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Strange & Paranormal Files
Strange & Paranormal Files
4 w ·Youtube Paranormal

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Scary Videos You Will Replay on Loop
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4 w

President Trump moves forward with major federal layoffs amid the Democrat-led government shutdown
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President Trump moves forward with major federal layoffs amid the Democrat-led government shutdown

President Trump moves forward with major federal layoffs amid the Democrat-led government shutdown
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4 w

Halloween Display In Houston Sparks DHS Outrage
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Halloween Display In Houston Sparks DHS Outrage

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Daily Wire Feed
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4 w

Academy Award-Winning Actress Diane Keaton Dead At 79
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Academy Award-Winning Actress Diane Keaton Dead At 79

Academy Award-winning actress Diane Keaton has passed away at the age of 79. A cause of death was not immediately made known, and her family have asked the public for privacy, according to People. Keaton had a long career on film and television — though her earliest roles were on stage. In 1968, she was cast as an understudy in the Broadway musical “Hair,” and after that, was cast in Woody Allen’s “Play It Again, Sam” in 1969. It was the 1970s when Keaton began her rise to stardom with roles in “The Godfather” and “Annie Hall,” another collaboration with Woody Allen, for which she won the Academy Award for Best Actress. Of working on “The Godfather,” Keaton told People: “I think the kindest thing that someone’s ever done for me … is that I got cast to be in The Godfather and I didn’t even read it. I didn’t know a single thing. … I just was going around auditioning. I think that was amazing for me. And then I had to kind of read the book.” Get 40% off new DailyWire+ annual memberships with code FALL40 at checkout Keaton’s famous filmography included roles in “Crimes of the Heart,” “Father of the Bride,” “The First Wives Club,” and “Something’s Gotta Give,” among many others. She also worked in television, with roles in “Mannix,” and more recently “The Young Pope,” and “Amelia Earhart: The Final Flight,” for which she was nominated for an Emmy Award. Keaton also starred in Justin Berber’s music video for “Ghost,” which was the only music video she ever participated in. Though Keaton never married, she leaves behind her adopted children Dexter and Duke.
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4 w

‘Get Our Troops Paid’: Trump Says He Won’t Let Military Suffer Due To Dem Shutdown
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‘Get Our Troops Paid’: Trump Says He Won’t Let Military Suffer Due To Dem Shutdown

President Donald Trump announced on Saturday that he had found a way to make sure that American service members would be paid on October 15th, in spite of the Democrat-driven government shutdown. Trump made the announcement via his Truth Social platform, saying that he had directed War Secretary Pete Hegseth to take steps to ensure that payment immediately. “Chuck Schumer recently said, ‘Every day gets better’ during their Radical Left Shutdown. I DISAGREE!” Trump began. “If nothing is done, because of ‘Leader’ Chuck Schumer and the Democrats, our Brave Troops will miss the paychecks they are rightfully due on October 15th,” he continued. “That is why I am using my authority, as Commander in Chief, to direct our Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, to use all available funds to get our Troops PAID on October 15th.” Trump went on to say that he had already found a workaround and was pushing forward with it. Get 40% off new DailyWire+ annual memberships with code FALL40 at checkout “We have identified funds to do this, and Secretary Hegseth will use them to PAY OUR TROOPS,” he declared. “I will not allow the Democrats to hold our Military, and the entire Security of our Nation, HOSTAGE, with their dangerous Government Shutdown.” The president concluded with a call for Democrats to vote to reopen the government, saying, “The Radical Left Democrats should OPEN THE GOVERNMENT, and then we can work together to address Healthcare, and many other things that they want to destroy. Thank you for your attention to this matter!” “President Trump delivers for the troops,” War Secretary Pete Hegseth added. Hegseth also praised House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) for making appearances across media outlets to talk about what was really going on. “Unlike @TheDemocrats, this Administration will ensure that no military-dependent child goes without health care or medicine during the Democrat Government Shutdown,” Hegseth said. “Kudos to the @SpeakerJohnson for blanketing the airwaves and giving Americans the facts about the shutdown,” he added. “Shame on Chuck Schumer for voting NO and preventing our brave troops from getting a paycheck.” Unlike @TheDemocrats, this Administration will ensure that no military-dependent child goes without health care or medicine during the Democrat Government Shutdown. Kudos to the @SpeakerJohnson for blanketing the airwaves and giving Americans the facts about the shutdown. Shame… https://t.co/Pq1iloDs7h — Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) October 11, 2025 CNBC host Joe Kernen addressed the shutdown with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) days earlier, arguing that Democrats were effectively trying to use a government shutdown to undo duly-passed legislation because they didn’t agree with it.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
4 w

Kate Middleton Shares Sweet Sign Of Support With Fellow Brit Victoria Beckham
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Kate Middleton Shares Sweet Sign Of Support With Fellow Brit Victoria Beckham

At 43 years old, Kate Middleton is the perfect age to have grown up a fan of the Spice Girls. Those brazen Brits had the world in a chokehold in the late 1990s and early 2000s. If you didn’t have a favorite and know all the words to Wannabe, were you even alive? Victoria Beckham, lovingly nicknamed Posh Spice, had the perfect pout and a bob that every girl adored. At the height of her fame, Victoria married David Beckham, and the pair raised four children. During that time, she also became a famous designer. On October 9, Netflix launched a 3-part documentary called Victoria Beckham. That same day, Kate Middleton gave a subtle nod to Victoria Beckham as a sign of solidarity. View this post on Instagram A post shared by The Prince and Princess of Wales (@princeandprincessofwales) Kate Middleton Wore A Suit From Victoria Beckham’s Fashion Line According to People, Kate Middleton donned a Victoria Beckham suit during a visit to Home-Start in Oxford on October 9. Posh Spice herself attended a premiere of the series on October 8 and shared her thoughts. “It’s taken me this process to really be proud of what I’ve achieved and to realize finally that I am enough,” she said. The Prince and Princess of Wales shared photos of Kate’s visit on Instagram. The post was signed with a C, indicating it was personally signed by Kate. “Attention is the most basic form of love. In our increasingly distracted world, it has never been more important to hold on to what truly connects us – to ourselves, to one another, and to the world around us,” she shared. “Thank you to Home-Start and the Rose Hill Community Centre in Oxford for today and for all you do to nurture strong connections in the community. C” Followers pointed out how lovely Kate Middleton looked in her Victoria Beckham suit. “Princess Catherine is beautiful in every colour but this one particularly highlights out more her warm energy!” A royal enthusiast wrote. This story’s featured image is by Kirsty Wigglesworth – WPA Pool/Getty Images. The post Kate Middleton Shares Sweet Sign Of Support With Fellow Brit Victoria Beckham appeared first on InspireMore.
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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
4 w

Zohran Mamdani Chased Out Of NYC Park By Protester Slamming Him As An ‘Antisemite’
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Zohran Mamdani Chased Out Of NYC Park By Protester Slamming Him As An ‘Antisemite’

Security personnel intervened to escort the candidate away from the scene.
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4 w

President Trump To Direct Hegseth To Pay Troops Amid Shutdown
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President Trump To Direct Hegseth To Pay Troops Amid Shutdown

'If nothing is done, because of 'Leader' Chuck Schumer and the Democrats, our Brave Troops will miss the paychecks they are rightfully due on October 15th'
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4 w

How to Win a War
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How to Win a War

It has been a long time since a Western country has won a war. It can now be said that Israel has won its war on Iran and its proxies in the Middle East, with the assistance of the United States—and, in particular, President Donald Trump. On Oct. 7, 2023, the genocidal terror group Hamas invaded Israel’s borders and killed 1,200 Israelis, mostly Jewish; they abducted 250 Israelis and took them back to their terror tunnel hellholes. Those tunnels, as well as Hamas’ vast arsenal of rockets, grenades and small arms, had been built up over the course of 20 years, with the support and funding of nations in the region including Iran, Qatar and Turkey. That terrible day, Israel didn’t just face down Hamas. It faced down a similarly genocidal and far better-armed Iranian terror proxy on its northern border in Hezbollah, which had hundreds of thousands of rockets, tens of thousands of which were armed with targeting technology; over the course of the next months, Israel’s north would be emptied of civilians due to barrages of drones and rockets sent from Lebanese territory. Israel also faced down a continuing terror threat from Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Judea and Samaria, the so-called West Bank; Syria, which was used as a thoroughfare for Iranian arms for Hezbollah; Iran-backed Iraqi terror groups; the Houthis in Yemen; and the Iranian government, which wasn’t merely spreading terrorism but pursuing a nuclear weapon. Two years later, the world has turned upside down. Israel has decimated Hamas, killing its entire top leadership from Gaza to Iran. Israel has destroyed Hezbollah’s efficacy and killed its terror master Hassan Nasrallah—and its attacks on Hezbollah have been so effective that the Assad regime in Syria completely collapsed, with a little push from the Turkish-backed terror group HTS. Judea and Samaria have been quieted by the work of the IDF. Iranian proxies in Iraq have gone silent, too. The Houthis in Yemen have been bombed thoroughly—and while they remain a nuisance, they are not an existential threat. And Iran’s nuclear program has been set back years if not decades, thanks to the courage of the Israeli Air Force and a timely and brave intervention from Trump. And now, Trump has brokered an unthinkable deal: the release of the final 20 live Israeli hostages, with Israel maintaining a secure posture in the Gaza Strip; the possibility of a non-Hamas future in Gaza, supported by regional allies; the even greater possibility of future Abraham Accords with countries like Saudi Arabia and Indonesia. So, how did this happen? It happened the same way things always happen in the Middle East: The decisionmakers ignored the conventional wisdom. The conventional wisdom said that military action could not guarantee security. That wasn’t just wrong; it was catastrophically wrong: It was military action that took out the supporting pillars beneath Hamas’ feet. The conventional wisdom said that the United States ought to play a peculiar neutral role between Israel and its genocidal enemies. That wasn’t just wrong; it was idiotically wrong: The Trump administration’s open support for Israel’s military victory led to actual victory. The conventional wisdom said that threatening to kill terror leaders abroad would be conflagrationist. That, too, was wrong: It was Israel’s willingness to kill terror masters in Iran and Qatar that led to Qatar and Turkey deciding to press for Hamas’ ouster, with a carrots-and-sticks approach led by Trump. For understanding the Middle East better than all the so-called experts—and the isolationists in his own party, who wanted to reject Trump’s tempered and rational Peace Through Strength in favor of Cowardice Through Catastrophism—Trump undoubtedly deserves the Nobel Peace Prize. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who soldiered through withering criticism both at home and abroad for the great crime of seeking victory over those who would destroy his country, deserves extraordinary credit as well. The greatest credit goes to the Israeli people, who mobilized in an unprecedented way to defend their nation and their civilization—and to the American people, who provided Israel the support it needed to finally win, both in terms of material and by electing Donald J. Trump president of the United States. Victory is indeed possible. It just requires the desire to win, the willingness to win and the perspicacity to dismiss those who promote either a starry-eyed millenarianism or a benighted conventional wisdom that fails every time it’s tried. COPYRIGHT 2025 CREATORS.COM. We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of The Daily Signal. The post How to Win a War appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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The Blaze Media Feed
4 w

Birth rates are falling — and the experts still don't get it
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Birth rates are falling — and the experts still don't get it

When considering the issues of low birth rates and population decline, it's essential to differentiate between those who are pro-life and those who are pro-natalist.While both have concluded that people around the world should have more children, their reasoning is almost diametrically opposed to each other.Defining termsPro-lifers, often informed by Christian morality, believe in the dignity and value of each human life. They value the virtues of the nuclear family, believing it brings out the best in parents and their children. Their commitment to life and family means they vigorously oppose all forms of abortion and, by extension, in-vitro fertilization, surrogate parenting, and divorce.In the pro-life view, lower birth rates are largely the result of cultural and moral decadence, which can be reversed only through a full reformation of social values and institutions.By contrast, pro-natalists tend to be strict utilitarians, arguing for more children for primarily economic and political reasons. They worry about the public pensions going unsupported, schools emptying, and whole political systems collapsing due to depopulation. They fear a technological regression, a contraction in the markets, and even a revival of provincialism (or de-globalization) in a world with fewer people.Unlike pro-lifers, they have no problems with employing artificial means of reproduction, legalizing abortion, and allowing any adult, regardless of background, to adopt and raise children for whatever reasons. In the minds of most pro-natalists, depopulation can be averted through twisting the right dials of social policy and letting go of the traditional expectations around parenting.'No future is more likely than that people worldwide choose to have too few children to replace their own generation.'Put more crudely, pro-lifers tend to be conservative and pro-natalists tend to be non-conservatives (which would include libertarians and moderates in addition to progressives).Then, of course, there are the anti-natalists (usually on the political and cultural left), who believe overpopulation is a problem and oppose having more children. They believe a lower population will improve the environment and the quality of the life for those lucky enough to be alive.'After the Spike'Understanding these distinctions is key to understanding the latest best-selling book on depopulation, "After the Spike: Population, Progress, and the Case for People" by economists Dean Spears and Michael Geruso. This is a book by pro-natalists written explicitly for anti-natalists.As such, the two writers end up spending more time on what they are not arguing (i.e., pro-life claims about morality and culture) than what they are actually arguing (i.e., the pro-natalist concerns about depopulation).Not only does this approach shut out a large group of potentially sympathetic readers wanting to know more about the issue, but it also fatally undermines their main argument for stabilizing the population. Even though they use the language of anti-natalists and speak to their concerns, it’s doubtful they would even persuade the target audience since their claims are so qualified and open.However, this is not necessarily the fault Spears and Geruso, but the presuppositions of utilitarianism itself, which prove to be wholly inadequate for addressing the challenge of depopulation.Math over meaningThese problems begin early in the book. As the book’s title suggests, the writers mainly frame depopulation as a simple math problem. They explain how the world population will peak or “spike” in the coming decades and then swiftly drop over the course of a few generations right afterward.Their “big claim” in the first two chapters is expressed in clinical terms: “No future is more likely than that people worldwide choose to have too few children to replace their own generation. Over the long run, this would cause population decline.”Somehow proving this “big claim” takes up nearly a fifth of the whole book. Perhaps they do not want to be confused with Bible-thumping pro-lifers who lack their credentials and supposedly rarely bother with hard numbers. That said, pro-lifers would not deny the claim that depopulation is imminent — birth rates are below replacement, so yes, deaths will outnumber births and result in depopulation — but the anti-natalist crowd evidently struggles to accept this basic fact.If so, this popular denial might be an interesting potential factor in depopulation to explore further, but the writers never go there. Instead, they review the usual anti-natalist arguments made in favor of depopulation: It’s better for the planet; it’s better for women; and it’s better for conserving resources.In most cases, debunking these claims is as simple as looking at available social science data. It turns out that the world is cleaner, more equitable, and in less danger of running out of natural resources now with a larger population than it was in the recent past with a smaller population.RELATED: Trump's baby bonus won't work — but we already know the real solution Kukurund/iStock/Getty Images PlusAgain, this point is fairly easy to grasp, but not if a person casts human beings as irredeemable parasites. Spears and Geruso thus spend much of their time showing that human beings can generate new ideas and do useful things. Yes, a person represents another mouth to feed, but he or she also represents another set of hands who can produce food or anything else.This means that humanity can clean up their messes, come up with systems that better support women and minorities, and find better ways to extract and use natural resources.It follows that without these extra people, many innovations would never materialize, social progress would likely stagnate or go backward, and there would be too few workers to support today’s high standard of living. To illustrate how bad conditions could become, the writers bring up the fact that “small towns hardly ever have a great Ethiopian place and a great Indian place and a great Korean place. But big cities often do.”If the prospect of ghost towns, lonely elderly people dying in squalor, and a full-scale devolution into a pre-industrial age fails to raise any alarms, then maybe the loss of one’s favorite greasy spoon will do it.Values without rootsAlthough Dean and Geruso carefully avoid moral questions throughout the book — it's taken for granted that abortion is good, modern feminism has zero downsides, and human-caused climate change is a critical matter — they make their one moral claim in favor of having children in the most generic tautology they can muster: “More good is better.”In other words, a bigger overall population means a bigger number of worthwhile lives. But what makes a life worthwhile? True to utilitarian philosophy, it's all about material comforts and basic necessities.For those who argue that this makes an insufficient distinction about the moral worth (or worthlessness) of each life and the surrounding context in which a life is lived, they will have to settle for the writers’ quantifications and graphs.Once Spears and Geruso establish that people are good and that depopulation is bad, they move on to possible solutions. Unfortunately, nothing seems to work. Compelling people to have children (as Romania did under Nicolae Ceausescu) or offering money and additional maternity leave (as the Swedish government has done) have done little to fix the sliding birth rates.The main problem seems to be that women will have fewer children if the opportunity costs of parenting are too high. As the writers declare in their inimitable prosaic style, “Spending time on parenting means giving up something. Because the world has improved around us, that ‘something’ is better than it used to be.” When men and women find fulfillment in their careers and self-indulgence, they have less interest in sacrificing this for the sake of having children.While this assertion aligns with their value-neutral utilitarian premises, Spears and Caruso are completely uninterested in countries that still have high birth rates, like those in sub-Saharan Africa.'Change needs vision and values and commitments before detailed plans matter at all.'Would it offend their readers to suggest that these countries have high birth rates because there are relatively few opportunity costs that exist because these countries are less developed? Is there something to be said about traditional gender roles and the high regard given to parenthood and children in these cultures? What about the religious practices of these places?For unspecified reasons, these obvious questions about population trends are scrupulously ignored.Where science failsInstead, the writers insist that there is no solution to the depopulation bomb set to go off after the spike: “No one has such a solution. The challenge is still too new.” For the time being, people need to be made aware of the difficulties that await them and consider ways they can organize and effect change.In other words, it’s a weak ending to a weak argument in favor of a weak position. But even this could be forgiven if the book overall were interesting, but it isn’t. By avoiding moral questions, ignoring cultural factors, and rejecting all speculation, "After the Spike" is boring, basic, and dry.Still, Spears and Geruso perform an important service by demonstrating the limits of pro-natalism. While it's perfectly reasonable to be worried about the global birth dearth and to try to use the scientific method to fix this problem, the formation of families and communities is a fundamentally human matter that largely transcends the scope of the sciences.Although graphs can illustrate the superficial reality of declining populations, it will take the humanities disciplines to understand and effectively address this reality on a deeper level. Moreover, it will require letting go of progressive priorities and returning to certain beliefs and practices that made parenthood in the past more appealing than it is now.This may be hard pill for pro-natalists to swallow, but as Spears and Geruso themselves conclude, “Change needs vision and values and commitments before detailed plans matter at all.”This "vision and values” just happen to be pro-life — not pro-natalist.
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