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Commentary Corruption Links from other news sources. Opinion Politics Progressive Racism Undocumented

Why do white progressives think that Blacks and other people of color are too stupid to get a photo ID?

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 12, 2025
  • No Comments on Why do white progressives think that Blacks and other people of color are too stupid to get a photo ID?
Lawler asks what are they afraid of?

Why do white progressives think that Blacks and other people of color are too stupid to get a photo ID?

OK so some black folk in Northern California might fit that stereo type painted by white progressives. Maybe a criminal record could be why some are afraid. But most are not criminals. So, what is it?

Friday, during an appearance on FNC’s “The Ingraham Angle,” Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY) questioned Democrats opposition to the SAVE Act, which requires proof of citizenship to vote in U.S. elections.

Lawler argued their opposition suggested Democrats think certain people are “too stupid” to secure identification and prove citizenship. Maybe the undocumented who vote don’t have an ID?

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  • Tags ID, People of color, Progressives

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Commentary Corruption Crime Links from other news sources. Media Woke Opinion Politics Reprints from others. The Courts Uncategorized

NBC defamation settlement with Georgia doctor finalized in court following MSNBC’s ‘uterus collector’ coverage.

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 11, 2025
  • No Comments on NBC defamation settlement with Georgia doctor finalized in court following MSNBC’s ‘uterus collector’ coverage.
MSNBC hosts Rachel Maddow, Nicolle Wallace and Chris Hayes were swept up in a defamation lawsuit filed by Georgia gynecologist Dr. Mahendra Amin. (Scott Kowalchyk/CBS via Getty Images | Lloyd Bishop/NBC via Getty Images | Steve Zak Photography/FilmMagic)

NBC defamation settlement with Georgia doctor finalized in court following MSNBC’s ‘uterus collector’ coverage.

By Joseph A. Wulfsohn , Brian Flood Fox News.

NBCUniversal, the parent company of NBC News and MSNBC (the latter is currently being spun off as a separate company), settled the $30 million lawsuit filed by Georgia gynecologist Dr. Mahendra Amin. Amin who was the subject of a report claiming he performed unnecessary hysterectomies at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) center.

Both parties struck the settlement in February, but the lawsuit was officially dismissed Friday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia. The terms of the settlement were not publicly disclosed.

“We are pleased that Dr. Amin is able to move on from his years-long litigation against NBCUniversal,” Amin’s attorneys, Stacey Evans and Scott Grubman, told Fox News Digital. “It is unfortunate that he had to sue to get confirmation of what was known all along—that he did not perform mass hysterectomies on women detained at Irwin County Detention Center. We are glad that the judge found those statements false as a matter of law because, in fact, Dr. Amin performed only two hysterectomies, both of which were medically necessary and consented to by the patients.”

“Dr. Amin is a dedicated physician who has dedicated his entire career to serving underserved communities. The recklessness of NBCUniversal to try to paint him as an evil doctor was disgusting and we are glad they finally settled the case,” they added.

Representatives from NBCUniversal and MSNBC did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Rachel Maddow and Jacob Soboroff were expected to be called as witnesses in a jury trial previously scheduled for April 22, 2025, in Waycross, Georgia. (MSNBC/Screen grab)

Amin was the subject of an NBC News article in September 2020, which cited a whistleblower’s claim that he was performing unneeded hysterectomies while providing medical care to women detained at the Irwin County Detention Center.

MSNBC quickly followed with a series of on-air reports on “Deadline: White House,” “All In with Chris Hayes” and “The Rachel Maddow Show,” all running with the “uterus collector” label for Amin.
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Amin filed a lawsuit against parent company NBCUniversal, alleging he was falsely portrayed as “an abusive, unethical, and dishonest physician who treated and operated on immigrant women in an abusive fashion, without consent, and motivated by profit instead of quality healthcare.”

Judge Lisa Godbey Wood of the Southern District of Georgia previously ruled that a jury could reasonably find actual malice and the trial was set to begin April 22, in Waycross, Georgia. In light of the settlement agreement, the court canceled the scheduled trial.

“NBC investigated the whistleblower letter’s accusations; that investigation did not corroborate the accusations and even undermined some; NBC republished the letter’s accusations anyway,” Judge Wood wrote last year in a 108-page summary.
MSNBC is heading to trial in a $30 million “uterus collector

Amin believed “false and defamatory” statements published with actual malice that caused him significant damage were said six times on “Deadline: White House,” seven times on “All in with Chris Hayes” and 10 times on “The Rachel Maddow Show.”

“We are pleased that Dr. Amin is able to move on from his years-long litigation against NBCUniversal,” Amin’s attorneys, Stacey Evans and Scott Grubman, told Fox News Digital. “It is unfortunate that he had to sue to get confirmation of what was known all along—that he did not perform mass hysterectomies on women detained at Irwin County Detention Center. We are glad that the judge found those statements false as a matter of law because, in fact, Dr. Amin performed only two hysterectomies, both of which were medically necessary and consented to by the patients.”

“Dr. Amin is a dedicated physician who has dedicated his entire career to serving underserved communities. The recklessness of NBCUniversal to try to paint him as an evil doctor was disgusting and we are glad they finally settled the case,” they added.

Representatives from NBCUniversal and MSNBC did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Rachel Maddow and Jacob Soboroff were expected to be called as witnesses in a jury trial previously scheduled for April 22, 2025, in Waycross, Georgia. (MSNBC/Screen grab)

Amin was the subject of an NBC News article in September 2020, which cited a whistleblower’s claim that he was performing unneeded hysterectomies while providing medical care to women detained at the Irwin County Detention Center.

MSNBC quickly followed with a series of on-air reports on “Deadline: White House,” “All In with Chris Hayes” and “The Rachel Maddow Show,” all running with the “uterus collector” label for Amin.
placeholder

Amin filed a lawsuit against parent company NBCUniversal, alleging he was falsely portrayed as “an abusive, unethical, and dishonest physician who treated and operated on immigrant women in an abusive fashion, without consent, and motivated by profit instead of quality healthcare.”

Judge Lisa Godbey Wood of the Southern District of Georgia previously ruled that a jury could reasonably find actual malice and the trial was set to begin April 22, in Waycross, Georgia. In light of the settlement agreement, the court canceled the scheduled trial.

“NBC investigated the whistleblower letter’s accusations; that investigation did not corroborate the accusations and even undermined some; NBC republished the letter’s accusations anyway,” Judge Wood wrote last year in a 108-page summary.

Amin believed “false and defamatory” statements published with actual malice that caused him significant damage were said six times on “Deadline: White House,” seven times on “All in with Chris Hayes” and 10 times on “The Rachel Maddow Show.”

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Commentary Crime Opinion Politics Terrorism

One Law. One Page. All Nationwide Law Enforcement have Federal Powers when it comes to the undocumented, Part 29.

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 11, 2025
  • No Comments on One Law. One Page. All Nationwide Law Enforcement have Federal Powers when it comes to the undocumented, Part 29.
Going after all who ignore the law.

One Law. One Page. All Nationwide Law Enforcement have Federal Powers when it comes to the undocumented, Part 29.

Pass a law giving all law enforcement nationwide federal powers when it comes to the illegals arrest and detention. So the small town cop can serve federal warrants, and arrest the illegals. This would also give all local and state AG’s the same federal powers. So when the blue state top law enforcement refuses to serve or prosecute, they can be charged with a felony.

So take a state like California. You give the AG ICE powers and then see if he says he will not have the illegals arrested. Will he be willing to commit a FELONY to protect the illegals?

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Commentary Daily Hits. Links from other news sources. Politics The Courts

House passes good bill, but will die in the Senate. Restrict rogue judges.

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 10, 2025
  • No Comments on House passes good bill, but will die in the Senate. Restrict rogue judges.
House of Representatives Getty Image.

House passes good bill, but will die in the Senate. Restrict rogue judges.

Of course the Senate will kill this bill because seven Democrats must go along with 53 Republicans. And being that the Democrats are using judge shopping, no way do they support this. Below is the result.

The House on Wednesday passed legislation that will prevent federal district court judges from issuing nationwide injunctions in a move that seeks to halt rulings that have hampered President Donald Trump’s agenda.

The legislation, the No Rogue Rulings Act, passed by a 219-213 vote, with only one Republican, Rep. Scott Turner of Ohio, joining the Democrat minority. Article III of the Constitution gives Congress authority over how lower federal courts operate.

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Commentary Democrat Free Speech How funny is this? Links from other news sources. Opinion Politics

Support Operation let her speak.

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 10, 2025
  • No Comments on Support Operation let her speak.
Americas Choice. Credit: Fox News Channel Screenshot/@Overton_News

Support Operation let her speak.
Fox News’s Sean Hannity held a “town hall” with multiple GOP senators, including Senate Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Katie Britt of Alabama, and Kennedy. The senators discussed the ongoing budget negotiations to deliver Trump’s agenda and tariffs with Hannity.

But Kennedy stole the show.
“And our plan for dealing with her is called ‘Operation let her speak,’” he stated.

🔥 I think Senator John Kennedy has the best one-liner of the month. LMAO.

Referring to Rep. AOC: "I think she’s the reason there are directions on a shampoo bottle."

💀🤣pic.twitter.com/yBpGmd5jdS

— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) April 9, 2025

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America's Heartland Commentary Economy Links from other news sources. Opinion Reprints from others. Trump

What I learned about ‘America First’ in a Pennsylvania steel mill.

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 9, 2025
  • No Comments on What I learned about ‘America First’ in a Pennsylvania steel mill.
Will US Steel survive? WP Photo.

What I learned about ‘America First’ in a Pennsylvania steel mill.
Salena Zito is a columnist for the Washington Examiner.

WEST MIFFLIN, Pennsylvania — The steep climb in the truck up from the Monongahela River to the entrance of the Mon Valley Works Irvin Plant is a picturesque reminder of just how much earth had to be moved for the 650 acres of wall-to-wall steel production to be built.

After a series of check-ins and a maze of buildings, plant manager Don German is there at Building B to greet me for a tour, a rare invitation for a journalist. After gearing up in a hard hat, safety glasses, a heavy, bright orange jacket with the blue-and-white U.S. Steel emblem on the back, German begins with the plant’s history. Legend has it, he said, that they needed more cubic yards of dirt to construct it in the 1930s than was used to build the Panama Canal.

The bright orange of the molten steel, the heat, the soot, the constant movement, the smell of hot machinery and a hum so loud you have to yell to communicate — these are all token that you stand in the presence of something being made, something huge. It takes only seconds for the hot steel strip to travel 300 feet when it exits its last stand through the sprays and emerges as a massive coil ready to be transformed into the material undergirding our everyday lives, from SUVs to building frames; 850 people at the Irvin Plant supply this raw material.
Steelworkers wait to band hot rolled steel as it comes off of the hot-strip mill at the Irvin Plant on March 19.
The oldest hot mill in the United States, built in 1938, operates inside the Irvin Plant.

I’m visiting because the plant is at the center of President Donald Trump’s early second-term agenda. It’s a major employer in a state where a red shift among blue-collar workers powered his two election victories. It’s protected by rising tariffs, which now stand at 25 percent on steel under the president’s latest order. And its owner, U.S. Steel, is engaged in intense negotiations over a potential sale to Nippon Steel — a similarly iconic Japanese brand — in which Trump is involved as a broker.
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I wanted to hear from the employees themselves, many of whom have multigenerational ties to the facility, about their hopes and fears and what the often bloodless business headlines mean to communities whose identity is wrapped in steel, who consider their work part of the fabric of the nation itself.

What I found was a nuanced conversation, one that’s divided workers, unions, politicians and investors over the future of American steel. And a debate in which the “America First” position, according to the workers whose gloved hands actually touch the steel, might mean welcoming Japanese cash and leadership rather than shutting the company off from the world.
A surprise offer

Inside a tiny conference room, German and I met with the top local union leaders: USW Local 2227 President Jack Maskil, Vice President Jason Zugai and Safety Chairman Gary Pickett. Their combined tenure at this plant add up close to the 124 years that U.S. Steel has been in existence.

At stake in the proposed sale to Nippon is their livelihoods — and their outlook is not what many people might assume.

The two steel companies stunned local elected officials, union members, and the White House with their joint announcement in December 2023 of an agreement for Nippon to acquire U.S. Steel in an all-cash transaction at $55 per share, or $14.1 billion. None — not management, not labor, not the Biden administration — saw it coming.

“Woke up on a Sunday morning and next thing you know, phone’s blowing up,” Maskil said. “What’s going on? What’s going on? I’m like, wait, what are we talking about here?”

Maskil and Zugai fielded calls for days. The initial reaction among workers was near-uniform opposition. Pennsylvanians still remember Japan’s reputation for “dumping” cheap materials into the United States in the 1970s while steel mills in the area closed. Maskil, though, said he was mostly just processing his shock that the sale had even been a possibility.

While the workers sought information, national leaders made their objections known. United Steelworkers came out against the deal, warning that the union couldn’t trust Nippon to honor labor contracts. President Joe Biden opposed the deal on national security grounds. Vice President Kamala Harris also announced her opposition after becoming the Democratic presidential nominee, saying she would “always have the backs of America’s steelworkers.”

Over time, though, the steelworkers in question began to change their tune. Nippon made a $1 billion pledge to upgrade the plant with a new hot strip mill, replacing its nearly 90-year-old infrastructure — a move that many workers thought was needed to keep up with more advanced foreign competitors.
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“To be honest with you, at first I was skeptical just like everybody else was, but through the process, as time went on, we learned more and more, and as time went on, more and more investment opportunities became available,” Maskil said. “Unfortunately we are — how should I say it? I refer to it as flipping the hourglass. So we are on a strict time frame, if this investment does not go through, if this deal doesn’t see through.”

The room got quiet. It was clear everything was on the line.

Within fairly short order, Maskil, Zugai and Pickett said they had met with their union workers at the three facilities that make up the Mon Valley Works: their plant, the Clairton Coke Works six miles down the river and the Edgar Thomson Plant in Braddock nine miles upriver. After much deliberation, they decided to support the sale.

“When the deal to sell to Nippon was first announced, 95 percent of the rank and file did not want it to happen,” Zugai explained. “Now, 95 percent of them do.”
Clairton Coke Works in Clairton, Pennsylvania, on March 19.

German, the one member of management in the room, interrupted: “I think what he is saying is important; while everyone was reacting to the announcement, these three did a phenomenal job of collecting the facts, communicating with the rank and file and ultimately understanding the benefits of the deal.”

It is a complex situation for all of these men, beginning with the fact that the local union remains at odds with the United Steelworkers International, whose Cleveland-based leader David McCall has denounced the sale, saying he has no faith in Nippon to make good on its guarantees and investments.

Maskil acknowledged that the local and national union leaders are not aligned. “But we were elected to fight for the guys, the men and women out on that floor, and this is what they want. Not only what we want but what they want,” he said.

In December, hundreds of local members rallied outside the plant desperately asking the Biden White House to approve the Nippon purchase; the appeal was also aimed at their own recalcitrant international union leadership.

At the same time, many of these steelworkers supported Trump’s 2024 campaign — so much so they stood behind him at rallies in Latrobe and Pittsburgh in their gear. Trump shared Biden’s initial skepticism toward Nippon Steel; they hoped to bring him toward their side by touting a deal as a win for the workers who embodied his coalition.

Asked how one can be “America First” while supporting a Japanese company owning a historic American company, Maskil did not hold back.

“To be blunt? Yeah. I don’t care what this company’s called,” he said. “We’ve said that from Day 1 it doesn’t matter who buys us. Our concern is whoever buys us honors our current basic labor agreement moving forward as well as [that] they’re prepared to put the investments into the corporation that we not only want but we have to have in order to sustain employment here.”

Their entreaties did not move the Biden administration. Throughout the year, the president railed against the sale, often to the frustration of some on his staff. In the waning days of his presidency, Biden moved to block the sale after federal regulators deadlocked on whether to approve it.

Trump, at the time, was still against it as well. After taking office, though, he looked to revive talks. In February, after meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba at the White House, Trump said Nippon Steel would instead be heavily investing in the company without a majority stake. Since then, discussions among Trump, Nippon, U.S. Steel CEO David Burritt and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick have been going on at a furious pace with a goal to reach a partnership.

All four steelworkers at the Irvin Plant said there are so many reasons this deal needs to happen — but, most important, they’ve all seen what it looks like when the investment dries up.
The ghosts of steel mills past

Pickett, the plant safety chairman on the union side, told me that if this place is gone — if Edgar Thomson and Clairton are gone — it’s not just the product they make here that goes. It’s also the heart of the community — from the churches to the schools to the tax base — that will be torn apart.

“Take a look,” Pickett said. “I grew up in McKeesport. I was born and raised in McKeesport. When I grew up, downtown McKeesport was booming. We had three movie theaters, a beautiful upscale hotel, multilevel department stores. Ride through it now. You got a hot dog shop. I wouldn’t stop there if you paid me, and I was born and raised there. I mean, that’s all from the mill shutting down.”

McKeesport once was so politically significant that John F. Kennedy visited twice: once to debate the Taft-Hartley Act with then fellow Rep. Richard M. Nixon and once to campaign for president against him.

The city has declined dramatically. Deindustrialization has hollowed out the working class. Those who could not get out now struggle to support a family. Crime has increased; several years ago, a study from the National Council for Home Safety and Security named it one of the most dangerous cities in the United States.

McKeesport is not alone.

The Jones and Laughlin Steel plant once stretched for seven miles along the riverfront in Aliquippa, Beaver County, at one time the largest steel mill in the world. It is almost all demolished. Gone, and with it the 10,000 union workers who labored there. Aliquippa’s population has dropped from 22,000 in 1970 to 9,000 today.

Duquesne Steel once hosted a 12-open-hearth furnace that fed a giant four-mill rolling complex heralded as the technology hub of its day. But the city of Duquesne died hard when the industry collapsed — locals tried desperately to stop the tearing down of the iconic “Dorothy Six” furnace. Now fewer people live here than worked at the mill in its prime.

For those with roots here, it’s clear how this movie can end.

“People look at those buildings, and they feel a kinship: Maybe their uncle worked there, maybe their dad or grandfather. It leaves a mark, and it impacts culture and politics, and I think someone that isn’t from around here isn’t going to understand,” Pickett said. “No matter in which direction you drive, you understand the impact bad trade deals and tariffs had on their families and communities’ lives.”
Shoots of hope

That said, steel itself and some former mill towns here do still survive, even after some near-death experiences.

Several counties east, in the Conemaugh Valley, the city of Johnstown cuts a little differently than McKeesport, Aliquippa and Duquesne.

It lost nearly 12,000 jobs when the massive Bethlehem Steel plant suffered through years of layoffs and then finally closed. Its population too has dropped, staggeringly, from around 67,000 in 1920 to under 18,000 today. But the community has new activity in the massive former plant, thanks to Bill Polacek, whose father started a one-man welding shop called “Johnny’s Welding” in his garage as a side hustle to his job at Bethlehem Steel.

That side hustle is now inside 500,000 square feet of what was Bethlehem Steel’s Lower Works. Polacek has revamped the mill, changed the name of the company to JWF Industries and expanded to supplying defense contractors with well-made, sustainable fabrications and subassemblies.

He employs well over 400 people, and the place is humming with workers, most of them young, working on parts for military Humvees and tanks and other defense items I cannot mention. Polacek, who just named his son president of the company, has a trade apprentice program on-site for those willing to learn.

One of his suppliers is U.S. Steel, which Polacek uses in multiple military applications. He said he is deeply concerned about what will happen if the deal with Nippon falls through or if Trump is unable to forge a partnership between the three competing interests.

“If U.S. Steel unravels, a couple things will happen,” he said. “No. 1, steel’s [cost is] going to go up dramatically as a lot of supply and demand kick in; 2, we are going to be forced to buy foreign steel.”

Then, he said, comes the psychological effect. “U.S. Steel, the dominant steel producer, gone? The American company?” he asked, his voice rising.

Polacek said it would make everything more expensive for his customers: “And it also makes us less competitive on an international basis. Now, my costs go up, my customers’ costs go up. And then, when they make something or produce something, it gets sold to a foreign country — we lose that competitive edge.”

The Trump effect

There have been a hundred stories from 30,000 feet looking at how Democrats lost the support of the working class and union voters — if you lived through it and around it, as I have, as these men have, it has been gradual, painful and inevitable.

Trump spoke to them about the things they cared about: the border, the economy and, most important of all, tariffs — which in this part of the country means their jobs are not on the “loser” side when people more powerful than them pick winners and losers.

“Yeah, tariffs are a good thing,” Zugai told me with a big smile. The charismatic union official, who met Trump when he visited Pittsburgh on election eve and who organized scores of fellow workers to attend the rally, said it is one of the reasons he voted for Trump.

“Tariffs level the playing field for us with China,” he said. “They’re the biggest steel producer. They just dump nonquality steel in our country, and we can’t compete with that.”

Zugai said he was in the click line the night before Trump was elected and got a couple of minutes to chat with him before he went onstage: “I spoke as fast as I could trying to get my point across to him, and he kind of chuckled and said, ‘We’ll talk after I get elected.’”

If Zugai had the chance to speak with Trump today, he’d urge him to look past the “optics” of a Japanese buyer and remember his promise to attract foreign investment.

“This is what the men and women on the floor want,” he said. “It is what we need to solidify our jobs. It saves the communities that surround our plants, plus all of the vendors and the contractors and everybody else that calls on U.S. Steel — it saves all of their jobs too.”

German added that Trump voters were watching him closely, hoping to see a payoff on their own investment in his political revival. “These guys worked hard and fought for Trump and won voters over for him,” he said. “The union guys that work here and want this deal to pass got him in Pennsylvania. It’s time to return that and help us out by keeping our jobs.”

Trump isn’t the only politician who courted the labor vote in the state. Biden’s union ties and Scranton upbringing helped put him over the line in 2020. But he proved to be a disappointment to the working class here — his focus on climate action was tone deaf to a segment of the population who were not finding these mythical green jobs in the places they call home. Harris repeated Biden’s policies and never managed to connect on a more personal level.

The steelworkers I talked to faulted overly burdensome environmental regulations for pushing the plant to its point of desperation. U.S. Steel announced in 2019 it would invest $1 billion to transform Mon Valley into the “most innovative steel mill in the United States of America.” Less than two years later, it canceled the project, casting the move as part of the company’s new sustainability commitments but also mentioning its long struggle to get the permitting approved. The county health department was a major source of conflict.

“Their regulations have cost us what would already be a brand-new hot mill rolling still right now,” German said. “Remember: All of us live in this area, so it’s not like we want to pollute. And so, the regulations make it good for our families. So we are all about having clean water, having clean air, and one of the things that proves it is our eagles.”

Before I left, German took me to the very edge of the cliff where Irvin Works overlooks the Monongahela River and Clairton Works. Just below us was an expansive eagle nest — and inside were Stella and Irvin and their three eggs.

“You know, the Game Commission says you need pristine air and pristine water for eagles to habitat; goes to show you we are getting this right,” he said.

When U.S. Steel was formed in 1901, it was the United States’ first billion dollar company and for a time the world’s largest company; it was a shining example of American technology and science as well as grit, the ethos of hard work and American exceptionalism. Working here then and now carried with it a sense of immense pride — you were part of something bigger than yourself; what you did here built the country and protected our troops in times of war. When the steel industry struggled, it felt like the nation was losing a piece of itself.

Bald eagles were once struggling to survive too. Their gradual disappearance was considered just one more depressing, inevitable sign of American decline. But the nation’s leaders got together, formed a plan to rescue them, and now they’re thriving, even on the edge of a steel mill.

I pointed out that their current choice of home seems like more than a coincidence. German smiled.

“It’s a sign,” he said.

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Commentary Economy Energy Links from other news sources.

Going Nuclear. Next Generation Reactors.

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 8, 2025
  • No Comments on Going Nuclear. Next Generation Reactors.
Cooling tower's one and two are seen at the nuclear reactor facility at the Alvin W. Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Friday, May 31, 2024, in Waynesboro, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart) Featured Photo Galleries

Going Nuclear. Next Generation Reactors.

Forget wind and solar. The next generation nuclear reactors may be the way to go. Smaller, less expensive to build and maintain, and not dependent on the weather.

When completed, the nation’s first grid-scale advanced nuclear reactor will power a 4,700-acre facility that produces plastics and other materials used in dozens of products.

Dow Chemical and the nuclear energy engineering firm X-energy submitted a construction permit this week to the federal government for a small modular reactor, or SMR, at Dow’s Seadrift, Texas, manufacturing site. The reactor will replace an aging natural gas plant and eliminate nearly all greenhouse gas emissions.

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Commentary Economy Links from other news sources. Opinion Politics Tariffs Trump

How can this be? U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is already collecting over $200 million per day in extra revenue as it enforces a massive new wave of tariffs under President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” plan.

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 6, 2025
  • No Comments on How can this be? U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is already collecting over $200 million per day in extra revenue as it enforces a massive new wave of tariffs under President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” plan.
Trump wins again.

How can this be? U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is already collecting over $200 million per day in extra revenue as it enforces a massive new wave of tariffs under President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” plan.
We have more from FOX Business.

“CBP has successfully implemented 13 tariff-related presidential actions during this Administration,” a CBP spokesperson said in a statement to FOX Business. “Serving on America’s frontline, CBP strictly enforces all laws and Presidential directives to secure our economic sovereignty.”

The agency has already pulled in billions from earlier Trump executive orders.

That includes $4.8 billion under EO 14195, which targets synthetic opioids from China; $861 million under EO 14193, aimed at stopping drug flows from Canada; over $2 billion under EO 14194, addressing trade issues at the southern border; and $1 billion collected under Section 232 duties on steel and aluminum.

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Commentary DEI Links from other news sources. The Courts

Supreme Court Allows Trump Admin to Terminate Teaching Grants That Violate DEI (Progressives N Word) Policy.

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 5, 2025
  • No Comments on Supreme Court Allows Trump Admin to Terminate Teaching Grants That Violate DEI (Progressives N Word) Policy.
Another victory. US Supreme Court, a Jim Hoft photo

Supreme Court Allows Trump Admin to Terminate Teaching Grants That Violate DEI (Progressives N Word) Policy.

NBC News reported:

The Supreme Court on Friday allowed the Trump administration to terminate Education Department grants for teacher training that official deemed to violate their new policy opposing diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.

The decision blocks a Massachusetts-based judge’s ruling that said the administration had failed to follow the correct legal process in terminating the grants. About $65 million in grant payments are outstanding.

The decision is the first win for President Donald Trump at the Supreme Court in his second term.

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Commentary Corruption COVID Links from other news sources. Medicine Opinion Reprints from others. Science

You make the call, Dr. Mary Talley Bowden Drops Chilling COVID Statistic.

  • Post author By MC
  • Post date April 4, 2025
  • No Comments on You make the call, Dr. Mary Talley Bowden Drops Chilling COVID Statistic.
Medicine facts revealed?

You make the call, Dr. Mary Talley Bowden Drops Chilling COVID Statistic.

The Vigilant Fox
Apr 02, 2025

Dr. Mary Talley Bowden left Tucker Carlson visibly shaken after dropping a chilling COVID vaccine statistic that’s impacting millions of children right now.

Before her appearance on Carlson’s show, Dr. Bowden, a Texas-based ENT specialist, rose to prominence in the medical freedom movement by speaking out against vaccine mandates and advocating for early treatment options like ivermectin.

She gained national attention after she was suspended by Houston Methodist Hospital for challenging the prevailing COVID narrative.

Despite the backlash, Bowden has remained committed to the Hippocratic Oath, successfully treating an impressive total of over 6,000 COVID patients without a single death.

Before Tucker became visibly disturbed, Dr. Bowden pointed to data from the CDC’s VAERS system, explaining that over 38,000 deaths have been reported following the rollout of the so-called COVID-19 vaccines.

She said that under normal circumstances, such numbers would’ve prompted the FDA to pull the shots.

Instead, they pushed forward, adding the COVID vaccine to the routine childhood schedule, with the expectation that babies receive three doses by just nine months of age.

She added that the shots are still under Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) for children under 12—not fully FDA approved—and yet they remain on the official vaccine schedule.

Tucker was horrified when Dr. Bowden mentioned a disturbing fact: “According to the CDC, 9 million American children have gotten the latest version of these COVID shots,” she said.

Clearly caught off guard, Carlson asked, “Actually?”

“Yes,” Bowden confirmed.

“Still?” he pressed.

“Yes. Yes. 9 million [kids]—12% [of US children have been injected].”

Tucker, in disbelief, asked, “Wait, this is going on right now?”

“Yes,” Bowden replied.

“I think we voted against this,” Tucker said.

“Yeah,” Bowden confirmed.

“Correct?” Tucker stressed.

“I don’t know,” Dr. Bowden answered.

“You’re very diplomatic, but I’m just stunned to learn that that’s happening right now,” Tucker exclaimed.

“Could this be shut down?” he asked.

“It should have been shut down a long time ago,” Dr. Bowden answered. “And you know, what’s the—”

Tucker interrupted: “9 million babies have had COVID shots?”

“Yeah. Well, children. Minors,” Dr. Bowden clarified.

The conversation took another dark turn when Carlson asked about the potential long-term consequences of these shots, to which Dr. Bowden pointed to a disturbing trend.

“I don’t see a ton of cancer in my practice,” she said, “but I do have friends at MD Anderson, and they said they’ve never seen anything like it. The young people coming in with very advanced tumors, I think that’s what we have to be worried about now.”

She explained that getting updated cancer data is difficult, but the anecdotal reports are piling up. “It’s hard to get up-to-date cancer numbers, but I’m hearing all sorts of things. There are probably people who have access to that data, but publicly, it’s hard [to get access].”

This raises a profound question we must now consider as a society: What have we done?

In our rush to vaccinate every man, woman, and child, have we compromised the long-term health of a population that never needed these shots in the first place?

What data was ignored? If so, who made decisions to ignore that data, and will they ever answer for the consequences? It’s time for a serious conversation about accountability.

You can watch the full, eye-opening conversation below:

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