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6 w

MSNBC's ICE-Breaker Jacob Soboroff Touts Fear: We May Not Have a 2026 Election
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MSNBC's ICE-Breaker Jacob Soboroff Touts Fear: We May Not Have a 2026 Election

On Monday's Deadline: White House, host Nicolle Wallace and reporter Jacob Soboroff were eager partisan spinmeisters on Democrats like Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker for their feverish resistance to President Donald Trump's deportation efforts of our "neighbors." But it really went off the rails when Soboroff touted conspiracy theories to mobilize protester turnout against the National Guard. He loved the line that "I don't know if we'll have an election in 2026 or we will have the military outside of the ballot boxes." Wallace opened the show suggesting Trump could still lose support on the immigration issue and claimed that Pew Research polling found that only small numbers of Americans support deporting all illegal aliens -- a claim she has been making for months in spite of being debunked by NewsBusters. Here's Wallace: He (Joe Rogan) doesn't like deporting people who have been here 20 years who haven't committed crimes. Pew polling had that number at about I think eight percent of Americans supported deporting people married to a U.S. citizen. It's about 12 (percent) who supported people -- I mean, there were always micro, micro numbers of people who supported what's actually happening -- 87 percent of Americans, according to Time/CNN, support deporting adjudicated violent criminals. And the whole program is built around deporting the people that eight (percent) of Americans want gone. In fact, more recent polling finds that most Americans still give support to deporting all illegal aliens. In the next segment, Wallace began by talking up Governor JB Pritzker (D-IL) resisting President Trump's deportation efforts in Chicago: "Pritzker seems to have been made for this moment, or to be emulating what Gavin Newsom pioneered both as an advocate for his city and state -- and Karen Bass as well for her city." She then asked Soboroff for predictions, leading him to repeat some of the spin pushed by Pritzker and other Democrats: And what they are communicating when they're saying, "Come get me -- come arrest me" is that -- he said to me -- he said, "I don' t know if we'll have an election" -- we were joking about it, but "I don't know if we'll have an election in 2026 or we will have the military outside of the ballot boxes. And so they are taking this from just an immigration-related issue to saying, "Democracy is on the line here, ladies and gentlemen." And I think that's part of what is compelling people that -- as you said, Cornell -- may not have otherwise shown up for an immigration protest into the streets. That protest of 10 or seven or 10,000 people up and down Michigan Avenue was just -- was not your ordinary immigration protest. He added: It was a really electric, impressive thing to see, and I think because their local leaders are standing up and saying, "This isn't -- this is about your neighbors -- documented and undocumented -- but it's not just about the future of who gets to live in this country -- it's whether or not we get to have a free country at all." Belcher jumped in to tout how this could work for presidential contenders: I'm going be the bad guy here because I'm going to say it's not bad for their politics thinking about running for President. ... You look at Pritzker, and you look at Newsom. You know, they've been outspoken -- they've taken on this fight -- they're doing everything the base has asked that they want to see more Democrats doing. ... I think this positions them well in a crowded field going into a Democratic primary. Transcript follows: MSNBC's Deadline: White House October 13, 2025 NICOLLE WALLACE: Hi, everyone. Welcome to Monday. It's 4:00 in New York. If Donald Trump's political power lies in being able to convince his supporters of anything and everything, then loud public dissent from inside his coalition from prominent Trump influencers might be the thing that will melt his carefully crafted, alternative fact-based reality faster than the Wicked Witch in the Wizard of Oz. And that is exactly what is starting to happen with his brutal and ugly and clunky and wildly unpopular mass deportation scheme. The sight and the sound and the smells of heavily armed federal agents of sweeping up people with no criminal records -- everyone from grandmas to kids -- with arrests everywhere from outside of schools to outside of bakeries to even a Marine base. Those sights and sounds are proving to be too much for arguably the most influential podcaster in the MAGA-adjacent universe. (Plays clips of podcaster Joe Rogan and Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) arguing against deporting illegals who have been in the country a long time who are working) WALLACE: So the reality of Trump's mass deportation campaign and how it is impacting everyone of us. Everyone is going to be touched by it regardless of who you voted for -- if it's starting to sink in. We should note that the administration is about to turn the volume up even louder. They are now escalating what brought those two to their conversions in their views on Trump and his policy. In city after city after city, it's going to get worse. On Friday ICE deported the father of a U.S. Marine who was first detained along with his wife at a Marine base in San Diego. In Chicago, more than 1,000 people have been arrested since deportation operations began last month, leading to some incredibly harrowing scenes that have put the city and the country and mixed documented families in this country on edge all over the country. Scenes like this one. This video is from The New York Times showing a flower vender being detained. Or authorities conducting a military-style operation on an apartment building on the south side in which children were zip-tied, and, according to one eyewitness, the agent said, "F the kids." Or this: agents shooting pepper balls at a pastor with his hands held up in prayer. Trump's Department of Homeland Security claiming that it is arresting, quote, "the worst of the worst," end quote. But brand-new reporting from MSNBC blows that lie out of the water. It reveals that, out of the more than 1,000 arrests made in Chicago, quote, "the agency provided detailed information for only 10 men with a criminal background, about one percent of those detained, making independent verification difficult." The public intra-MAGA backlash to the open cruelty of Donald Trump's mass deportation campaign is where we start today. ... (...) Jacob Soboroff says President Donald Trump wants to deport as many immigrants as President Barack Obama did, and then recalls the Obama-era deportations: JACOB SOBOROFF: There will be advocates who say there were interior removals that tore apart families. Read Dr. William Lopez -- he has a new book out now about raised in the heartland of the United States and how these played out under multiple Presidents, but he didn't have wide-scale, indiscriminate family separation-style raids like Donald Trump and Stephen Miller and Tom Homan and Kristi Noem are effectuating on the streets of this country right now for the purpose of only of hitting the numbers that Stephen Miller wants to hit. Barack Obama -- I'm not justifying it in any way -- I think any of the advocates would say it was very damaging and traumatic -- traumatizing to the children that were caught in those policies -- but for Donald Trump -- and I'm not objectively -- this is what they said -- the point was to harm people with family separation. The point is to hurt these communities so that other people -- there are ads running in Chicago in English with Kristi Noem on television offering people money  to leave the country. They want as many people as possible to leave, and the way they think they can do that is by scaring the holy hell out of people by putting these images on television. That is not what prior administrations did. This is a whole new level. WALLACE: If you take the parts of this that -- let's just go with Joe Rogan because he's speaking publicly, and the MAGA coalition listens to him.  He doesn't like deporting people who have been here 20 years who haven't committed crimes. Pew polling had that number at about I think eight percent of Americans supported deporting people married to a U.S. citizen. It's about 12 (percent) who supported people -- I mean, there were always micro, micro numbers of people who supported what's actually happening -- 87 percent of Americans, according to Time/CNN, support deporting adjudicated violent criminals. And the whole program is built around deporting the people that eight (percent) of Americans want gone. BELCHER: Yeah, well. look, I'm -- the cruelty is the point, yeah, the cruelty is the point, but I want to go a little deeper than that, right? This doesn't lower the prices of gas or eggs or groceries (...) 4:24 p.m. Eastern NICOLLE WALLACE: We're back with Jacob, Cornell, and Tim. I feel like we could solve everything. Jacob, just tell me -- I mean, Pritzker seems to have been made for this moment, or to be emulating what Gavin Newsom pioneered both as an advocate for his city and state -- and Karen Bass as well for her city. But just tell me -- tell me where you see this heading this weekend and in the coming days. JACOB SOBOROFF: Well, I think what they have all come to realize and understand is that not only is this a usurpation of their power -- at least that's what they say -- that's what Bass said on the streets -- that's what Newsom was saying when it came to the calling up of the Guard and the deployment of the Marines. Obviously, he's not going to deploy the Marines to L.A., but when the Marines were on the streets of L.A. -- and Pritzker as well -- and what they are communicating when they're saying, "Come get me -- come arrest me" is that -- he said to me -- he said, "I don' t know if we'll have an election" -- we were joking about it, but "I don't know if we'll have an election in 2026 or we will have the military outside of the ballot boxes. And so they are taking this from just an immigration-related issue to saying, "Democracy is on the line here, ladies and gentlemen." And I think that's part of what is compelling people that -- as you said, Cornell -- may not have otherwise shown up for an immigration protest into the streets. That protest of 10 or seven or 10,000 people up and down Michigan Avenue was just -- was not your ordinary immigration protest. That was people from all walks of life on the night that that Cubs' future was on the line in Chicago. It was a really electric, impressive thing to see, and I think because their local leaders are standing up and saying, "This isn't -- this is about your neighbors -- documented and undocumented -- but it's not just about the future of who gets to live in this country -- it's whether or not we get to have a free country at all." WALLACE: Yeah, I mean -- CORNELL BELCHER, MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR: Nicolle, I'm gonna --  WALLACE: Yeah, go. BELCHER: I'm going be the bad guy here because I'm going to say it's not bad for their politics thinking about running for President. SOBOROFF: Yeah. BELCHER: Right? WALLACE: Yeah, yeah. BELCHER: You look at Pritzker, and you look at Newsom. You know, they've been outspoken -- they've taken on this fight -- they're doing everything the base has asked that they want to see more Democrats doing. And, again, I'm completely neutral -- I never want to work another presidential campaign as long as I live -- but I got to tell you, I think this positions them well in a crowded field going into a Democratic primary. WALLACE: Let me just give you an alternate analysis, I mean, President of what? Because -- because -- right? Because like if this doesn't win, President of what? And I think that the MAGA world braids these things together, right? Why do -- why do 48 states pass voter suppression laws? They pass them predicated on a lie that Bill Barr told us was a lie. He told us it was bull bleep. It's Monday -- I'll try to go through two hours without swearing. So the same thing with the -- with immigration raids and militarized federal law enforcement. But what are they on the streets for? Only the pro-democracy side is trying to answer that question. To MAGA it's a lollapalooza. They're there for all of it. They're there for -- they're there for mass deportation -- they're there to make it scarier to vote -- they have no plans on leaving. We're the only side trying to unbraid what is just their mass overreach. BELCHER: Yeah, I'm not kidding when I'm not sure there's going to be an election. WALLACE: Yeah. BELCHER: I'm not, right? I, fingers crossed, I hope there's going to be election. But if I look at everything that's happening in this country right now, I'm not 100 percent sure that these people aren't going to block an election. There's -- he's not -- WALLACE: A free and fair election. BELCHER: A free and fair election -- that he won't, you know, put military on the street and especially in certain areas of the country, military will be on the street to stop us -- get in the way of having a free and fair election.
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PBS Host Geoff Bennett Prods Retired Justice Kennedy to Condemn Current Court
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PBS Host Geoff Bennett Prods Retired Justice Kennedy to Condemn Current Court

On Tuesday's PBS News Hour, co-host Geoff Bennett interviewed retired liberal-pleasing Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy and tried to get him to condemn the current right-leaning Supreme Court for being too pro-Trump. Kennedy, who retired in 2018, talked about his new memoir, Life, Law & Liberty. Bennett politely prodded Kennedy to justify his principled, First Amendment-supporting ruling in the pivotal campaign finance case Citizens United, the 2010 decision in which the Supreme Court reaffirmed the First Amendment right of corporations and citizens to spend money for or against candidates in federal elections. Kennedy was author of the majority decision that dismayed the left. Bennett: You were the pivotal voice in cases that expanded LGBTQ rights, that preserved abortion rights at the time, but also a ruling that struck down campaign finance restrictions. How do you reconcile or explain those strands of your legal philosophy? Kennedy pointed out the unfairness of media corporations being allowed speech denied to other corporations. Kennedy: ....They forgot that The New York Times was a corporation, and it was exempt. The Washington Post was a corporation. It was exempt…. By contrast, Bennett didn't make Kennedy defend his ruling in support of gay marriage, but hailed it: Bennett: ....In the Obergefell v. Hodges case, you wrote so powerfully about the dignity of same-sex couples….But Justice Clarence Thomas recently said at Catholic University that legal precedents — this is a quote — "are not the gospel." Given the current petitions seeking to revisit Obergefell, do you worry that parts of your legacy, including that case, could be undone? Kennedy demurred, but Bennett kept prodding: Bennett: I want to ask you about democracy and the court's role in preserving it. You warned this past summer in remarks that freedom and democracy are at risk. What, in your view, poses the greatest threat to our democratic system?   Like a moderate, Kennedy cited a “lack of civility.” Bennett was compelled to push him on Trump threatening democracy: Bennett: Beyond that, is the court doing enough to safeguard our democratic system? There are those who argue that the court, with its current trajectory, is strengthening the executive branch at the expense of Congress, at the expense of the people. Is that, in your view, a fair assessment? Kennedy again demurred, saying “Well, my practice is not to comment on current issues,” but Bennett prodded further about this hopelessly Trump-favoring court: Bennett: As of last week, the court had issued 23 rulings in a row for the Trump administration. At a time when public opinion of the Supreme Court is near historic lows, do you worry that the consistent support for the Trump administration feeds into this public perception that the court is partisan or, worse than that, political? PBS was defunded because of the obvious perception that they were political partisans.  In contrast, the News Hour’s previous interviews with an even more liberal retired justice, John Paul Stevens, hailed all of his rulings, especially Stevens’ extremist position on campaign finance reform. (When the New York Times asked him if "Congress could in theory ban books urging the election of political candidates," Stevens offered this less-than-reassuring reply: “Perhaps you could put a limit on the times of publication or something....You certainly couldn’t totally prohibit writing a book.” Stevens got no worries from PBS journalists, who after all work for corporations that rely on the First Amendment. Veteran PBS reporter Judy Woodruff spoke with Stevens after his retirement and not only failed to challenge Stevens on his proposed limits on free speech but lamented the 2010 Citizens United ruling, asking Stevens in May 2019, “Why do you think it's had a corrosive effect on American politics?” A transcript is available, click “Expand.” PBS News Hour 10/14/25 7:44:45 p.m. (ET) Geoff Bennett: Former Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy served on the nation's highest court for three decades and was often described as the swing vote in landmark decisions from marriage equality to campaign finance. It's a label he's long resisted, even years after his 2018 retirement. When we spoke last week about his new memoir, Life, Law & Liberty," he explained why. Anthony Kennedy, Former Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court: Well, it's really the metaphor that's the problem for me. The metaphor, you see this person swinging back and forth. And my comment when people say about that is that the cases swing. I don't. And so that's why it seems to me — people can disagree — that my jurisprudence is quite consistent and it doesn't swing. And so that was one of the things explained in the book. Geoff Bennett: You were the pivotal voice in cases that expanded LGBTQ rights, that preserved abortion rights at the time, but also a ruling that struck down campaign finance restrictions. How do you reconcile or explain those strands of your legal philosophy? Anthony Kennedy: The campaign finance cases are very, very difficult. I'm sure most people don't like the idea that millionaires, maybe billionaires, come in and spend all this money in a place where they don't even live in order to get somebody elected. And why should the successful candidate be the one that has the most money? That's — something that's wrong with it. So then you're asking me, well, what are you talking about, Kennedy? Why did you write this? The answer was that what the Congress had done was to say that corporations could not give the money. They forgot that The New York Times was a corporation, and it was exempt. The Washington Post was a corporation. It was exempt. And many corporations were small, so the small Chamber of Commerce, a grocery store. So to me, if we had held it for just big corporations, we would have endless cases on drawing the line, and we had no jurisprudential reason to do it. My suggestion, and it's still my hope, is that the voters will be better informed about who is giving money, who is getting money, and take that into account when they vote. And the voters should be better informed. The books, it talks generally about we have to be better informed about how our government works and what our great — the issues of our time are. Geoff Bennett: Yes. We were talking earlier about how the book is organized, because you do explain your opinions in these key cases. In the Obergefell v. Hodges case, you wrote so powerfully about the dignity of same-sex couples. And you write in the book about how someone once told you that the opinion passed the refrigerator test. Explain that for us. Anthony Kennedy: Somebody said, you passed — we were at some event. Somebody said: "Your opinion passed the refrigerator test." I said: "What's the refrigerator test?" If there's something that's written in a newspaper article or a book or, in this case, the Supreme Court opinion, and the parents want the family to read it, they just get some adhesive tape and put it on the refrigerator, and then everybody reads it when they're going to get something out of the refrigerator. So certain parts of my opinion, they said, passed the refrigerator test, those parts of the opinions which talk about the dignity and the sanctity of marriage. Geoff Bennett: But Justice Clarence Thomas recently said at Catholic University that legal precedents — this is a quote — "are not the gospel." Given the current petitions seeking to revisit Obergefell, do you worry that parts of your legacy, including that case, could be undone? Anthony Kennedy: Well, of course, the law must stand the test of time. And if we learn or think we learn new things over the course of years, the judges and the legal profession and the general public are free to examine and think about the reasons. That's why we give reasons for what we do. That's why we write about what we do and see if those reasons can stand the test of time. So the fact that there is a reexamination and additional conversation, to me, is a strength of our system. Geoff Bennett: Yes. I want to ask you about democracy and the court's role in preserving it. You warned this past summer in remarks that freedom and democracy are at risk. What, in your view, poses the greatest threat to our democratic system? Anthony Kennedy: Lack of civility. Aristotle wrote that democracy depends upon a rational, thoughtful, probing discussion in which you have disagreements, but you respect the other person, and you do not — and you respect the dignity of the other person. Those with whom you disagree have a dignity that you must respect. And in this age of the cyber age, we have some problems. Initially, my thought was, oh, the cyber age is good because we will all — more people will talk to each other. And I don't know. There are 39,000 books in the Library of Congress. There are close to two billion Web sites on the Internet. And the problem with the Internet, as a professor from the University of Michigan, Barbara Meekam (ph), wrote, is that, sure, we talk to each other more, but we talk only to people who feel exactly the same way as we do. We don't have — the Internet doesn't lend itself to a debate. If you and I are going out to lunch, we will find something we disagree with and we will enjoy the lunch, but we disagree. That doesn't happen on the Internet. Geoff Bennett: Beyond that, is the court doing enough to safeguard our democratic system? There are those who argue that the court, with its current trajectory, is strengthening the executive branch at the expense of Congress, at the expense of the people. Is that, in your view, a fair assessment? Anthony Kennedy: Well, my practice is not to comment on current issues. We have — when I — during my time on the court, we had three times as many cases as they have now. Does that mean that we were three times as busy? No, because of all of these emergency orders. And the problem with emergency orders is that there is little time to have briefs or argument to think, to think about it. And the court, in my view, is beginning to recognize that and beginning to say there will be an executive order. Sure, we will allow it for a couple months, or we won't allow it for a couple months, but we will hear arguments and then we will decide. It's very, very important that the court hear arguments. One of the problems that we have is, as you know, lawyers are brilliant now about finding a way for almost any social issue to become part of a lawsuit, so that courts can decide almost any social issue. This means that we have to be very, very careful about the authority and the position of the courts in deciding so many critical issues that the public should be deciding for themselves. Nino Scalia would say, oh, you ask what the framers of the Constitution would do, and if they don't give you the answer, then you can't come up with it. And many of us disagree with that. But it is quite true that we have to be very careful that we don't just jump off from what the framers said and decide whatever we like. Geoff Bennett: On that point, as of last week, the court had issued 23 rulings in a row for the Trump administration. At a time when public opinion of the Supreme Court is near historic lows, do you worry that the consistent support for the Trump administration feeds into this public perception that the court is partisan or, worse than that, political? Anthony Kennedy: The danger of the court being thought of as partisan and political, it's very real and of great concern to me. It begins with the confirmation process. The confirmation process is too partisan. There are very few presidents who appointed justices from a different party. Eisenhower did Brennan. And you could argue about Warren. Warren was something of an independent. And so partisanship has always played a role, but it shouldn't dominate. We should talk about temperament and learning and moderation and thoughtful writing. We should emphasize that more than just he or she will decide this my way, and therefore we're going to appoint that person as a judge. That's not right. Geoff Bennett: You have shaped the law in ways that have touched millions of lives, expanding rights, defining liberty, at times dividing the nation with some of the rulings. When you reflect on that, what part of your legacy feels most meaningful to you? Anthony Kennedy: Well, I will think of this answer later tonight. (Laughter) Anthony Kennedy: The part that I — is that we give reasons for what we do and that it's essential for all of government, for all thoughtful people to give reasons for what we do and to be unafraid to discuss those reasons openly and with an open — and with a searching mind-set. Geoff Bennett: The book is "Life, Law & Liberty: A Memoir." Justice Anthony Kennedy, thanks again for being here. A real pleasure to speak with you. Anthony Kennedy: Thank you so much. It's my pleasure and honor to be on this great, great television network.
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6 w

CNN Admits There's Some Merit to Bolton Classified Info Indictment
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CNN Admits There's Some Merit to Bolton Classified Info Indictment

While the liberal media was quick to claim the FBI’s raid of former National Security Advisor John Bolton’s home was another instance of President Trump’s purported ‘campaign of vengeance,’ the details of his indictment by a Maryland grand jury had them back tracking, if only just slightly. According to the Friday edition of CNN News Central, the indictment had some real serious teeth in the form of evidence that Bolton knew he shouldn’t be in possession of the information he had and that some of it was hacked by the Iranians. Following a report from crime and justice correspondent Katelyn Polantz going over the eight counts of transmission of national defense information and 10 counts of unlawful retention of national defense information, co-host John Berman brought on former Deputy Assistant Attorney General Tom Dupree who saw this particular case as “a serious situation.” According to Dupree, the case against Bolton had more teeth that the ones against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James: Those indictments were short, they were skeletal, they were haiku like. This is long and thorough, 26 pages, very detailed allegations. It's what prosecutors call a speaking indictment that really tells a story and goes into great detail and puts on public display the evidence that the government has gathered much of which I think was actually picked up when they executed the search warrant at John Bolton's house.     “But the government has already put a lot of cards on the table, and the allegations. And at this point, they are just allegations. Do tell a fairly disturbing story about how Bolton allegedly mishandled classified information,” Dupree added. Pivoting to his other guest, former U.S. Attorney Michael Moore, Berman actually read from the indictment a text exchange between Bolton and couple family members he sent the classified information to, with an apparent acknowledgement that they shouldn’t have it: BERMAN: Michael, let me read to you in the indictment where it says, “On or about July 23rd, 2018, Bolton sent individuals one and two a 24-page document which described information that Bolton learned while national security advisor. Less than three hours later, Bolton sent individuals one and two a follow up message that stated, ‘none of which we talked about” - three exclamation points. In response, individual one sent a message that stated, “Shhhhh.”  So, how does that state of mind, Michael, maybe acknowledge that this needed to be kept quiet? How could that impact the case? (…) MOORE: And what he would do is, by all appearances, is he would take some notes while he was in a meeting in his own hand. Those notes may include information which was discussed, which shouldn't have been discussed outside the meeting. He would then send those to family members who were helping him compile his manuscript or his notes to be submitted to an editor.     Seemingly hinting at comparing it to the classified documents case President Trump once faced, Berman noted that what made this case particularly unique, “was a transmission, allegedly, of classified material. It's not just retention, like boxes of records here. He hit send allegedly to these AOL accounts.” Worse yet, that information Bolton sent was hacked by the Iranians. “He would apparently scan them or take a picture or whatever, and he would have those notes sent over a non-secure program. And that's how ultimately they were subject to hack,” Moore explained. “And apparently they were hacked by Iran or people connected with Iran. And that's the danger of having this information out there.” According to reports from MSNBC, the only reason investigators knew that Bolton was hacked was because U.S. operations against Iran discovered the hacked information on their hardware. CNN also seemed to give this indictment more wait because the case was opened under the Biden administration. The transcript is below. Click "expand" to read: CNN News Central October 17, 2025 9:04:26 a.m. Eastern (…) JOHN BERMAN: Tom, let me start with you. What jumps out to you? How serious is this situation for ambassador Bolton? TOM DUPREE: It's a serious situation. And what jumped out at me when I reviewed that indictment was how starkly it differed from the indictments we saw of Jim Comey and Tish James. Those indictments were short, they were skeletal, they were haiku like. This is long and thorough, 26 pages, very detailed allegations. It's what prosecutors call a speaking indictment that really tells a story and goes into great detail and puts on public display the evidence that the government has gathered much of which I think was actually picked up when they executed the search warrant at John Bolton's house. But the government has already put a lot of cards on the table, and the allegations. And at this point, they are just allegations. Do tell a fairly disturbing story about how Bolton allegedly mishandled classified information. BERMAN: And if you read the indictment, it seems to suggest he knew there was something in the way he was handling it, at least allegedly. There's this point. Michael, let me read to you in the indictment where it says, “On or about July 23rd, 2018, Bolton sent individuals one and two a 24-page document which described information that Bolton learned while national security advisor. Less than three hours later, Bolton sent individuals one and two a follow up message that stated, ‘none of which we talked about” - three exclamation points. In response, individual one sent a message that stated, “Shhhhh.” So, how does that state of mind, Michael, maybe acknowledge that this needed to be kept quiet? How could that impact the case? MICHAEL MOORE: Yeah, well, I'm glad to be with you. Look, this is a serious indictment, and it just tells us how seriously we need to take the handling of national security information. But the bottom line is, this is really a case about him writing a book. And what he would do is, by all appearances, is he would take some notes while he was in a meeting in his own hand. Those notes may include information which was discussed, which shouldn't have been discussed outside the meeting. He would then send those to family members who were helping him compile his manuscript or his notes to be submitted to an editor. This is not a case where he had a little secret camera and he was taking pictures of the war plane plans and all this, and sending them to China or something. That’s not what this case is. But it's serious nonetheless, because he knows enough, having had the roles that he's had in the U.S. government. He knows enough about how to handle classified and sensitive information. And he didn't do that here. (…) 9:09:04 a.m. Eastern BERMAN: And, Michael, a couple of things here that are different from this case. There was a transmission, allegedly, of classified material. It's not just retention, like boxes of records here. He hit send allegedly to these AOL accounts. And there was a hack by a foreign actor into this information. So how does that color the case? Michael? MOORE: Well, I mean that that makes it and probably as a good example of why it's all the more serious. And that is because he was using a non-secure server, a non-secure system, to transmit information, that is his notes that he had handwritten. He would apparently scan them or take a picture or whatever, and he would have those notes sent over a non-secure program. And that's how ultimately they were subject to hack. And apparently they were hacked by Iran or people connected with Iran. And that's the danger of having this information out there. (…)
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Ketanji Brown Jackson exposes her own worldview, compares black people to disabled people
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Ketanji Brown Jackson exposes her own worldview, compares black people to disabled people

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is under fire after invoking the Americans with Disabilities Act during oral arguments in defense of ensuring black representation in Congress — however, many are now accusing her of comparing black people to the disabled."The fact that remedial action, absent discriminatory intent, is really not a new idea in the civil rights laws. And my kind of paradigmatic example of this is something like the ADA.”"Congress passed the Americans with Disabilities Act against the backdrop of a world that was generally not accessible to people with disabilities. And so it was discriminatory, in effect, because these folks were not able to access these buildings — and it didn't matter whether the person who built the building, or the person who owned the building, intended for them to be exclusionary. That's irrelevant," she continued."Congress said the facilities have to be made equally open to people with disabilities, if readily possible. I guess I don't understand why that's not what's happening here."“The idea in Section 2 is that we are responding to current-day manifestations of past and present decisions that disadvantage minorities and make it so that they don’t have equal access to the voting system, right?” she asked, adding, “They’re disabled.”BlazeTV host Jason Whitlock admits that it’s “a tricky conversation” and a “tricky subject.”“If you go back in history, there was legitimate racial discrimination that harmed black people politically. There are a number of us that think that that time has passed, that that sort of discrimination has passed, and there is no … racial impediment to seeking higher office in Congress, in the House, Senate, whatever,” Whitlock says on “Jason Whitlock Harmony.”“So in her defense of gerrymandering, she’s saying that we have faced so much discrimination that we’re disabled,” he adds.“She’s not on solid ground,” BlazeTV contributor Virgil Walker says. “She has a false view of mankind. She has a false view of blacks in particular, mankind in general. What she’s exposing in her response is actually her worldview. Her idea that blacks are handicapped, blacks are disabled, blacks are beholden unto white power structures and submitted to that.”“She has an unbiblical anthropology. All that means is an unbiblical view of who we are, who man is, an unbiblical view that we are not image-bearers of God, that you can assess who we are on the basis of the level of melanin in our skin and the historic narrative that has been permeated throughout American culture and society,” he adds.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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6 w

Exclusive: ICE takes down child predator, murderer, and other violent 'dirtbags'
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Exclusive: ICE takes down child predator, murderer, and other violent 'dirtbags'

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have arrested a child predator, a murderer, and other violent illegal-alien criminals this week, according to a Department of Homeland Security press release obtained exclusively by Blaze News.'Some of the dirtbags arrested included pedophiles, murderers, and drug traffickers.'ICE continues to take the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens off of America’s streets despite the ongoing government shutdown, the release noted."Nothing will slow ICE down, not even the Democrats’ government shutdown," it read.The DHS highlighted the Thursday arrests of five convicted criminals who are in the U.S. illegally.ICE officers captured Sergio Ivaan Martinez, a 30-year-old child sexual predator from Mexico who was living in Dallas, Texas. According to the Texas Public Sex Offender registry, Martinez was previously convicted in early 2014 of aggravated sexual assault of a child and indecency with a child by contact. His judgment was listed as “probation/community supervision.”RELATED: Exclusive: ICE arrests alleged MS-13 gang leader on El Salvador's ‘most wanted’ list Sergio Ivaan Martinez. Image source: Department of Homeland SecurityLaw enforcement nabbed Chay Jungle Her, an illegal alien from Laos who was previously convicted of homicide-murder and assault with intent to do great bodily harm in Flint, Michigan. Chay Jungle Her. Image source: Department of Homeland SecurityJose Andres Gomez-Matarrita, an illegal immigrant from Costa Rica, had a criminal record in New Hanover County, North Carolina, for strangulation and second-degree kidnapping. Jose Andres Gomez-Matarrita. Image source: Department of Homeland SecurityICE arrested Enzo David Fernandez-Morales, a Venezuelan national convicted of engaging in organized criminal activity in Hays County, Texas. Enzo David Fernandez-Morales. Image source: Department of Homeland SecurityOfficers also locked up Leonardo Estupinan-Nazareno, an Ecuadoran national with a criminal history in Weston, Florida, for importation of cocaine. RELATED: DOJ files first terrorism-related charges against alleged 'Antifa Cell' after ICE attack: 'Get to the rifles' Leonardo Estupinan-Nazareno. Image source: Department of Homeland Security“The Democrats’ government shutdown is not slowing ICE down from removing the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens from our streets,” DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin stated.“Yesterday some of the dirtbags arrested included pedophiles, murderers, and drug traffickers,” McLaughlin continued. “These criminal illegal aliens have no business remaining in this country to terrorize innocent Americans. ICE will NOT stop making America safe again even during the Democrats’ government shutdown.”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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6 w

US Army general reveals he's been using an AI chatbot to make military decisions
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US Army general reveals he's been using an AI chatbot to make military decisions

Even United States military brass is looking to AI for answers these days.The top United States Army commander in South Korea revealed to reporters this week that he has been using a chatbot to help with decisions that affect thousands of U.S. soldiers.'As a commander, I want to make better decisions.'On Monday, Major General William "Hank" Taylor told the media in Washington, D.C., that he is using AI to sharpen decision-making, but not on the battlefield. The major general — the fourth-highest officer rank in the U.S. Army — is using the chatbot to assist him in daily work and command of soldiers.Speaking to reporters at a media roundtable at the annual Association of the United States Army conference, Taylor reportedly said "Chat and I" have become "really close lately."According to Business Insider, the officer added, "I'm asking to build, trying to build models to help all of us."Taylor also said that he is indeed using the technology to make decisions that affect the thousands of soldiers under his command, while acknowledging another blunt reason for using AI.RELATED: The government's anti-drone energy weapons you didn't know existed Photo by Seung-il Ryu/NurPhoto via Getty Images "As a commander, I want to make better decisions," the general explained. "I want to make sure that I make decisions at the right time to give me the advantage."In a seemingly huge revelation for an Army officer, Taylor also revealed that it has been a challenge to keep up with the developing technology.At the same time, tech outlet Futurism claimed that the general is in fact using ChatGPT, warning that the AI has been found to generate false information regarding basic facts "over half the time."ChatGPT is not mentioned in Business Insider's report.Return reached out to Army officials to ask if the quotes attributed to Taylor were accurate, if he is actually using ChatGPT, and if they believe there to be inherent risks in doing so. An official Pentagon account acknowledged the request, but did not respond to the questions. This article will be updated with any applicable responses.It was recently reported by Return that the military is already tinkering with a chatbot of its own.RELATED: Zuckerberg's vision: US military AI and tech around the world SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg via Getty Images Military exercises in Fort Carson, Colorado, and Fort Riley, Kansas, recently took place, utilizing an offline chatbot called EdgeRunner AI.EdgeRunner CEO Tyler Saltsman told Return that his company is currently testing the chatbot with the Department of War to deliver real-time data and mission strategy to soldiers on the ground. The chatbot can be installed on a wide variety of devices and used without an internet connection, to avoid interception by the enemy.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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6 w

NBC News drops gay and race-specific DEI teams in attempt to 'streamline editorial efforts'
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NBC News drops gay and race-specific DEI teams in attempt to 'streamline editorial efforts'

NBC News has released several identity-based news teams that cover sexuality- and race-focused stories.Not only were dozens of employees laid off, but the cuts seemingly came as a surprise.'Not their first gay rodeo.'NBC News reportedly made the announcement early on Wednesday, and according to insiders, the bomb was dropped by Executive Vice President of Editorial Catherine Kim. At around 10 a.m., about 150 NBC News staffers were told they were no longer employed during a brief meeting that was described by one source as a "difficult day for a lot of us."LGB-freeThe Wrap reported that the cuts completely eliminated teams who superficially covered news for black, Asian, Latino, and various gay identities. This includes NBC BLK, NBC Asian America, NBC Latino, and NBC OUT.NBC OUT, for example, describes itself as content driven toward "the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer community."Recent coverage included, "Queer art faces widespread museum censorship," and "Not their first gay rodeo: Celebrating 50 years of queer cowfolks."NBC BLK recently published a piece on how a "new exhibit highlights LGBTQ legacy of Harlem Renaissance."The bizarre content will still live on, but in a less dedicated format.RELATED: No MAGA 'Magic' allowed? Champion card gamer faces bans for Trump support Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images The Wrap noted that the specific pages will still have stories published regarding the identity groups, but the content will come from a group of just five news team members who will contribute to the pages across the board. Another alleged inside source said the cuts were not meant to target the diversity teams, but rather were driven by budget concerns and a desire to "streamline its editorial efforts."Ruffled feathersThe shift in personnel comes after Comcast announced a realignment of its networks in August. As reported by Reuters, USA Network, CNBC, and MSNBC will branch off into a new company called Versant. MSNBC will also change its name to "MS NOW" and lose its peacock logo. The new name is an acronym for "My Source News Opinion World."MSNBC was launched in 1996 and represented a partnership between Microsoft and the National Broadcasting Company. Microsoft left the venture in 2012, however. CNBC will keep the same name, which stands for Consumer News and Business Channel.RELATED: God doesn't make anyone gay: The case against banning 'conversion therapy' Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images Divesting diversityNBC News' total reductions make up about 7% of its 2,000 staffers. The move comes as several companies shift away from their divisive verticals, which haven't always been amicable departures. In April, Paramount agreed to terminate its diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, which included racial quotas for staff and writers, after it was sued by a white writer who said he was discriminated against.Then-president and CEO of CBS George Cheeks had said publicly that he set a goal for CBS writing rooms to have 40% non-white staff members, with 17 of 21 networks allegedly meeting or exceeding that target.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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6 w

OUCH! Karoline Leavitt Goes Full Truth Nuke on Lefties Lashing Out About Her Dem Party Analysis
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OUCH! Karoline Leavitt Goes Full Truth Nuke on Lefties Lashing Out About Her Dem Party Analysis

OUCH! Karoline Leavitt Goes Full Truth Nuke on Lefties Lashing Out About Her Dem Party Analysis
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6 w

Got Our Hands on Some Chants the Mouth-Breathers Will be Using on 'No Kings Day' and Talk About HILARIOUS
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Got Our Hands on Some Chants the Mouth-Breathers Will be Using on 'No Kings Day' and Talk About HILARIOUS

Got Our Hands on Some Chants the Mouth-Breathers Will be Using on 'No Kings Day' and Talk About HILARIOUS
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6 w

AWKWARD: Randi Weingarten Confirms BIG News That Will Only Hurt Jay Jones (and VA Teacher's Union) MORE
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AWKWARD: Randi Weingarten Confirms BIG News That Will Only Hurt Jay Jones (and VA Teacher's Union) MORE

AWKWARD: Randi Weingarten Confirms BIG News That Will Only Hurt Jay Jones (and VA Teacher's Union) MORE
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