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Labour Experiencing Their First 'Fiery But Peaceful' Weekend of Cultural Differences
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Labour Experiencing Their First 'Fiery But Peaceful' Weekend of Cultural Differences

Labour Experiencing Their First 'Fiery But Peaceful' Weekend of Cultural Differences
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Daily Show Mocks Idea God Saved Trump, Laments GOP Still Likes Guns
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Daily Show Mocks Idea God Saved Trump, Laments GOP Still Likes Guns

Comedy Central’s The Daily Show took the air early Friday morning for a live reaction show to day four of the Republican National Convention. Host Jordan Klepper was not happy that Republicans are simultaneously claiming that God spared Donald Trump’s life on Saturday while continuing to reject gun control. Introducing a montage of conservative media personalities, Republican politicians, and Trump campaign officials, Klepper declared, “This one seemed to have a higher purpose.”     After the montage, Klepper returned to quip, “If God did save Trump from that bullet, he kind of procrastinated till the last second, didn't He? He could have stopped the gunman at any point during the day, but instead, he waited until the bullet was in the air and went, ‘Shit, shit, shit, shit, shit! That was close. I got to stop looking at my phone all the time.” Later, Klepper played a clip of vice presidential nominee JD Vance’s acceptance speech, where he recalled his family discovering 19 loaded handguns in his grandmother’s house after she died. A displeased Klepper reacted, “Yeah, that's the American spirit! Unhinged paranoia! You know what, I love how gun nuts in this country are always like, ‘We're responsible gun owners. Anyway, here is a Glock I taped under my baby's crib.’" He further mourned that the attempt on Trump’s life hasn’t changed Republicans’ stance on gun control, “Let me just remind everyone that five days ago, their nominee was almost taken out by an assault rifle and I thought that might lead to a moment of introspection. But you guys are like, ‘You know what's hilarious? How guns are everywhere!’" Liberals had a similar reaction after the GOP Congressional baseball shooting, but if Republicans still oppose gun control, maybe they should consider whether such oppositions are genuine and not because the big, bad NRA is pulling their strings.  Here is a transcript for the July 19 show: Comedy Central The Daily Show 7/19/2024 1:35 AM ET JORDAN KLEPPER:  This one seemed to have a higher purpose. SEAN HANNITY: This convention is happening, frankly, by the grace of God. ANNA PAULINA LUNA: It is a divine intervention by God that President Trump is not dead right now. CORY MILLS: This is divine intervention. CAROLINE SUNSHINE: The bullet pierced President Trump at 6:11 PM. Ephesians 6:11 tells us "put on the full armor of God, take your stand against the Devil and his schemes." ROGER MARSHALL: This was Providence. NARSGA BLACKBURN: God’s divine providence. ROB SCHMITT: A millisecond before he fired the shot, a little tilt. RIC GRENELL: A God-given tilt. A God-given tilt TIM SCOTT: If you didn't believe in miracles before Saturday, you better be believing right now. BEN CARSON: That God lowered his shield of protection. KIMBERLY GUILFOYLE: God has put an armor of protection over Donald Trump. SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS: God is not finished with him yet. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE: I believe we all witnessed a miracle, literally. From, you know, before it happened, the flag above got blown in the wind and it got tied into literally what looked like an angel. KLEPPER: Divine origami? That is what we are going with? I mean, you see an angel. I see the G-string from the cover of that Black Crows album. You see what you want to see, but I don't mean to nitpick God, but if God did save Trump from that bullet, he kind of procrastinated till the last second, didn't He? He could have stopped the gunman at any point during the day, but instead, he waited until the bullet was in the air and went, "Shit, shit, shit, shit, shit! That was close. I got to stop looking at my phone all the time.” … KLEPPER: Yeah, that's the American spirit! Unhinged paranoia! You know what, I love how gun nuts in this country are always like, "We're responsible gun owners. Anyway, here is a Glock I taped under my baby's crib."  Let me just remind everyone that five days ago, their nominee was almost taken out by an assault rifle and I thought that might lead to a moment of introspection. But you guys are like, "You know what's hilarious? How guns are everywhere!"
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PBS’s Capehart: Trump ‘Deified,’ I Am ‘Terrified’ of ‘We Love Trump’ Chant
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PBS’s Capehart: Trump ‘Deified,’ I Am ‘Terrified’ of ‘We Love Trump’ Chant

PBS’s coverage of Night Four of the Republican National Convention again featured the Washington Post’s Jonathan Capehart holding up the liberal end of the political analysis. (David Brooks of the New York Times was the ostensible conservative on the panel, but as usual they often agreed with each other.) Capehart spent most of the four nights of the convention whining that the speakers weren’t displaying the promised “unity,” and on Night Four declared Donald Trump’s 90-minute acceptance speech “hateful.” After all the distress seeping out of the Democratic camp regarding President Biden’s fitness to run again, Capehart still carried a torch for the president, saying at 9:06 p.m. “We’re in July. This is not September, there is time to pull things back, but it seems like the party has made up its mind. They want him out.” At 10:08 p.m., pre-Trump speech, after insisting crime rates were falling “in record numbers” under Biden, Capehart went on a rather insulting rant about Trump’s supporters in the hall. Capehart: “And one other thing. All week, I’ve been hearing references to God and divine intervention and guardian angel. This is not the Republican Party and I’ve seen stories about this being a coronation of Donald Trump. I think for the people in this room it goes beyond a coronation. He’s being deified. He is being deified. And I noted when the crowd started chanting ‘We Love Trump,” I understand where it comes from, it comes from a good place. But there’s a part of me that’s terrified by that chant, given everything that I heard from Eric Trump and a bunch of other speakers we’ve been listening to since Monday.” Capehart defended Biden after Trump's speech. Capehart: “I think it should make Democrats reconsider what’s going on. Because I don’t understand and I have not heard from anyone what happens if they succeed in getting President Biden to step away from the ticket.’ Co-host Geoff Bennett, sounding exasperated with the GOP, made a silly comparison of Biden’s disturbing debate performance to Trump’s long acceptance speech. Bennett: When I used to cover the Trump White House we had a running joke that being his teleprompter operator was the hardest job in all of Washington. And Jonathan, what do you make of this asymmetry, where Joe Biden has his disastrous debate performance and there are calls for him to exit the race. Donald Trump gives a, I think it’s fair in many ways rambling, more than 90-minute speech, and that’s accepted, that’s accepted by this Republican base. Capehart: It’s accepted by the Republican base, but it’s also accepted by us in the media. Quite frankly, I would love it if folks in our profession would treat this speech the way they treated Joe Biden’s debate. This speech was not presidential, this speech was not unity. This speech was hateful, it was not unifying, and quite honestly, if Democrats don’t get their act together, they’re going to prove David [Brooks] right, both campaigns are out to lose the campaign. That was the final word of PBS’s analysis before saying farewell until the Democratic National Convention in August (whoever may be on the Democratic ticket by then).
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God’s Hand on Donald J. Trump
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God’s Hand on Donald J. Trump

An inch. One inch, and President Donald J. Trump would be dead. One slight turn of the head. One slight turn of the head saved Donald J. Trump’s life. The fact that Donald J. Trump is alive today is a miracle. There is no other way to see it. His assassin had a clear line of sight. He was 135 meters from Trump. He got off multiple rounds. And Trump was wounded. Barely grazed in the ear, bleeding profusely, Trump rose from the ground, pumped his fist, and shouted, “Fight!” Whatever the reason -- and who knows the reasons of God? -- God decided that Donald J. Trump would live on Saturday. And that demands an answer of us: Can we, as Trump has now said, unify? Can we come together as Americans? Because if that assassin’s bullet had been one inch the other way, our country would have found itself in an unprecedented crisis. The leading candidate for the candidacy, the ex-president of the United States, a man targeted by his political opposition more than any figure our lifetimes, would have been murdered on national television. What would have come next? It is almost impossible to imagine. Given the obvious questions about the failures of the Secret Service to secure the roof from which the assassin fired his deadly shots, given the crisis of confidence in our institutions, given the fact that Joe Biden has run an entire campaign on the basis that Trump is an existential threat to the republic -- could we ever come together again? Or would the assassination of Trump have ushered in an era of extreme violence in our politics? Would it have presaged the breaking apart of our social bonds, the actual dissolution of our national ties? God didn’t just save Donald J. Trump on Saturday. He may have saved the United States as well. What comes next? What should come next is a realization that Americans are, in fact, compatriots. That we share a country and a future together. The language of dissolution -- the line that “if (INSERT CANDIDATE) wins the presidency, there will never be another election” -- must stop. It is a lie. It was always a lie. Neither candidate on the ballot is Hitler. Neither candidate wishes to end America’s elections or send his opponents to concentration camps. I want Donald Trump to win. I’ve given money to his campaign. I think Joe Biden is the worst president in modern history. But I do not believe that Joe Biden will end America itself if he wins. America will continue to exist, and my political side will continue to fight for its principles. Joe Biden had the opportunity to deliver such a message in the hours after the Trump assassination attempt -- and he failed signally. He reminded Americans of “the need for us to lower the temperature in our politics” but didn’t say the one phrase that might have given such a statement credibility: “everyone, including me.” And indeed, just the next day, he gave an interview to NBC’s Lester Holt in which he denied any role in ramping up the hysterical tone of America’s political rhetoric. Instead, he suggested, that hysterical tone was all the fault of Donald Trump. In essence, it was Trump’s own fault someone tried to shoot him. This is an absurdity. More than that, it is morally disgraceful. This week, Trump has the opportunity to do what Biden wouldn’t: unify the country. He says he wants to do just that. And he can do so by reminding us of the better angels of our nature and by decrying the catastrophist rhetoric that has infected our politics. He can point out that while he disagrees with Joe Biden -- while he thinks Biden is the worst president in American history -- Joe Biden will not be the end of America. We will continue to live together, to work together and to be a nation. God gave us all another chance on Saturday. We ought to take it.
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NBC Frets Trump’s ‘Unifying Message’ Morphed into ‘Grievances’, ‘Insults’
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NBC Frets Trump’s ‘Unifying Message’ Morphed into ‘Grievances’, ‘Insults’

Though not as bombastic as ABC’s Good Morning America, NBC’s Today still made their point Friday about how they viewed President Trump’s Thursday speech at the Republican National Convention, crediting him for his vivid retelling of Saturday’s assassination attempt and the tribute to the late Corey Comperatore, then knocking him for “riffing” and “repeating...grievances, conspiracies, and insults”. Co-host Savannah Guthrie said in a tease that Trump gave an “emotional description of that attempted assassination” before throwing “fiery red meat” to “the party faithful” then later offered the same notes in tossing to senior Washington correspondent Hallie Jackson.     “[I]n many ways, it was also a tale of two speeches with the former President returning to the controversial rhetoric more familiar to his campaign remarks, even after promising a departure from the divisions he had a hand in stoking. But at the outset of that 93-minutes speech, he positioned himself as a unifier, describing in dramatic detail, the attempted assassination against him,” Jackson began. Jackson at least spent some time on Trump discussing Saturday’s horror before pivoting to him “riffing, rally style, off script, repeating the grievances, conspiracies and insulting characteristic of his campaign speeches” and delivering “ominous warnings” (click “expoand”): JACKSON: In his first speech after the assassination attempt against him — [TRUMP CLIP] JACKSON: — Mr. Trump, his ear still bandaged, recounting the moment he was shot Saturday in Pennsylvania, surrounded by images from that day, tears streaming down the faces of some in the crowd — [TRUMP CLIP] JACKSON: — the former President kissing the helmet of Corey Comperature, the firefighter who died at the rally protecting his family before a moment of silence and later, displaying the chart Mr. Trump had turned to see on the rally stage, a move he credited with saving his life. [TRUMP CLIP] JACKSON: But despite the former President’s pledge to deliver a more unifying message after the shooting, only a brief nod — [TRUMP CLIP] JACKSON: — before riffing, rally style, off script, repeating the grievances, conspiracies and insulting characteristic of his campaign speeches — [FIVE TRUMP CLIPS] JACKSON: Mr. Trump, in the longest campaign speech ever, issuing ominous warnings —  [TRUMP CLIP] JACKSON: — repeating his election fraud lies and slamming Democrats, though notably only mentioning President Biden by name briefly. [TRUMP CLIP] In the analysis portion, Guthrie told Jackson that the RNC “was...really interesting...because it really — I was so struck by the way convention organizers seem to be pulling off a real softing of Donald Trump” until Thursday with “Hulk Hogan ripping off his shirt”, “Kid Rock and the crowds yelling, fight,” and Trump’s stemwinder of a speech that “many, many, many people love, but he’s trying to reach across and get new voters.” Jackson agreed and said this signaled the belief in the Trump camp to boost base enthusiasm so their “loyalists...show up” so “then maybe they don’t need quite as many of those independent, suburban, swing state voters as well.” NBC’s Biden coverage was far more contained, but was still devastating. Guthrie framed Biden’s problem in existential terms: “President Biden in isolation with Covid, facing the biggest decision of his political career: Carry on with the campaign or bow out amid mounting and relentless pressure from prominent Democrats?” Senior White House correspondent Gabe Gutierrez said from Rehoboth Beach, Delaware that “[t]he political ground seems to have shifted” and “[t]here’s been a distinct change in the last 24 hours” with it being “simply not clear how the next few days will play out.” Gutierrez noted that while the public posture of the Biden campaign is full speed ahead, a source told the network that “we’re close to the end” of its existence. “This morning, in self-isolation as he recovers from Covid, President Biden is also growing more isolated politically,” Gutierrez added. In a shot to Biden that he’s not the leader of the party, Gutierrez said “anxiety among Democrats reaching the top of the party,” citing former President Obama and former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (CA). Guthrie and Meet the Press moderator Kristen Welker weren’t any less charitable (click “expand”): GUTHRIE: The many, many Democrats that you talked to think it’s all but done. Although, apparently he has not made that decision. WELKER: That’s right. It’s not done until he makes that final decision, if he does. There is an air of inevitability, though, right now given that you have these mounting calls both publicly and privately. Jon Tester becoming the second U.S. Senator to call on him to step down. I am told that he is increasingly reflective. He’s obviously in Rehoboth with his family as he recovers from Covid, but I’m also told he’s increasingly resentful of this pile-on, and it underscoring the divisions in the party. GUTHRIE: Yeah. And his circle of advisers has reportedly gotten narrower and narrower — WELKER: Yeah. GUTHRIE: — and it wasn’t exactly wide to start with.     WELKER: Well, exactly. And this is part of the concern with the Democratic Party that he hasn’t been given the full picture that shows he’s increasingly trailing former President Trump nationally and in key battleground states as well. So, what’s happening though is those conversations are becoming more realistic, I’m told. Despite rehasing much of his report from the first hour, Gutierrez dropped the w-word in the second hour: “The walls seemingly closing in on his campaign.” To see the relevant transcripts from July 19, click here (for Trump coverage) and here (for Biden coverage).
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1 y

Lana Del Rey's easygoing Americana is what we need
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Lana Del Rey's easygoing Americana is what we need

Lana Del Rey is going country. September will bring her new album, titled “Lasso”; in the meantime, her new “country-trap” ballad with Atlanta rapper Quavo is steadily climbing the charts.“Tough” pairs acoustic guitar and Del Rey’s breathy crooning with Quavo’s tight verses and thick trap beats. The lyrics are also a mash-up, expressing a resilience in the midst of everyday adversity through imagery from both the rural and urban underclass: “The blue-collar, red-dirt attitude” meets “808s beating in the trunk in Atlanta.”Above all, Del Rey exhibits the playful humor and patriotic attitude at the core of conservatism’s resurgence. If this kind of thing has 'crossover appeal,' then all the better. It’s no surprise that fans have responded to the tune. The boundaries between country, pop, and hip-hop are more permeable than ever; Del Rey has played with elements of all three ever since her 2012 major-label debut, “Born to Die.”The fact that that album – released midway through the Obama era – is currently surging in the charts is a testament to Del Rey’s staying power, her ability to hold onto pop stardom during a particularly volatile time for the music business. Unlike her fellow survivors, Taylor Swift and Beyoncé, Del Rey has always remained aloof from the liberal cause du jour. Which, along with her throwback femininity, is enough to make her seem vaguely conservative. Contrast her with Swift, who alienated her early fans by trading her everywoman appeal for celebrity activism. And yet musically, it is Swift who is more palatable to many conservatives, for whom hip-hop culture evokes DEI entitlement, sexual licentiousness, urban lawlessness, and probably twerking. For every fan on the right who applauds Del Rey’s self-consciously all-American aesthetic, there’s another who regards her penchant for genre-mixing as suspicious. Right-wing infighting? There’s nothing new under the sun.Even the rural America Del Rey embraces — typically the last bastion of conservative identity in our pop culture — can’t escape scolding from the right. Witness the controversy surrounding 23-year-old Tennessean Hailey Welch, whose crude but innocuous comment made her a viral sensation.Why? It's not as if there's a shortage of pretty young woman making vulgar jokes about sex online. Welch struck a chord because she (and her delightful twang) are recognizably from a real place.At the time she was “discovered,” Welch was living — happily — in a place with a population about the size of Oberlin's 2024 graduating class. With her grandmother. She worked in a bedspring factory and had never driven on the interstate or been in an airplane. Conservatives would normally applaud these markers of wholesome, small-town life — if they weren't too busy clutching their pearls at the temerity Welch had to monetize her fame and further degrade the culture.Unlike the pundits, the people who made Welch go viral understand that it’s all in good fun. It’s doubtful that any of the passersby in the original video would’ve been scandalized by Welch’s off-color talk, either.“Rich Men North of Richmond” singer-songwriter Oliver Anthony’s viral fame followed a similar trajectory. At first, conservatives loved his accent and the “Hillbilly Elegy” populism of his lyrics. Before long, however, he began failing the usual right-wing purity tests, mentioning “diversity” without a sneer and lamenting that his song was being “weaponized” by conservative-activist types.Anthony may no longer be the partisan sensation he was last summer, but people still seem to enjoy his music, if the robust ticket sales for his current tour are any indication.What the right might ponder is how to reach the kind of "barstool conservatives" who naturally identify with the likes of Welch and Anthony. These are people who are instinctively drawn to anti-wokeness without necessarily caring to engage in culture-war debates about "traditional values." “Tough” may be something of a departure for Del Rey, but it conveys a theme that runs through all of her work: the freedom of embracing regional roots. Del Rey herself was born in Manhattan. And it is there she returned — after a childhood in upstate New York and a stint at boarding school in Connecticut — to launch her career. And yet in her music, she’s always gravitated to more remote American eras and locales.Above all, Del Rey exhibits the playful humor and patriotic attitude at the core of conservatism’s resurgence. If this kind of thing has “crossover appeal,” then all the better. Worrying about whether any newcomers are “our people” betrays deep insecurity. To search for signs of liberal creep in “Yellowstone” or Zach Bryan is to forget that their very prominence is a victory in itself. That alone should embolden conservatives. If the right really wants to claim a central place in the culture, it could start by emulating the graceful, confident cool of Ms. Del Rey and having a little fun.
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Pastor visits jailed teen accused of torching church vans — then helps change his life forever: 'He gave his life to Christ'
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Pastor visits jailed teen accused of torching church vans — then helps change his life forever: 'He gave his life to Christ'

A South Carolina pastor emulated a core teaching of Christianity when he forgave a teenager accused of setting fire to his church's vans. Earlier this month, South Carolina police arrested 18-year-old Brandon Thomas Greene for allegedly torching two Ford Transit church vans in the parking lot at Philadelphia Baptist Church in Pauline, South Carolina. 'I told him that the church loved him because Christ loved us, and then, long story short, I got to share the gospel with him.' He was taken into custody on July 5 and charged with two counts of arson. To be sure, losing the church vans was an inconvenience for Philadelphia Baptist Church. Congregants were planning to use the vans to transport a youth team to a missions event in Kentucky. The departure date was the day after the vans were torched. However, instead of responding with anger, Philadelphia Baptist Church pastor Kiah Graves visited Greene in jail and extended him forgiveness. "'Brandon, we forgive you because we've been forgiven of our sins, but we want to know if you understand that,'" Graves recounted to WYFF-TV of the message he delivered to Greene in jail. But that's not all. Not only did Graves extend forgiveness, but he also shared the gospel with Greene. "It was an amazing moment. We hugged each other. I told him that the church loved him because Christ loved us, and then, long story short, I got to share the gospel with him," Graves told WYFF. "He gave his life to Christ in there, repented of his sins, and wants to be baptized," he explained. "But none of that would have happened, I don't think, if everybody wasn't on the same page of, 'Yes, let's catch him, let's make sure we get that squared away, but also don't leave him by himself.'" Forgiveness is core to Jesus' teachings. Not only did Jesus emphasize the importance of forgiveness in his Sermon on the Mount, but he repeatedly told parables about the requirement of forgiveness. Famously, Jesus even told his disciple Peter that forgiveness should be never-ending.As this situation demonstrates, forgiven people forgive — and receiving the grace of forgiveness contains a transforming power."Forgiveness and a hope of redemption for other people, offering second chances, is a way that Spartanburg could be known as one of the best places on Earth to live," Graves told WYFF. 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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Ocasio-Cortez says anti-Biden Democrats want to secretly cut Kamala Harris from ticket too: 'That's bulls***!'
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Ocasio-Cortez says anti-Biden Democrats want to secretly cut Kamala Harris from ticket too: 'That's bulls***!'

Socialist Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York excoriated Democrats for leaking anonymous comments to derail the Biden campaign while not admitting they want to jettison Vice President Kamala Harris as well. Ocasio-Cortez made the comments in a video she posted to her social media account on Thursday. "I'm gonna say what a lot of these folks aren't saying. I'm just gonna say it," said Ocasio-Cortez. "If you think that there is consensus among the people who want Joe Biden to leave, that they will support Kamala, Vice President Harris, you would be mistaken. And I'm gonna say that because if they're gonna come out and say all their little things on background, off the record, but they're not gonna be fully honest, I'm gonna be honest for them," she continued. "I'm in these rooms. I see what they say in conversations," Ocasio-Cortez added. "A lot of them are not just interested in removing the president. They are interested in removing the full ticket." She floated a conspiracy theory that Republicans were plotting to steal the election through the Supreme Court.She went to call out those Democrats who didn't admit in public that they wanted to get rid of Harris on the ticket as well. "That's bulls***! If you have an opinion, say it with your chest, and say it in public!" she added. She admitted in the hour-long video posted to Instagram that Biden's performance at the debate against Trump was terrible, but she floated a conspiracy theory that Republicans were plotting to steal the election through the Supreme Court. "I want to put all my cards out on the table because I don't know what's going to happen," she added earlier in the video. Ocasio-Cortez had previously defended Biden and said the issue of his candidacy was settled because he had come out and decided that he was staying in the race. "I have spoken with him extensively, he made clear then, and he has made clear since, that he's in this race. The matter is closed," she said at the time. “Joe Biden is our nominee. He is not leaving this race. He is in this race and I support him," she added. Despite her defense, the pressure against Biden had only increased after former President Donald Trump narrowly survived an assassination attempt at a Pennsylvania rally. The complete video was posted to X, the platform formerly known as Twitter. 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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'Better than half these dudes in the league': Raiders star Davante Adams would love for Tom Brady to come out of retirement
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'Better than half these dudes in the league': Raiders star Davante Adams would love for Tom Brady to come out of retirement

Las Vegas Raiders star wide receiver Davante Adams said he'd happily play with Tom Brady even if he were 58 years old.It was widely speculated that NFL legend Tom Brady would play his last season with the Raiders to coincide with their move from Oakland to Las Vegas, which included a brand-new mega stadium. However, Brady retired as a member of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.Although, much of the rumors seemed to culminate in Brady becoming a minority owner of the Raiders instead.The team is currently struggling to find a solid quarterback, prompting podcast host and former NFL player Shannon Sharpe to ask Adams if he would play with Brady should he unretire.'I don't know if they're going to let me.'In fact, Sharpe barely got the words out before Adams started to answer."Tom Brady ... would you want — how old's Brady?" Sharpe began."Hell, yes," Adams interrupted. "Damn, you didn't even let me finish the question!" Sharpe came back."I know exactly [what you were going to say]. I knew when you said 'Tom Brady' I knew what you said," Adams continued. The 31-year-old wide receiver said he knew exactly what Sharpe was about to ask, adding that he has to "talk about how old [Brady] is.""I don't care, I don't care!" he said on the "Club Shay Shay" podcast."Would you take Tom at 47 or 48?" Sharpe continued.Adams clarified that even a 58-year-old Brady would still be one of the better quarterbacks in the NFL."He's getting older, but I mean he's still got to be able to throw it better than half these dudes in the league."The last time Brady seriously talked about a possible return to the NFL was in April 2024, when he said on the "DeepCut with VicBlends" podcast that he "wasn't opposed" to a Michael Jordan-style comeback."Let's say one day there's a situation, right? Maybe it's a [San Francisco] 49ers, maybe, you know, heading to the playoffs. Offense is great ..." the host described."Patriots, could be Raiders, could be ... never know," Brady interrupted."God forbid somebody goes down," the host continued. "Would you pick up that phone?""I'm not opposed to it," Brady said at the time. "I don't know if they're going to let me if I become an owner of an NFL team. I don't know, I'm always going to be in good shape, always be able to throw the ball, so to come in for a little bit like MJ coming back? I don't know if they'd let me, but I wouldn't be opposed to it," Brady concluded.Adams went on to tell Sharpe that his team's offense was one that was "fit for a Tom Brady" due to it being an "offense that you have to have extremely high-level execution to be able to make it work."Adams was also asked if he felt pressure to live up to the idea that Raiders players are troublemakers on and off the field.In a hilarious response, Adams said that while he wants to people to "fear" him when they're playing against him, "You don't want them to fear that you're about to shoot them or rob them!""Nothing like that! We can't be getting too out of control with it," he laughed.Brady has consistently stayed in headlines since his retirement, particularly with his massively successful Netflix roast. However, after garnering over 14 million views in the first week of airing, Brady later revealed that the impact the roast jokes had on his children was too much for him to consider participating in such an event ever again.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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Secretary of State Blinken Shares Latest Disturbing Example of Biden's Foreign Policy Brilliance
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Secretary of State Blinken Shares Latest Disturbing Example of Biden's Foreign Policy Brilliance

Secretary of State Blinken Shares Latest Disturbing Example of Biden's Foreign Policy Brilliance
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