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5 w

MSNBC’s Downplays BOMBSHELL: Biden FBI Spying on Republican Senators
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MSNBC’s Downplays BOMBSHELL: Biden FBI Spying on Republican Senators

During Attorney General Pam Bondi’s hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday, Senator Josh Hawley bewailed the newly unearthed fact of President Biden’s FBI investigating himself and eight other Republican members of Congress. MSNBC’s Ana Cabrera Reports took the opportunity to fact-check and downplay the importance of the Arctic Frost operation, almost making it out to be routine. Hawley repeatedly called the investigation as phone “tapping,” which Ana Cabrera pooh-poohed: It wasn't listening in to any content of conversations that they had. In fact, this is according to Senator Ron Johnson, also a Republican, as he was among those revealing what they had learned. He said that the information was who was called, date, time, length of call. So again, it was not a phone tap. That, according to what’s publicly known thus far, was true. But Cabrera didn’t think it enough to purely set the record straight, and pushed MSNBC legal analyst Catherine Christian into characterizing Republicans’ rightful concern as mere partisanship: CABRERA: Catherine, is this revelation something to be concerned about? Or do you see this strictly as political posturing from Josh Hawley, this line of questioning? CHRISTIAN: It's probably political posturing. It makes sense that the Special Counsel would want to know who these particular Senators called and who called them during January 4th to January 7th, 2021. But it was concerning. The fact that the investigation wasn’t opened until over a year afterwards (by a former agent who may have had a hand in covering up Hunter’s laptop from Hell) proved Biden’s FBI wasn’t singularly interested in apolitical justice. If Cabrera was actually interested in the usefulness of Congressional hearings, she should have offered a solution. The hearings had largely been reduced to partisan virtue-signaling. Perhaps they should’ve been kept behind closed-doors, or at the very least not broadcasted. Cabrera then tried to normalize the Arctic Frost investigation: And a reminder, too, as he frames this as political weaponization of the DOJ under the Biden administration. Jack Smith was a Special Counsel appointed by Merrick Garland to create separation with the Biden Justice Department at the time. And is that an appropriate way for these types of investigations to be handled? And do you see it differently than what we are seeing under the current administration? The Arctic Frost investigation was both illegitimately opened and expanded into targeting numerous right-wing politicians and organizations, even before it was handed over to Jack Smith.     The probe wasn’t simply looking into any potential wrongdoing surrounding the 2020 presidential election. It was an excuse to surveil all political opposition in hopes of launching lawfare campaigns. Christian continued to portray the revelation as standard procedure: It's actually — it's very normal to, as a investigation that this was, to subpoena, it's usually a subpoena, to get phone records of who called who as part of the investigation, particularly for a timeline […] So it was very — it's not out of the ordinary, and particularly during that time period. If Senator Graham said it was going on for months and months and months, then you could be concerned. But since it was limited to that period of the indictment, it makes sense. The recent uncovering was a small piece of a larger and much more damning puzzle, one many have suspected existed but was now coming to light. But MSNBC wanted you to believe that Republicans were overreacting. The transcript is below. Click "expand" read: MSNBC’s Ana Cabrera Reports October 7, 2025 11:17:00 a.m. EDT ANA CABRERA: Okay, we're just going to pull out for a quick second to do a fact check, because Senator Hawley keeps on bringing up this idea that the FBI tapped their phones related to the Jack Smith investigation into January 6th and 2020 election interference. What we have learned, and the facts of the matter are, that the FBI did request phone logs or data related to a number of senators, GOP Senators who had communications on that day in January 6th. And what they asked for was not any information related to a phone tap. It wasn't listening in to any content of conversations that they had. In fact, this is according to Senator Ron Johnson, also a Republican, as he was among those revealing what they had learned. He said that the information was who was called, date, time, length of call. So again, it was not a phone tap. Catherine, is this revelation something to be concerned about? Or do you see this strictly as political posturing from Josh Hawley, this line of questioning? CATHERINE CHRISTIAN: It's probably political posturing. It makes sense that the Special Counsel would want to know who these particular Senators called and who called them during January 4th to January 7th, 2021. And Senator Graham used those dates because that was part of the now-dismissed indictment of obstructing that Congressional proceeding, the certification of the election. So they were investigating who did President — then-President Trump speak to? Who, all the other people who — again, the indictments now dismissed — that's related to that. So that's a very particular time period. And there was an indictment. It's now dismissed. But I'm glad you clarified. Tap means listening to phone conversations. That's not what happened here. It was, who did the senator call? Who called the senator? For how long and what date? CABRERA: And a reminder, too, as he frames this as political weaponization of the DOJ under the Biden administration. Jack Smith was a Special Counsel appointed by Merrick Garland to create separation with the Biden Justice Department at the time. And is that an appropriate way for these types of investigations to be handled? And do you see it differently than what we are seeing under the current administration? CHRISTIAN: It's actually — it's very normal to, as a investigation that this was, to subpoena, it's usually a subpoena, to get phone records of who called who as part of the investigation, particularly for a timeline. Particularly if you have a confidential source saying, “I was in the room when this person called that one.” Well, let's find out if Ana Cabrera actually made a phone call at that time, and to the person that this confidential source said he did. So it was very — it's not out of the ordinary, and particularly during that time period. If Senator Graham said it was going on for months and months and months, then you could be concerned. But since it was limited to that period of the indictment, it makes sense.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
5 w

‘The View’ praises Pope Leo’s controversial pro-life remarks
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‘The View’ praises Pope Leo’s controversial pro-life remarks

After the pope’s controversial comments on abortion — where he aimed his ire at pro-lifers and pointed out what he seemed to believe was hypocrisy surrounding their stance on the death penalty — those on the left are feeling emboldened.Especially the women on “The View.”“You know, I think he’s right. If you are pro-choice and pro-death penalty, you’re at least consistent,” Joy Behar said in response to Pope Leo XIV’s statement.“As a lifelong Catholic, I am against abortion. I’m also against the death penalty. I’m also against guns. I’m also against the starvation of children. I’m a humanitarian above all because I believe that all life is precious,” Sunny Hostin replied.“That’s why I find there is a hypocrisy with certain Christians who are pro-life, but they will pull that electric chair switch. They are pro-life, but they have their AR-15s in their cabinet. They are pro-life, but they don’t mind immigrant families being torn from each other. They are pro-life, but they don’t care about little children’s subsidies being taken away from them. That is not pro-life,” she added.“Let’s just take a quick survey,” BlazeTV host Pat Gray says on “Pat Gray Unleashed.” “For or against the starvation of children?”“I’ve got to be for that, okay. Because we’re evil Republicans,” he says.“I just can’t take this line of reasoning that has no reason involved with it,” Gray continues, noting that the death penalty and abortion aren’t even close to the same.“It boggles my mind how you can draw that equivalency,” he adds.Want more from Pat Gray?To enjoy more of Pat's biting analysis and signature wit as he restores common sense to a senseless world, 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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The Blaze Media Feed
5 w

Democratic senator accuses Trump administration of faking anti-ICE rioting
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Democratic senator accuses Trump administration of faking anti-ICE rioting

As protests against immigration enforcement turn to violence across the U.S., one Democratic senator is accusing the Trump administration of faking rioting out of authoritarian impulse.Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon made the claims Wednesday while speaking to reporters at the U.S. Capitol even as the administration ramped up law enforcement efforts to aid ICE agents and facilities under siege from protesters.'This is unacceptable. This is wrong. This is un-American.This is authoritarianism, plain and simple.'"This is the first time I know of, at least in my lifetime, that the federal government has faked a riot in order to try to justify the Insurrection Act being invoked,” Merkley said, according to CNN's Manu Raju.Raju said Merkley cited local reporting that claimed federal law enforcement officers escalated tactics to provoke protesters in Portland just hours after a judge said the president could not deploy 200 members of the Oregon National Guard to the city.One report from Oregon Public Broadcasting said that agents moved to push protesters away from the driveway at the ICE building on Saturday at about 8 p.m. and then continued to press them farther into neighborhood streets. Officers then dropped tear gas and other chemical munitions toward protesters before marching back to the facility.On Sunday, Merkley responded to a report that Trump was mobilizing the California National Guard to go to Portland with accusations that the president was trying to incite violence."Having illegitimately attempted to federalize the Oregon National Guard and being blocked because there is no 'invasion' or 'rebellion' in Portland, Trump continues to try to incite riots and violence by deploying the California National Guard to Portland," Merkley posted on Facebook."This is unacceptable. This is wrong. This is un-American.This is authoritarianism, plain and simple," he continued.U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut issued a temporary restraining order that blocked the Trump administration from sending any National Guard troops to Portland and criticized the administration."How could bringing in federalized National Guard from California not be in direct contravention to the temporary restraining order I issued yesterday?" she asked.RELATED: Trump names liberal mayor and governor who 'should be in jail' Similar claims were made by California Gov. Gavin Newsom, another Democrat, when the president ordered National Guard and active Marine troops into Los Angeles during violent anti-ICE protests in June."The federal government is turning the military against American citizens. This is unprecedented and threatens the very core of our democracy," he said.The president eventually pulled a number of troops providing security in Los Angeles.A Blaze News request for comment to the White House was not immediately answered.Judge Karin Immergut was appointed by Trump.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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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
5 w

So It Wasn’t Climate Change? Man Arrested for Starting Palisades Fire
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So It Wasn’t Climate Change? Man Arrested for Starting Palisades Fire

So It Wasn’t Climate Change? Man Arrested for Starting Palisades Fire
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
5 w

Man Arrested Outside Annual Red Mass Had Hundreds of Explosive Devices, Leftist Manifesto
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Man Arrested Outside Annual Red Mass Had Hundreds of Explosive Devices, Leftist Manifesto

Man Arrested Outside Annual Red Mass Had Hundreds of Explosive Devices, Leftist Manifesto
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Twitchy Feed
5 w

Bernie Sanders' January Attempt to Basically Blame Trump for the Palisades Fire Just Aged Wonderfully
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Bernie Sanders' January Attempt to Basically Blame Trump for the Palisades Fire Just Aged Wonderfully

Bernie Sanders' January Attempt to Basically Blame Trump for the Palisades Fire Just Aged Wonderfully
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
5 w

'Spiritual Height': AOC Hilariously Backtracks on Stephen Miller Swipe After Karma Pays Her a Visit
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'Spiritual Height': AOC Hilariously Backtracks on Stephen Miller Swipe After Karma Pays Her a Visit

'Spiritual Height': AOC Hilariously Backtracks on Stephen Miller Swipe After Karma Pays Her a Visit
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
5 w

New: 9th Circuit Presses Pause on TRO Issued by Oregon Judge re: National Guard
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New: 9th Circuit Presses Pause on TRO Issued by Oregon Judge re: National Guard

New: 9th Circuit Presses Pause on TRO Issued by Oregon Judge re: National Guard
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
5 w

Apple Updates MagSafe Chargers To Address iPhone 17 'Scratchgate'
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Apple Updates MagSafe Chargers To Address iPhone 17 'Scratchgate'

There have been a few legitimate iPhone controversies over the years, but the iPhone 17's Scratchgate doesn't appear to be one of them.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
5 w

Ferdinand Magellan: The Man who First Circumnavigated the Globe
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Ferdinand Magellan: The Man who First Circumnavigated the Globe

Ferdinand Magellan's name is etched into history as the man who led the first expedition to circumnavigate the globe, an achievement that forever reshaped humanity's understanding of the world. His journey was a story of daring ambition, perilous voyages, and unyielding determination, all undertaken in the age of discovery when maps were incomplete and much of the Earth remained mysterious. Yet Magellan himself would not live to see the full success of his enterprise, perishing before his fleet returned home. His legacy, however, endured as one of the most significant milestones in the history of navigation and exploration.Terry Bailey explains. Discovery of the Strait of Magellan (Descubrimiento del Estrecho de Magallanes) by Álvaro Casanova Zenteno.Magellan was born around 1480 in northern Portugal, likely in the small town of Sabrosa, though the details of his childhood are not fully certain. He came from a noble but not particularly wealthy family and entered the service of the Portuguese court at an early age. As a boy, he was educated in navigation, cartography, astronomy, and seamanship, skills that would later serve him well as an explorer. Like many young men of Portugal's noble class, he became a page at the royal court and soon grew fascinated by the maritime exploits of Portugal's great navigators. Portugal at the time was at the forefront of global exploration, having pioneered trade routes along the coasts of Africa and toward India, and Magellan found himself immersed in this world of maritime ambition.By his early twenties, Magellan joined expeditions to the East, sailing first to India and later to the fabled Spice Islands, the Maluku archipelago in present-day Indonesia, through the Portuguese route around the Cape of Good Hope. These journeys acquainted him with both the riches of Asia and the complexity of long-distance navigation. Yet his career in Portugal was not without friction. After serving in several campaigns, including military action in Morocco, Magellan fell out of favor with King Manuel I. Denied further command and accused of illegal trading, he turned instead to Spain, Portugal's great maritime rival, to pursue his ambitions.In 1517, Magellan offered his services to King Charles I of Spain (later Holy Roman Emperor Charles V), proposing an ambitious plan: to reach the Spice Islands by sailing westward, thus avoiding Portuguese-controlled waters in the east. The Spanish crown, eager to break Portugal's monopoly on the spice trade, accepted his proposal. In 1519, Magellan set sail from Seville with five ships, the Trinidad, San Antonio, Concepción, Victoria, and Santiago, and roughly 270 men. His goal was nothing less than to chart a western passage to Asia. HardshipThe voyage was fraught with hardship from the very beginning. Storms battered the fleet in the Atlantic, and crew mutinies tested Magellan's authority. Yet he pressed on, hugging the South American coastline in search of a strait that would lead to the Pacific. For months the fleet explored treacherous inlets until, in October 1520, Magellan discovered the passage that now bears his name, the Strait of Magellan at the southern tip of South America. The narrow, winding waters were perilous, but they opened into an ocean unlike any Magellan had ever seen. He named it the Mar Pacífico—the "peaceful sea"—for its calm compared to the turbulent Atlantic he had left behind.Crossing the Pacific proved far from peaceful for the crew. The crossing was unimaginably vast, lasting over three months without fresh provisions. Many sailors succumbed to scurvy and starvation, chewing leather and sawdust to survive. Yet the fleet pressed on, eventually reaching the islands of Guam and then the Philippines in March 1521. Here, Magellan sought both provisions and an opportunity to convert local rulers to Christianity, aligning with Spain's imperial and religious mission.It was in the Philippines, however, that Magellan met his end. In April 1521, he became embroiled in a conflict between rival local chiefs. Leading his men into the Battle of Mactan, Magellan was struck down by warriors led by the chieftain Lapu-Lapu. His death was a heavy blow to the expedition, but his men carried on under new leadership. After further hardships and the loss of several ships, the expedition was reduced to a single vessel, the Victoria, commanded by Juan Sebastián Elcano. In September 1522, the Victoria returned to Spain with just 18 men, completing the first circumnavigation of the Earth.As Magellan had succumbed to the attack led by the chieftain Lapu-Lapu he naturally did not witness this triumph, but the success of the voyage confirmed what many had only speculated: that the Earth was indeed round and that its oceans were interconnected. The circumnavigation provided crucial new knowledge of global geography. It revealed the staggering size of the Pacific Ocean, recalibrated European conceptions of distance and trade, and laid the foundation for future maritime empires. Spain now had a claim to the Spice Islands and the prestige of sponsoring the first global voyage, though Portugal would contest these claims fiercely. ImpactMagellan contributed more than geography to the world's understanding. His expedition demonstrated the practical possibility of circumnavigation, proving that long-distance navigation could be achieved through careful seamanship, astronomical observation, and the use of advanced navigational instruments such as the astrolabe and quadrant. He and his crew also documented winds, currents, and coastlines that would guide sailors for generations. In terms of society, his journey helped to knit together the world's continents into a global network of trade and cultural exchange, albeit one that was often marked by exploitation and conquest.Unlike some explorers of his era, Magellan did not himself leave behind a written account of his travels. The most detailed records of the voyage came from Antonio Pigafetta, an Italian nobleman who sailed with him. Pigafetta's chronicle is one of the most important documents of the age of exploration, providing vivid details not only of the geography encountered but also of the cultures, languages, flora, and fauna observed.Without Pigafetta's writings, much of what we know about Magellan's expedition would have been lost. Ferdinand Magellan's life was cut short on distant shores, yet his vision carried forward across oceans. His ambition to connect the world, his courage in the face of mutiny and hardship, and his role in proving the vast scale of the globe make him one of history's most consequential explorers. His voyage, completed in his absence, inaugurated a new era of global history, an age in which continents were no longer isolated worlds but parts of a single, interconnected planet.Ferdinand Magellan's story closes not with his own return but with the rippling consequences of his vision. Though his death on the shores of Mactan left him absent from the final triumph, the voyage he conceived and set in motion altered the trajectory of human history, proving that perseverance could pierce the unknown, and that oceans, once thought to be insurmountable barriers were in fact vast highways binding the continents together.The circumnavigation redefined geography, expanded commerce, and opened a new chapter in cultural exchange, for better and for worse, as Europe's expansion reached every corner of the globe. Magellan's name thus endures as both a symbol of bold exploration and a reminder of the human cost of conquest. His expedition was not merely a feat of navigation but the dawn of a global age, and in this, his legacy remains as expansive and enduring as the oceans he first crossed. The site has been offering a wide variety of high-quality, free history content since 2012. If you’d like to say ‘thank you’ and help us with site running costs, please consider donating here.  Notes:The pen that carried the voyage.If Ferdinand Magellan's ships carried his expedition across the oceans, it was Antonio Pigafetta's pen that carried its memory across centuries. A Venetian nobleman who volunteered to join the voyage, Pigafetta kept a meticulous daily record of the expedition. His chronicle, later titled Primo viaggio intorno al mondo ("First Voyage Around the World"), became the most detailed and enduring account of Magellan's journey.Pigafetta's writings were more than a sailor's log. They were an ethnographic and geographic treasure, documenting not only the route and hardships but also the peoples, languages, flora, and fauna encountered along the way. From the Strait of Magellan to the Philippines, his descriptions vividly depicted unfamiliar worlds that Europeans could scarcely imagine. His account of the Battle of Mactan, in which Magellan was killed, immortalized the event and shaped the narrative of the voyage for posterity.In Europe, the chronicle captured imaginations at a moment when maps were still being filled in. Published and circulated widely after Pigafetta's return, it gave Europeans a tangible sense of the vastness of the Earth and the diversity of its peoples. The work influenced cartographers, natural philosophers, and writers of the Renaissance, contributing to a more accurate picture of the globe and reinforcing the idea of a single interconnected world.Without Pigafetta, Magellan's feat might have remained only a line in royal records. Instead, his chronicle transformed the expedition into a legend, ensuring that Magellan's vision and Europe's first true glimpse of a global horizon would never be forgotten. Myth and legacy of MagellanOver the centuries, Ferdinand Magellan's name has often been wrapped in myth. Popular retellings sometimes call him "the first man to circumnavigate the globe," a claim that is both true and false. While his expedition was the first to achieve this feat, Magellan himself never completed the journey, as indicated in the main text he was killed in the Philippines in 1521, halfway around the world. It was Juan Sebastián Elcano and the surviving crew of the Victoria who sailed back to Spain, closing the loop. Yet Magellan's vision and leadership set the course that made the achievement possible.This blurring of fact and legend reflects the power of exploration narratives in shaping historical memory. To many in Europe, Magellan came to symbolize the courage to test the limits of the known world, even at the cost of his life. His voyage became a metaphor for human endurance and the relentless pursuit of knowledge, themes that resonated throughout the Renaissance and beyond.Magellan's name has endured in geography and culture alike. The Pacific's Strait at South America's tip bears his name, as do the Magellanic Clouds, two dwarf galaxies visible from the southern hemisphere, first noted by his crew. These celestial names reinforce his place not only in the history of navigation but also in the broader story of humanity's relationship with the cosmos.In truth, Magellan's legacy is more complex than the myth suggests. He was both a daring visionary and a figure of empire, whose voyages helped open pathways for global trade but also paved the way for conquest and colonization. His story embodies both the triumphs and the contradictions of the Age of Discovery, an era when the world became at once larger and more interconnected.
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