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9 w

Plane Carrying Hundreds Of Passengers Crashes Moments After Takeoff In India, One Man Reportedly Survives
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Plane Carrying Hundreds Of Passengers Crashes Moments After Takeoff In India, One Man Reportedly Survives

Rest in peace
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9 w

EXCLUSIVE: Paxton Accuses Cornyn Of Flip-Flopping On Leftist Groups As TX Senate Race Heats Up
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EXCLUSIVE: Paxton Accuses Cornyn Of Flip-Flopping On Leftist Groups As TX Senate Race Heats Up

'Applauded federal grants to three of the groups'
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9 w

Chicago Mayor Urges City To ‘Resist’ Looming Trump Immigration Crackdown
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Chicago Mayor Urges City To ‘Resist’ Looming Trump Immigration Crackdown

'Counting on all of Chicago to resist in this moment’
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
9 w

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Renewed for Fifth and Final Season
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Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Renewed for Fifth and Final Season

News star trek: strange new worlds Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Renewed for Fifth and Final Season Captain Pike and his crew will close out with six final episodes. By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on June 12, 2025 Credit: Marni Grossman/Paramount+ Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: Marni Grossman/Paramount+ The third season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds hasn’t even premiered yet, but Paramount+ is already looking to explore new seasons. Today, the streamer announced that the show, which was already greenlit for a fourth season, would also get a fifth. The bad news? That fifth season, which will have six episodes, will be the show’s final. “From the very beginning, Strange New Worlds set out to honor what Star Trek has always stood for—boundless curiosity, hope and the belief that a better future is possible,” executive producers Akiva Goldsman, Henry Alonso Myers, and Alex Kurtzman said in a statement. “We’re deeply grateful to Paramount+ for the chance to complete our five-season mission, just as we envisioned it, alongside our extraordinary cast and crew. And to the passionate fans who’ve boldly joined us on this journey—THANK YOU. With three more spectacular seasons ahead for you to see and enjoy, this adventure is far from over.” The five-season arc appears to be a trend with the recent Star Trek shows. Lower Decks also bowed out at five, as did Star Trek: Discovery. Picard ended after three seasons, but that was less surprising given that Picard actor Patrick Stewart likely had a say on when he wanted to be done. That being said, it’s still a bit of a bummer to see Strange New Worlds end, even though that ending is still a ways off. But let’s focus on the good! We have three more seasons of the show to look forward to, starting with season three. The first two episodes of season three premiere on July 17, 2025, on Paramount+, with new episodes dropping weekly on Thursdays. Season four of the show is currently in production, and the fifth and final season will go into production later this year.[end-mark] The post <i>Star Trek: Strange New Worlds</i> Renewed for Fifth and Final Season appeared first on Reactor.
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
9 w

Gaza Humanitarian Foundation Continues Work Follow Deadly Hamas Attack
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Gaza Humanitarian Foundation Continues Work Follow Deadly Hamas Attack

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation continued aid distribution in Gaza on Thursday, less than 24 hours after at least eight workers with the group were killed in a Hamas attack.  “This has been a painful day but our team made the decision that the best way to honor the memory of our local Palestinian colleagues was to press on, proceeding with food distribution today, as planned,” Rev. Johnnie Moore, American evangelical leader and the executive chairman of the humanitarian aid group, wrote on X Thursday morning.  “We provided food for 2.6 million meals today,” he added.  This has been a painful day but our team made the decision that the best way to honor the memory of our local Palestinian colleagues was to press on, proceeding with food distribution today, as planned. We provided food for 2.6 million meals TODAY. GHF OPERATIONAL UPDATE –… pic.twitter.com/sAQ65ZhLuc— Rev. Johnnie Moore ? (@JohnnieM) June 12, 2025 In addition to the eight Palestinian Gaza Humanitarian Foundation workers who were killed, some were injured, and some are believed to have been taken hostage. “We are still collecting more information on the deadly and unprovoked attack on our dedicated local team members and volunteers,” John Acree, interim executive director of the foundation said Thursday. “We will not be deterred from our mission towards providing food security for the Palestinian people in Gaza,” Acree added.   Moore, who was just named the executive chairman of the humanitarian aid group at the start of June, shared a statement from the organization, explaining Hamas targeted, “a bus carrying more than two-dozen members of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation team, local Palestinians working side-by-side with the U.S.”  “Fathers, brothers, sons, and friends,” are among those who were attacked, according to the group. “Our hearts are broken and our thoughts and prayers are with every victim, every family, and every person still unaccounted for.”  Moore recently met with the U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee in Jerusalem. Huckabee shared a photo with Moore Thursday morning and expressed his sorrow over the news of the attack.  “Sadly Hamas murdered several Palestinians who were helping distribute food, which shows Hamas will starve and murder their own people to stay in power,” Huckabee wrote on X.  Met @JohnnieM at @usembassyjlm and discussed his taking lead of GHF humanitarian aid to Gaza. Sadly Hamas murdered several Palestinians who were helping distribute food which shows Hamas will starve & murder their own people to stay in power. pic.twitter.com/tnJDhRM0T5— Ambassador Mike Huckabee (@GovMikeHuckabee) June 12, 2025 The humanitarian group has distributed 19 million means since it launched operations on May 26.  “All [Gaza Humanitarian Foundation] wants to do is feed people. That’s literally all,” Moore recently said.  The group has received criticism from the United Nations following reports of violence at aid distribution sites that reportedly left some dead.  “The controversial new aid initiative run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation bypasses the work of UN aid agencies which have repeatedly appealed for unimpeded access to Gaza in order to bring in thousands of tonnes of supplies,” United Nations News wrote on June 3.  Moore condemned the U.N. on Thursday for not condemning “Hamas calls for violence” against the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, adding, the “UN—worse, much worse, than silence they continue their vicious slander against our mission. A mission with one goal: FEED GAZA!”  “The principle of impartiality does not mean neutrality,” Moore wrote on X. “There is good and evil in this world. What we are doing is good and what Hamas did to these Gazans is absolute evil.” The U.N. did not immediately respond to The Daily Signal’s request for comment. The post Gaza Humanitarian Foundation Continues Work Follow Deadly Hamas Attack appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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9 w

The Christian Roots of the NBA – From Naismith to This Year’s 79th NBA Finals
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The Christian Roots of the NBA – From Naismith to This Year’s 79th NBA Finals

Faith and sports go hand in hand. Quarterbacks quote Bible verses in interviews, and today’s top NBA players, from Golden State Warrior standout Stephen Curry (verses of scripture adorn his sneakers) to Indiana Pacer sensation Tyrese Halliburton (he cites church as “a big part of my success and my sanity”), count themselves as two of the 62% of Americans who call ourselves Christians. As sports fans nationwide watch the drama of the 79thth NBA Finals unfold, it’s worth telling the story of basketball’s Christian roots. Indeed, Christianity was the driving force behind the game’s origin story. “I want to take you back to the first game of basketball in Springfield, Massachusetts in 1891,” Paul Putz, author of “The Spirit of the Game: American Christianity and Big-Time Sports,” told Our American Stories. “Eighteen grown men, most in their mid-twenties—walked into the gym at the International Young Men’s Christian Association Training School, where they were students. There were two peach baskets tacked to banisters on opposite sides of the gym, ten feet off the ground. There was a soccer ball too, and thirteen rules for a new game their instructor, James Naismith, explained to them.” Putz described that first game. “They divided into two teams of nine: No dribbling, no jump shots, no dunking. Instead, they passed the soccer ball back and forth, trying to keep it away from their opponents while angling for a chance to throw it into the basket.” There was no template for what a shot might look like, Putz explained. As the players positioned the ball at the top of their heads to toss it toward the basket, a defender would swoop in and grab it away. “If you’ve ever tried to coach second graders, it was probably a scene like that—except with big players and beards,” Putz said. When the game ended, just one person made a shot. The final score: 1 to 0. To the students—and Naismith—it was a success. The students loved the challenge and possibilities of the game. Naismith loved those things, too. But he loved what the game represented, and why he was at the YMCA Training School in the first place. On his application, he was asked to describe the role for which he was training, and wrote: “To win men for the Master through the gym.” Naismith’s idea was simple, but revolutionary: He believed sports could shape Christian character in ways mere study could not. So who was this man who created one of America’s great homegrown sports? “He grew up in rural Canada,” Putz noted. “His parents died of illness when he was nine, and his uncle, a deeply religious man, took him in. When Naismith was fifteen, he dropped out of school, working as a lumberjack, but returned to high school at the age of twenty and entered college with the goal of becoming a minister.” Most Christians in Naismith’s day viewed sports as, at best, a distraction: others saw sports as a tool of the devil. “But Naismith was coming of age during the rise of a new movement called ‘Muscular Christianity,’” Putz said. “It pushed back against the dualism that separated the spiritual and physical,” Putz explained. “The body itself had sacred value, they believed, and human beings should be understood holistically—mind, body, and soul intertwined.” For Naismith, this idea came home in an epiphany playing football as a seminary student. During a game, a teammate lost his temper and let out a stream of curse words. During a break, he turned to Naismith and said sheepishly, “I beg your pardon—I forgot you were there.” Naismith never spoke out against profanity, but his teammate felt compelled to apologize because—in Naismith’s words—“I played the game with all my might, yet held myself under control.” His teammate was responding to Naismith’s character on and off the field. Soon after that encounter, Naismith heard about the YMCA Training School in Springfield, a new college dedicated to connecting physical activity and Christian formation. And away he went to America to invent the game we know and love. “Naismith believed strongly in individual expression, and wanted basketball players to have space to create,” Putz explained. “He celebrated inventive moves—like the dribble and the hook shot—and expressed awe as players pushed the limits of what was possible.” But Naismith also understood that with freedom came constraints. “Basketball is personal combat without personal contact,” Naismith would often say. Players can move anywhere at any time, and get close to their opponents, but can’t overpower them physically, Putz explained. The only way to make the game work is by consistently applying the rules. Which is why Naismith’s favorite role wasn’t  player or coach but referee.  Naismith would become a pioneer on more than one front. In the 1930s, while a professor at the University of Kansas, a young African American student named John McLendon enrolled,” Putz explained. “He wanted to join the basketball team—but Kansas didn’t allow Black players.” Naismith took the young man under his wing, and McLendon would later become one of the most important basketball coaches of the 20th century. Basketball was influenced by Americans of all stripes. “In 1892, Senda Berenson, a Jewish instructor at a women’s college, saw basketball as a rare opportunity for women to participate in sports,” Putz said. “She adapted the rules and helped make it the most important women’s team sport of the 20th century.” The Jewish community embraced the game early, producing many of its first stars and innovators. So did Catholics and Latter-day Saints. Basketball also crossed racial and ethnic lines. Though the YMCA was segregated, Black Americans created their own spaces—often through churches—and built thriving basketball cultures, especially in cities like New York and Washington, D.C. It didn’t take long for Naismith’s creation to became a pluralistic and collaborative force—a gift to the world, developed and shaped by many hands, Putz added. “One of my favorite Naismith stories comes from the 1920s,” Putz concluded. “He dropped by a small college gym in Iowa, and a pickup game was about to begin. The players needed a referee and spotted the old man in the bleachers. One ran over to ask if he’d officiate—but before Naismith could respond, another player interrupted: ‘That old man? He doesn’t know anything about basketball.’ The players walked off to find someone else. Naismith just smiled.” The fact is basketball would not be the game we know and love today if it hadn’t been for Naismith’s Christian vision. “I’m sure,” Naismith wrote near the end of his life, “that no man can derive more pleasure from money or power than I do from seeing a pair of basketball goals in some out of the way place—deep in the Wisconsin woods an old barrel hoop nailed to a tree, or a weather-beaten shed on the Mexican border with a rusty iron hoop nailed to one end.” Naismith’s story is worth celebrating as we watch the Knicks and Pacers battle for the 79th NBA title. Originally published in Newsweek We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of The Daily Signal. The post The Christian Roots of the NBA – From Naismith to This Year’s 79th NBA Finals appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
9 w

Upping the Ante: Iran Declared 'In Breach' of Non-Proliferation Duties
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Upping the Ante: Iran Declared 'In Breach' of Non-Proliferation Duties

Upping the Ante: Iran Declared 'In Breach' of Non-Proliferation Duties
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Hot Air Feed
9 w

YGBFKM: Gutless Gavin Hides 'First Amendment' Speech Behind Copyright Claims to Shut Down Critics
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YGBFKM: Gutless Gavin Hides 'First Amendment' Speech Behind Copyright Claims to Shut Down Critics

YGBFKM: Gutless Gavin Hides 'First Amendment' Speech Behind Copyright Claims to Shut Down Critics
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
9 w

If Sharks Don't Have Lungs Then What Are Their Nostrils Doing?
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If Sharks Don't Have Lungs Then What Are Their Nostrils Doing?

Answer me, shark.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
9 w

Not Everything On The Moon Is Gray – What Are These "Amazing" Orange Glass Beads?
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Not Everything On The Moon Is Gray – What Are These "Amazing" Orange Glass Beads?

A dash of color is always a good choice when one sports a monochromatic look.
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