP: I think CNN should be sold, because I think the people that are running CNN right now are either corrupt or incompetent. I think any deal, it should be guaranteed and certain that CNN is part of it.  . . .  CNN REPORTER: Mr. President, has Secretary Hegseth told you why he hasn't released the video of the second strike?  TRUMP: No, he hasn't told me. I thought that issue was dead. I'm surprised you're bringing it up. You must be CNN.  CNN REPORTER: Lawmakers are still talking about it on the Hill. TRUMP: Are you CNN? I don't know about lawmakers? Which lawmakers? Are you CNN?  CNN REPORTER: I am with CNN. The lawmakers are still talking about it on the Hill.  TRUMP: Well, I'll tell you, I don't know about lawmakers. Which lawmakers? I mean, the people you work for: the Democrats? You know you work for the Democrats, don't you? You're basically an arm of the Democrat party.  JOE SCARBOROUGH: Yeah, you know, it's so outrageous what he does there. And what a bubble he's put around himself where a basic question that every reporter is asking suddenly is an excuse for him to strike out at a young reporter and say, nobody's talking about that anymore. Again, when everybody is, you must be with CNN. You work for Democrats.  And again, it's preposterous. The question is, what are the regulators going to do? What are Republicans in Congress going to do? What are the courts going to do? Are they going to allow a president to destroy a news organization simply because he doesn't like what they say about him? Because that's the direction he's headed.  . . .  JONATHAN LEMIRE: This idea to try to push, try to hijack CNN. The Wall Street Journal has reported that David Ellison has promised the White House that if he indeed does take control of Warner Bros. Discovery, that he would make lineup changes to CNN, like replace the leadership there, and their, we presume, new on-air talent as well, new shows. Because we know President Trump doesn't like some of the voices on that network, which, again, in itself is a gross overreach . . . It is a tell, as Willie said. He lashes out at reporters. There's been a whole bunch lately, we should note, mostly female reporters, and there is a sense here in that building that things are off track. 
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
40 m

Senator Says If Pete Hegseth Just Wants to Blow S**t Up He Should Play a Video Game
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Senator Says If Pete Hegseth Just Wants to Blow S**t Up He Should Play a Video Game

Senator Says If Pete Hegseth Just Wants to Blow S**t Up He Should Play a Video Game
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Twitchy Feed
40 m

Gavin Newsom Finally Says the Quiet Part Out Loud: Free Healthcare for Illegals ... Heck Yeah, I’m Proud
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Gavin Newsom Finally Says the Quiet Part Out Loud: Free Healthcare for Illegals ... Heck Yeah, I’m Proud

Gavin Newsom Finally Says the Quiet Part Out Loud: Free Healthcare for Illegals ... Heck Yeah, I’m Proud
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Twitchy Feed
40 m

Author Hears a Lot of Canadians Are Canceling Their Trips to the US
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Author Hears a Lot of Canadians Are Canceling Their Trips to the US

Author Hears a Lot of Canadians Are Canceling Their Trips to the US
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NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
40 m

CDC Vaccine Panel Chair Fired From His Practice: Wife
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CDC Vaccine Panel Chair Fired From His Practice: Wife

Dr. Kirk Milhoan - the newly installed chair of the vaccine advisory panel that moved to scale back infant hepatitis B vaccination guidelines - has reportedly been fired from his pediatric cardiology practice because of the committee's position.
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NEWSMAX Feed
40 m

Trump: Indiana Senate Leader Will Lose GOP Primary
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Trump: Indiana Senate Leader Will Lose GOP Primary

President Donald Trump said he expects Rodric Bray, Republican leader in the Indiana Senate, to lose a primary after the chamber did not pass a measure that would redraw the state's congressional maps.
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