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8 w

This Fan-Favorite Retailer Is Offering Free Shipping for Today Only — Here’s What You Can’t Miss
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www.thekitchn.com

This Fan-Favorite Retailer Is Offering Free Shipping for Today Only — Here’s What You Can’t Miss

Don’t miss it! READ MORE...
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
8 w

Threatened at Boston Marathon: New Mom Takes Stand for Women’s Sports, Common Sense
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www.dailysignal.com

Threatened at Boston Marathon: New Mom Takes Stand for Women’s Sports, Common Sense

Running in the Boston Marathon was a longtime dream for Natalie Daniels, and doing it six months’ postpartum, she says, felt like a way to celebrate the beauty and power of the female body. That’s why Daniels says she was troubled to learn that the Boston Marathon was now allowing men who identify as women to compete in the women’s category.   Daniels, an avid marathon runner, shared her concerns regarding the Boston Marathon policy on social media and on a podcast with XX-XY Athletics just a few days before the marathon in April. Almost instantly, people Daniels knew and did not know began attacking her over her opinion that men should not be allowed to compete in the women’s category. The mom, in her early 30s, faced threats, with individuals online encouraging Boston Marathon attendees to throw bottles at her while she ran.   Natalie Daniels crosses the finish line of the Boston Marathon. Following the race, Daniels was kicked out of her running club for refusing to state that a man, with sufficient hormones and treatment, could ever become a woman. Today, she has partnered with XX-XY Athletics, a pro-women athletic apparel company, to stand up for the integrity and protection of women’s sports.   Daniels joins “Problematic Women” to share her story and explain how her faith in God has played a critical role in her running journey.   Also on today’s show, we discuss Democrat California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s appearance on “The Shawn Ryan Show,” a popular podcast, and the controversy following Chip and Joanna Gaines’ decision to feature a same-sex couple on their new TV series. Also: Is “Swag,” Justin Bieber’s new album, a hit or a miss? We give our reactions.   Enjoy the show! The post Threatened at Boston Marathon: New Mom Takes Stand for Women’s Sports, Common Sense appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
8 w

Neal McDonough Talks Faith, Family, And Why He Wants His Movies To Get People Talking
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www.dailywire.com

Neal McDonough Talks Faith, Family, And Why He Wants His Movies To Get People Talking

Neal McDonough made a career out of playing tough characters. From Lieutenant Lynn “Buck” Compton in “Band of Brothers” to the steely villain Michael Beck in “Yellowstone,” McDonough always seems to play someone who sends a chill up your spine. But offscreen, McDonough’s the polar opposite: warm and kind, committed to faith and family, and on a quest to make movies that touch audiences on a deeper level. In an exclusive interview with The Daily Wire, McDonough opened up about his new film, “Guns N’ Moses,” an independent thriller about a group of orthodox Jews grappling with the aftermath of an attack on their synagogue. He hopes the film will inspire viewers to find connections with those who don’t share their beliefs, and realize that we all have more in common than we may otherwise think. The actor also discussed why he believes smaller, independent films are filling a gap left by Hollywood. “Guns N’ Moses” was shot in just 20 days, but boasts impressive production values. McDonough thrives on the challenges of indie filmmaking because, he said, that’s where meaningful stories still get told. “You couldn’t make a film like this for a big studio because it really goes out on a limb and talks about things,” he explained. “The studios…they’re much more tentpole films now…big, huge, action blockbuster types of films. And they’ve really kind of gotten away from the crafting of ideas for smaller films.” For McDonough, those smaller films are where the important conversations happen. “Films like this make you realize that we need to be nicer to each other,” he said. “We can all have our different beliefs, but we all believe in the same all-powerful being that created all of us. So, we should be rooting for each other more.” A devout Catholic, McDonough said he’s experienced firsthand how speaking openly about faith can bring backlash in the industry. He made headlines in 2010 after being let go from the ABC drama “Scoundrels” for refusing to participate in intimate scenes or kiss another woman. “Whenever you stand up for your faith, especially in a positive way, there will be so many people who are ready to take you down,” he said. “They have to have a fight over it. ‘My faith is better than your faith. My color is better than your color. My bank account is bigger than yours.’ It’s kind of exhausting.” He referenced John Lennon’s “Imagine” as an idealistic vision, but acknowledged that it’s not necessarily realistic. “Films like Guns N’ Moses talk about the fact that it’s not a better place at times,” he said. “There is hate and there are problems within faiths. Especially now with what’s going on with Israel and the Middle East…it’s really a hard time to figure out: well, what is the truth?” For McDonough, the answer remains the same. “The truth is always what God says to me in particular. It’s what is God’s idea? God’s idea is we must love each other and we must honor God. Those are the two big things that we’re supposed to be doing.” In recent years, McDonough and his wife, Ruvé McDonough, a South African model he met while filming “Band of Brothers,” have been producing their own slate of films. Their latest project, “The Last Rodeo,” recently hit top spots on Amazon and Apple. “People really want to see films that make you think about faith, make you think about Him,” McDonough said. “Doesn’t matter if you’re a Jew or a Christian or Muslim or agnostic or whatever. It makes you think, how can I be a bit better of a person as a husband or as a father, as a coworker, as whatever?” “A lot of films nowadays don’t allow you to think. They give you the choices and they’ll play the music to swell up to make you think that way. Well, that’s manufacturing a thought process,” he added. The Hollywood veteran believes films like “Guns N’ Moses” push back against that formula. “It’s pimples and all. Here’s the film. It’s going to make you think about what your place is in life and how you can make it a better place for everyone else around you.” For McDonough, it all circles back to the values he holds dear: faith, family, and finding life’s deeper meaning. “America is the United States of America, not the divided States of America,” he said. “Our country was built upon faith…a Judeo-Christian faith is what it was built upon. It mentions God four times in the Declaration of Independence. It’s on our money. It’s everywhere we go.” “But somehow we veer away from it because of the temptations that are in front of us. A bigger car, nicer house…You’ll never find happiness if you’re chasing that,” the actor said. He admitted he used to chase those things himself until he shifted focus to what truly matters. “Once you start chasing the right thing, two things are going to happen,” he explained. “You’re going to be much more fulfilled because you’re doing the right thing for your Heavenly Father. But it’s also gonna be a lot of people out there who are gonna want to take you down and say horrible things.” Yet he remains committed to telling stories that encourage audiences to reflect and grow. “We’re gonna keep on making films like ‘Guns N’ Moses.’ We’re gonna keep on doing films like ‘The Last Rodeo,’ which is killing it right now on video. People want to see films that they can bring the whole family to look at, and have a real discussion about a movie and how we can be better as a society.” McDonough also dismissed the notion that conservative Christians are at odds Jewish people. “That’s not true,” he said flatly. “America is really a Judeo-Christian society. I lived in Hancock Park for a long time and all our neighbors were orthodox Jews. And boy, we got along quite well.” He called the faith traditions “almost exactly identical” in their values and said true believers in any faith respect each other. “It’s the ones who don’t 100% believe in Him first, me second…then it becomes about you and your personal opinions. Well, it shouldn’t really be your personal opinion. It should be your personal acceptance of God, acceptance of other beliefs, acceptance of everyone.” “No one is exactly the same. So why should one person think that their belief or their color or their money is better than somebody else’s? It’s all about faith and He built us to love each other, not to hate each other.” That, McDonough said, is the message at the heart of “Guns N’ Moses.” “We’re all in this together,” he said. “Shouldn’t we just enjoy each other more instead of hating each other more?” Despite Hollywood’s frequent hostility toward faith-based storytelling, McDonough is hopeful that independent films can help fill the cultural gap. “I think Hollywood has really veered off from making films that can help change your life in a better way to making films that can change your life through darkness and through all kinds of crazy stuff. And I’m guilty of being part of a lot of those films,” he admitted. “I have to make a living as an actor.” “But when it has our name on it for the McDonough Company, you know it’s gonna be a film that is about family, it’s about faith, and it’s about doing the right thing. And ‘Guns N’ Moses’ goes right along with that.” He’s convinced audiences are hungry for it. “There has to be a common ground,” McDonough said. “We can come together and allow each other to have our different beliefs… and maybe we can enjoy some together and break bread together and have a good conversation.” And that’s the type of filmmaking he intends to keep pursuing. “Guns N’ Moses” hits theaters July 18. “It’s an important movie,” McDonough said. “You guys gotta go out there and see it.”
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
8 w

10 Bizarre Events That Happened on the Set of Poltergeist
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listverse.com

10 Bizarre Events That Happened on the Set of Poltergeist

Discover 10 shocking behind-the-scenes events from the making of Poltergeist, from real human skeletons to dangerous prop malfunctions. The post 10 Bizarre Events That Happened on the Set of Poltergeist appeared first on Listverse.
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
8 w

Threatened at Boston Marathon: New Mom Takes Stand for Women’s Sports, Common Sense
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www.dailysignal.com

Threatened at Boston Marathon: New Mom Takes Stand for Women’s Sports, Common Sense

Running in the Boston Marathon was a longtime dream for Natalie Daniels, and doing it six months’ postpartum, she says, felt like a way to celebrate the beauty and power of the female body. That’s why Daniels says she was troubled to learn that the Boston Marathon was now allowing men who identify as women to compete in the women’s category.   Daniels, an avid marathon runner, shared her concerns regarding the Boston Marathon policy on social media and on a podcast with XX-XY Athletics just a few days before the marathon in April. Almost instantly, people Daniels knew and did not know began attacking her over her opinion that men should not be allowed to compete in the women’s category. The mom, in her early 30s, faced threats, with individuals online encouraging Boston Marathon attendees to throw bottles at her while she ran.   Natalie Daniels crosses the finish line of the Boston Marathon. Following the race, Daniels was kicked out of her running club for refusing to state that a man, with sufficient hormones and treatment, could ever become a woman. Today, she has partnered with XX-XY Athletics, a pro-women athletic apparel company, to stand up for the integrity and protection of women’s sports.   Daniels joins “Problematic Women” to share her story and explain how her faith in God has played a critical role in her running journey.   Also on today’s show, we discuss Democrat California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s appearance on “The Shawn Ryan Show,” a popular podcast, and the controversy following Chip and Joanna Gaines’ decision to feature a same-sex couple on their new TV series. Also: Is “Swag,” Justin Bieber’s new album, a hit or a miss? We give our reactions.   Enjoy the show! The post Threatened at Boston Marathon: New Mom Takes Stand for Women’s Sports, Common Sense appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
8 w

Goodbye, anons? Radical transparency is about to upend the internet
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www.theblaze.com

Goodbye, anons? Radical transparency is about to upend the internet

In June, Texas Patriot, a prominent anonymous account supportive of President Donald Trump, announced during the height of tensions with Iran:F**k it. If Trump takes us to war, I’m done with him and his administration.I voted for:NO WARSNo taxesCheap gasCheap groceriesMAHA.What of these things has actually happened?I’m pissed.This message from a popular pro-Trump account seemed significant. Was Trump’s populist base turning on him?In our current world, however, where plausible fake engagement can be created at an almost limitless scale, true anons will lose a great deal of their power.But shortly thereafter, Right Angle News, another popular anonymous account, asserted that Texas Patriot was actually based in Pakistan. Yet another popular anon account contested this, saying that Texas Patriot is really an American originally from Texas who now lives in Georgia. Notably, most other major accounts weighing in on the controversy, from Proud Elephant to Evil Texan, are themselves anonymous, adding further to the hall of mirrors.Either way, Texas Patriot deleted its own account shortly thereafter, perhaps suggesting that he or she had something to hide — or at least didn’t want the scrutiny.The question of whether Texas Patriot is, in fact, a patriot from Texas or a bad actor in Islamabad is ultimately beside the point. As Newsweek wrote of the incident:Social media has proved useful for galvanizing the MAGA movement, with popular accounts often reacting to political developments from Trump’s feud with X owner Elon Musk to Trump’s policy agenda. If it emerged that an account alleged to be American was actually based in another country, it would impact users’ trust.And such trust is rapidly eroding, which will accelerate as ever more sophisticated fake accounts and bot farms are exposed.The incident was just one of many in which major social media accounts were discovered — or at least suggested — to be run by someone far different from who they were purported to be. And it previews a shift that is just now beginning, which will fundamentally change how we interact with social media content.Bots indistinguishable from humansWhen it comes to who will rule social media, the age of the anon is ending. The age of radical transparency is beginning — and yet, if designed well, radical transparency can still include a substantial and valuable space for a large degree of online anonymity.Several reasons explain the shift. Increasingly sophisticated artificial intelligence models and bots generate outputs that, in many cases, are already almost indistinguishable from humans. For most users, they will soon become fully indistinguishable (a fact confirmed by multiple studies that have shown that most people have a poor ability to tell the difference between the two). And almost certainly, bots guided with even a minimum of human interaction will become indistinguishable from actual humans.Many of my best friends have had anon accounts. A few are still prominent anons. It’s also noteworthy that almost every prominent ex-anon I know personally, whether doxxed or self-outed, dramatically improved their profile and professional opportunities once they were no longer anonymous.I am not anti-anon, however. I understand why some people, especially those expressing opinions well outside of the mainstream, need to be anonymous. I also acknowledge that anonymity has been a crucial part of the American political tradition since the revolutionary era. An internet that banned anons would be an internet that is much poorer. This is why the biggest current anon accounts will be grandfathered into the coming system of radical transparency, as they have actual operators who are known to enough people that they are recognized as genuine.I know several big anon accounts like this. I don’t know who is running them, but I have multiple offline friends I trust who do know the account holders and vouch for them. Accounts of this kind, with credible, real-world validation, will continue to have influence. But increasingly, new big anon accounts will be ignored, even if they amass a large number of followers (many of whom are fake).As these ersatz accounts become increasingly sophisticated every day, engaging with the truly real becomes ever more important. Fake videos and photos proliferating on social media merely add to the potential for deception.Age of radical transparencyEven accounts run by real people will not be immune to the age of radical transparency. Some are partially or wholly automated — a way for a “content creator” to maintain a cheap 24-hour revenue stream. In the future, if you want to have influence, mechanisms will be in place to prove not only that it is you who are posting but that you are posting content that is authentic, with a proven real-world point of origin. Some have even suggested using the blockchain as a method of validation.There should be a simple way of blocking the worst AI slop accounts, foreign bad actors who post highly packaged clickbait, or those who shamelessly steal content made by others. Most Americans would probably prefer not to engage with unverified foreign accounts when discussing U.S. politics. Certainly, I would be willing to pay for a feed that only showed me real, verified accounts from America, along with a limited list of paid, verified, and non-anonymous accounts from other parts of the world.I am interested in having discussions with real people about real content and the real opinions they have. I want accounts mercilessly downrated if they produce inauthentic content presented as real. I want accounts downrated that regularly retweet unverified slop. If X, or any other online platform, can’t consistently provide that, I’ll look elsewhere — and so will many others.Anonymity breeds toxicityMy desire for authenticity is not a left-wing attempt to police “disinformation” — that is, whatever the left doesn’t want said. It’s far more serious. It’s not about getting “true” facts but a feed that is filled with actual people producing their own content representing their own views — with clear links to the sources for their claims.Anonymity has, naturally, always been accompanied by a slew of problems: It can lead to echo chambers or aggressive exchanges, as users feel less pressure to engage rationally.The lack of personal stakes can escalate conflict, which is amplified by AI. Modern AI can generate thousands of unique, human-like posts in seconds, overwhelming feeds with propaganda or fake news. The increasing influence of state actors in this fake news ecosystem makes it even riskier.RELATED: Slop and spam, bots and scams: Can personalized algorithms fix the internet? Vertigo3d via iStock/Getty Images Anonymity also emboldens individuals to act without fear of repercussions, which often has downsides. The online disinhibition effect, a psychological phenomenon first described by psychologist John Suler in 2004, suggests that anonymity reduces social inhibitions, leading to behaviors individuals might avoid in face-to-face settings.Everyone has met the toxic anon online personality who turns out to be quite meek and agreeable in person. One friend of mine who had an edgy online persona eventually closed her anon account (with tens of thousands of followers) and recreated her online presence from scratch as a “face” account. Her tweets are no longer as fun or spicy as they had been, but her persona is real — and presents who she really is. And she eventually landed a great public-facing job, partly based on the quality of her tweets.Dwindling era of anon accountsAnons could play a leading role in the old social media world where bots were mostly obvious, and meaningful provocations were, in large part, created by real people through anonymous accounts. In our current world, however, where plausible fake engagement can be created on an almost limitless scale, true anons will lose a great deal of their power. They will be replaced as top influencers by those who are willing to be radically transparent.Truly transparent identities should include verifiable information, such as email addresses, phone numbers, or government-issued IDs for account creation. While such information does not need to be publicly shared, it should be given to the social media company connected to the account.Raising the barrier for AI-driven impersonation, while not foolproof, deters malicious actors, who must invest significant resources to create credible fake identities.For anons unwilling to trust their private information to one of the major online platforms, third-party identity verifiers dedicated to protecting user privacy could carefully validate their identities while keeping them anonymous from social media companies. Such third-party brokers themselves would have their prestige checked by the accuracy of their verification procedures. This method would still allow for a high degree of public anonymity, bolstered by a backend that guarantees authenticity.A new internet ageIn the future, pure online anonymity will not be banned — nor should it be. But in the coming age of radical transparency, a truly anonymous account — one whose owner’s real-world identity is neither known within i own trusted circles nor verified by a reliable third party — will have little to no value.The next internet age will value not just what you say, but more importantly, that others know you are the one who is saying it.Editor’s note: A version of this article appeared originally in The American Mind.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
8 w

Amazfit Helio smart ring review — Accurate sleep tracking without breaking the bank
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www.livescience.com

Amazfit Helio smart ring review — Accurate sleep tracking without breaking the bank

The Amazfit Helio is a great budget-friendly alternative to the Oura Ring — as long as you can look past its short battery life and limited range of sizes.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
8 w

Why do sharks freeze when flipped upside down?
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www.livescience.com

Why do sharks freeze when flipped upside down?

Many shark species are temporarily paralyzed when turned upside down. But what benefit does this trait have?
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YubNub News
YubNub News
8 w

Trump’s $20 Billion Libel Suit Against Wall Street Journal Likely Doomed From the Start, Says Legal Expert
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Trump’s $20 Billion Libel Suit Against Wall Street Journal Likely Doomed From the Start, Says Legal Expert

By Gloria Ogbonna CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin offered a blunt legal assessment Friday night during an appearance on Anderson Cooper 360, stating that former President Donald Trump’s $20 billion…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
8 w

Trump Threatens Terror Label for Backers of ICE Riot Organizers, Citing Communist Ties
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yubnub.news

Trump Threatens Terror Label for Backers of ICE Riot Organizers, Citing Communist Ties

President Trump says organizers and funders of violent ICE protests may be designated terrorist entities if linked to coordinated or foreign-backed operations. By yourNEWS Media Newsroom President Donald…
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