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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
7 w

7 Budget-Friendly Ways to Have Winter Fun with Your Little Ones
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7 Budget-Friendly Ways to Have Winter Fun with Your Little Ones

Winter can feel long and draining, but it’s also full of quiet opportunities to connect with your children in meaningful ways. These simple, affordable ideas will help you make the most of your time together.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
7 w

How Long Should a Pastor’s Sermon Be?
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How Long Should a Pastor’s Sermon Be?

How Long Should a Pastor’s Sermon Be?
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
7 w ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
"Diego Garcia" - Why THIS Vital Military Base in the Indian Ocean has Trump's FULL Attention
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Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
7 w

Morning Brief: Armed Protester Killed, Dems Threaten Shutdown, & Trump Sends Warships To Middle East
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Morning Brief: Armed Protester Killed, Dems Threaten Shutdown, & Trump Sends Warships To Middle East

An armed Minneapolis protestor is shot and killed by Border Patrol — and more protestors fill the streets in freezing temperatures, the shooting fallout reaches D.C., and America beefs up its naval presence near Iran. It’s Monday, January 26, 2026, and this is the news you need to know to start your day. Today’s edition of the Morning Wire podcast can be heard below: Border Patrol Fatally Shoots Armed Man In Minneapolis Border Patrol shot and killed an armed protester in Minneapolis over the weekend, setting off more protests. The deceased has been identified as 37-year-old Alex Pretti, a nurse who officials say was armed while he was interacting with law enforcement, and he had magazines with ammo on him. Border Patrol agents said they were trying to conduct an operation to detain an illegal immigrant with a violent criminal history when the situation with Pretti took place. According to video, Pretti seemed to insert himself in the situation while Border Patrol dealt with an agitator. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem described the incident as an avoidable tragedy. Fatal Shooting Could Spark Govt Shutdown The deadly encounter between federal immigration agents and a Minneapolis man has ignited a fierce debate among political leaders that could impact all Americans. This incident is having a ripple effect across Washington, with one of the most significant reactions coming from Senate Democrats. They now say they will no longer support a budget deal that the House had already passed because it includes funding for the Department of Homeland Security. Democratic leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said in a statement released Saturday that “Senate Democrats will not provide the votes to proceed to the appropriations bill if the DHS funding bill is included.” Polymarket is now putting the odds of a government shutdown at 80%. Trump’s ‘Massive Armada’ Reaches Middle East President Donald Trump says he has dispatched a fleet of warships to Iran as the death toll in the country continues to climb amid anti-government protests. The armada Trump spoke of is the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group, which was last stationed in the South China Sea and reportedly reached the Middle East on Sunday. The strike group includes the Lincoln aircraft carrier, as well as three guided-missile destroyers. The Lincoln itself is carrying five fighter squadrons, and more cargo jets and aerial refueling tankers have also deployed to the region. The military hardware has surged into the area as questions swirl over Trump’s response to Tehran violating his red line with the mass slaughter of protesters. Various estimates have put the current death toll anywhere from a few thousand to tens of thousands.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
7 w

4 Sisters Invent Electric Tractor with Mom and Dad and it’s Selling in 5 Countries
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4 Sisters Invent Electric Tractor with Mom and Dad and it’s Selling in 5 Countries

A big Swiss family has invented Europe’s first all-electric, solar-assisted tractor, and is now selling the vehicle in 5 countries. The Knüsel Family lives in the canton of Schwyz, where patriarch and father of 4, Sepp Knüsel, has been building tractors for over 20 years under the brand name Rigitrac AG.  In 2019, with the […] The post 4 Sisters Invent Electric Tractor with Mom and Dad and it’s Selling in 5 Countries appeared first on Good News Network.
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
7 w

Minneapolis Police Chief: Yes, the Mob Should Rule
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Minneapolis Police Chief: Yes, the Mob Should Rule

Minneapolis Police Chief: Yes, the Mob Should Rule
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
7 w

Why every conservative parent should be watching California right now
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Why every conservative parent should be watching California right now

Well? Do you trust Sam Altman with your kids’ online safety?Of course you don’t. It is a category error, like asking the fox to draft the henhouse bylaws. Nevertheless, the question is now quietly circulating in Sacramento, Silicon Valley, and soon, if history is any indicator, the rest of the nation.The world’s most powerful AI company is no longer keeping itself to the building of machines. Now it is helping to write the rules that govern them. That alone should give any serious observer pause. When the referee starts co-authoring the rule book, something has gone wrong long before the first whistle blows. And these machines, of course, are like none other in human history.California has long served as the Democrats’ preferred testing ground.OpenAI has announced a partnership with Common Sense Media, a prominent children’s online safety group — founded by Jim Steyer, brother of Tom, the billionaire environmentalist and Democrat candidate for California covernor. OpenAI and CSM were previously at odds, each backing rival ballot initiatives to regulate how children interact with AI chatbots. Now? They've joined forces.The result is a single proposal that could soon land on the California ballot — and, crucially, be marketed as a model for national standards.California has long served as the Democrats’ preferred testing ground. Auto emissions standards were piloted there, then imposed nationwide. Data privacy followed the same path. So did labor rules, energy mandates, and environmental regulations that radically reshaped entire industries far beyond the state’s borders. Speaking of machines, this one has proven remarkably efficient. First comes the pilot. Then the precedent. Then the pressure. Boom — the heart of national policy is taken over from the fringe.Once embedded, predictably, the rules harden. Especially when written into ballot initiatives, state constitutions, or dense compliance regimes that only the largest players can afford to navigate. Revision becomes politically radioactive. Repeal is painted as dangerous. Dissent is portrayed as moral failure, opposition as risky and reckless.The stated purpose, to be sure, is unimpeachable. Protect children. Limit data collection. Add safeguards. Require age verification. Who could object? That's precisely the point. The moral framing does the work before the policy ever does.RELATED: Murder victim's heirs file lawsuit against OpenAI Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty ImagesBy the time questions about power, enforcement, and unintended consequences arise, the argument has already been won. After all, if you hesitate, what exactly are you saying? That children should be less safe?But politics, especially California politics, is not about intentions. It has always been about incentives. And this arrangement raises an obvious, uncomfortable question: Why would the most dominant AI firm want to help draft the very regulations meant to restrain it?Regulation, when shaped correctly, isn’t a burden on the powerful. Quite the opposite, in fact. It's a moat. Compliance costs rise. Audits multiply. Smaller firms buckle. New entrants hesitate. The giants absorb the expense, hire the lawyers, tick the boxes, and continue unimpeded. In public, this is called responsibility. In practice, it's market control with better manners.There is also the question of timing. OpenAI and its peers are facing mounting criticism over how young people interact with AI systems. Lawsuits loom. Legislators grow restless. Parents are alarmed. Aligning with a trusted children’s advocacy group offers something priceless: moral cover. It reframes the company not as a defendant, but as a protector, a source of safety against irresponsible risk.That shift matters.Once a firm is cast as part of the solution rather than a leading source of the problem, scrutiny softens. Critics sound shrill, concerns are waved away as the ravings of cranks, and the company secures a seat at the table where future rules are written.Far more mundane — and troubling — than a cloakroom conspiracy, this is regulatory capture conducted in broad daylight, wrapped up with a bow in the language of care. And you do care, don't you?Once California moves, the story writes itself. Headlines will hail “the strongest protections in the country.” Governors elsewhere will be asked why their states lag behind. Congress will be told a ready-made framework already exists. Why reinvent the wheel? Why delay?And just like that, a system designed with the input of the industry it governs becomes the national baseline.This is how power consolidates in the modern age. Forget force and secrecy. Who needs skullduggery when you have slickly deployed partnerships, press releases, and the careful use of children as moral ballast?None of this is to deny that children need protection online. They do. The digital world is unforgiving, full of predators and rabbit holes that lead nowhere good. No serious person disputes that. However, safeguards crafted in haste — or worse, convenience — rarely age well.In a brutal irony, though, a process meant to protect the young can instead shape a future where oversight is ossified, competition is stifled, and the most influential technology of our era answers primarily to itself.California is once again the laboratory. The rest of the country is expected to follow.So the opening question bears repeating. Do you trust Sam Altman, and companies like his, to help decide what your children are allowed to say, read, ask, or imagine? The question answers itself. What remains unanswered is whether the rest of the country will be given a choice.
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
7 w

Alaska Man Monday: Olympics, and a Happy Ending for Some Neglected Animals
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Alaska Man Monday: Olympics, and a Happy Ending for Some Neglected Animals

Alaska Man Monday: Olympics, and a Happy Ending for Some Neglected Animals
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
7 w

You're Probably Using Your USB-C Ports Wrong - Here's How
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You're Probably Using Your USB-C Ports Wrong - Here's How

If it seems as though you're using the USB-C port wrong on your device, this easy fix will likely solve the issue and improve performance at the same time.
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NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
7 w

Egypt to Adopt Restrictions on Children's Social Media Use to Fight 'Digital Chaos'
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Egypt to Adopt Restrictions on Children's Social Media Use to Fight 'Digital Chaos'

Egypt's Parliament is looking into ways to regulate children's use of social media platforms to combat what lawmakers called "digital chaos," following some western countries that are considering banning young teenagers from social media.
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