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48 w

PBS NewsHour's Extreme Makeover: 27 Times More Likely to Find 'Far Right' Over 'Far Left'
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PBS NewsHour's Extreme Makeover: 27 Times More Likely to Find 'Far Right' Over 'Far Left'

Introducing an interview with left-wing author Joshua Green, PBS News Hour co-anchor Geoff Bennett made a rare media admission: “Much has been made of the far right’s strong sway over the GOP and its agenda. But what doesn’t get nearly as much attention is the far left’s influence in the Democratic Party.”  Bennett could be describing his very own News Hour, PBS’s flagship weeknight news program. The “far left” certainly doesn't gain attention on taxpayer-funded PBS, at least not under that label. PBS was “far” more likely to use hostile ideological terminology to describe right-leaning groups, personalities, or policies. MRC analysts studied the labels used by anchors, reporters and contributors on the PBS NewsHour regarding American politics from June 1, 2023 to November 30, 2024. We did not include PBS News Weekend programs.The difference in labeling was stark.  Key Findings: ■ PBS staff used 162 variations of “far right” labels and only six “far left” labels, an astounding ratio of 27 to 1. ■ PBS staff also used mere "right-wing" and "left-wing" labels at a disparity of 33 to 6. So overall, the labeling disparity was 195 to 12. ■ Fascist Trump, Communist Harris: Independent of the labeling counts above, PBS staff and guests employed 17 total “fascist” labels of Donald Trump, compared to three for Kamala Harris as “communist,”  with two of those three denying she was one. Even that stark 27:1 ratio understates the full extent of the slant. “Right” labels were often targeted at specific people or groups and conveyed a sense of menace. The rare “left” labels were often merely quotes from the Republican campaign trail or amorphous descriptions that lacked the specificity or warning connotation of the right labels, or were loaded with caveats.  PBS also failed to apply “left” labels to the guests invited on to lament, unopposed, about Trump using extremist rhetoric of having extremist immigration proposals, or Republican legislation limiting abortion or transgender "health care." In fact, those guests turned around and contributed their own labeling bias, though the slant was not as stark as from PBS reporters.   PBS Reporters: “far-right” labels vs “far-left” labels: 64-2 Far-right examples: News Hour co-anchor Amna Nawaz lamented on June 2, 2023, during the drawn-out House GOP leadership fight: “….there were a lot of questions about how Speaker McCarthy would be able to handle the far-right members of his conference in particular.” PBS reporter Laura Barron-Lopez on September 12, 2023: “And far-right Republicans have threatened a shutdown and McCarthy's gavel if their list of demands, including an impeachment inquiry, go unmet….The White House is again saying that there is no evidence, that this is -- quote -- 'extreme politics.' And to Heather's point about the list of demands that these far-right conservatives are issuing in exchange for funding the government, the White House is very eager to latch on to that and say that this is extreme Republicans trying to potentially cause a government shutdown in exchange for an impeachment inquiry, in exchange for these — a host of all these other demands.” Nawaz’s fellow co-anchor Geoff Bennett said in a September 26, 2023 interview with Vice President Kamala Harris: “… as House Republicans fight among themselves over whether or how to extend government funding, it appears likely that the House speaker, Kevin McCarthy, who's already slammed his far-right flank, as trying to burn down the House, that he might need help from Democrats.” On October 25, 2023, Bennett said to guest Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-Iowa): “Mike Johnson is more genial than Jim Jordan, but he's no less a hard-liner. He is on the far right of the spectrum when it comes to issues like reproductive rights, same-sex marriage.” Bennett waded into the supposed Supreme Court flag controversy on May 29, 2024: “U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito told lawmakers today he won't recuse himself from cases involving the 2020 presidential election or the January 6 Capitol riot. That's despite concerns about two flags associated with far-right causes that have flown over his properties.” Barron-Lopez questioned hard-left Yale professor Jason Stanley on November 27, 2024: “What could a second Trump term mean in terms of emboldening extremists or those who hold far-right views about the future of the country?” Far-left: Occasionally centrist commentator David Brooks came up with one of his almost reluctant uses of a “left” label on August 30, 2024. Reflecting on the 2019 Democratic primary debates, he noted that “the Democratic Party moved pretty far left on a whole bunch of issues in ways that I thought were politically suicidal, decriminalizing the border, obviously the defunding the police, the ban on fracking.”    “Hard-right" vs “hard-left” labels: 16-1 Hard-right: Nawaz on October 2, 2023 documented one of the last acts of former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who kept the government open, having “sidestepped the hard-right flank of his party and pushed through a temporary spending bill with the help of Democrats.” Covering the race to replace McCarthy, here’s congressional reporter Lisa Desjardins on October 17, 2023: “In Congress, Jordan was a founding member of the hard-right Freedom Caucus, where he gained a reputation for forgoing suit jackets and for his combative in-your-face style of politics.” They did not describe the Congressional Black Caucus or the Congressional Progressive Caucus as "hard-left."  After Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) cited the “hard right….in the Freedom Caucus,” on the January 8, 2024 edition, Desjardins repeated the partisan Democrat’s hostile formulation: “Yes, but again, that hard right, however you want to describe them, Freedom Caucus really will be an issue in terms of getting the votes….” Hard-left:  This barely counts as a negative label, as David Brooks managed to sound sympathetic talking of the pro-Hamas mobs on college campuses on April 26, 2024: “So I think most of the protesters are appalled by the horrors the Palestinians are suffering and they're well-motivated by compassion. There are some people who are probably hard-left people, and they get to have their views.”    "Extreme right" vs "extreme left": 57-3 Extreme Right: Two groups that could actually be called “extreme,” The Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers, were granted that label by both anchors, Bennett and Nawaz, on the June 1, 2023 program. Yet PBS reporters have also used the label to smear  conservative groups like Moms for Liberty. On Independence Day 2023, co-anchor Amna Nawaz unwittingly revealed PBS’s gross labeling standards when she called the anti-Israel elimination terror group Hamas “extremist” (obviously before the October 7 attacks), then applied that same word, on the same program, to non-racist “militias” that celebrated 1776 and the Founding Fathers! Nawaz used two separate labels while introducing a report by congressional reporter Lisa Desjardins: “The American Revolution and the Founding Fathers, two parts of U.S. history celebrated on July Fourth. In recent years, they have also become political and ideological tools, including at times of some extremist groups on the right.” While interviewing Hillary Clinton on October 3, 2023, Bennett pivoted off Clinton’s reference to “extreme members” of the Republican caucus with this repetitive softball: “On this matter of extremists within the GOP, President Biden has said that the Trump Republicans, the MAGA Republicans, as he puts it, are semi-fascists, and that there's this growing authoritarian strain in the Republican Party. Do you see it that way? And what's the best way to remedy that, if you do see it that way?” On November 8, 2023, Bennett forwarded a charge by the discredited radical leftists at Southern Poverty Law Center: “In yesterday’s election, voters across the country pushed back on the group called Moms for Liberty. They say they’re a parental rights organization. The Southern Poverty Law Center says that they’re an extremist group.”  Anchor Nawaz talked to Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) on February 5, 2024 about Democrats supposedly caving on immigration legislation: “You have faced some criticism from your fellow Democrats as well, progressives in particular. The caucus chair, Pramila Jayapal, said Democrats are giving into extremist views."  Extreme Left: As previously noted, even the few lefty labels tabulated were often just anchors repeating Donald Trump or J.D. Vance’s campaign rhetoric, often with a note of disapproval. PBS wouldn’t have dared call Kamala Harris “extreme” directly, the way the News Hour was comfortable doing with Republicans. NPR’s White House correspondent and PBS commentator Tamara Keith announced on July 22, 2024: “There is a well of energy that exists for Harris and who she is and the history she could make. Republicans also want to tap into that and paint her as extreme.”    “Hard-line” right vs “hard-line” left: 25-0 Most stark was the use of “hard-line,” employed by PBS staff 25 times against conservative policies or personalities during the study period, compared to zero occasions for liberal ones. (Two guests also referred to conservatives as “hard-line.”) Lisa Desjardins packed an impressive amount of labels into her March 21, 2024 story: "Hard-liners say the disorder is within GOP leadership, that they skirt rules and bend or break pledges. But the majority of Republicans I speak with say, no, the issue is the hard-liners, that they demand untenable positions, like allowing a government shutdown. Some hard-liners see shutdowns as leverage, even right at this moment, Amna, and others see them as a disaster.” Here’s Bennett on November 11, 2024, after Trump’s victory: “And the president-elect is also expected to formally name Stephen Miller as his deputy chief of staff for policy in the coming days. Vice President-elect J.D. Vance confirmed the selection on the social media site X. Miller worked as an adviser during Mr. Trump's first term and is known as an immigration hard-liner.”   PBS Reporters: “right-wing” vs. “left-wing: 33-6 Right-wing: PBS host John Yang talked with NPR media reporter David Folkenflik about Rupert Murdoch’s right-leaning media empire on September 21, 2023. Folkenflik ranted: “The legacy that endures is sort of the success and the fun at times of his right-wing populism, but also the punitive and pugilistic nature of it that has been ultimately quite corrosive, not only to our sense of what fair play is in journalism in this country and in some of the others, like the U.K. and Australia, in which he was so dominant.”  Bennett chatted with then-Washington Post reporter Devlin Barrett on the November 7, 2023 edition on an emerging liberal bogeyman, the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025: “And you report that much of the planning for a second Trump term has been outsourced to this group of right-wing think tanks dubbed Project 2025.” Bennett on May 17, 2024: “Texas Governor Greg Abbott has pardoned a man convicted of fatally shooting a Black Lives Matter protester in the summer of 2020. Abbott had faced pressure to issue the pardon from white right-wing conservatives, including then Fox News host Tucker Carlson.” The same evening, reporter Stephanie Sy questioned Austin-American Statesman investigative reporter Tony Plohetski about Abbott’s pardon: “….critics say this is politics, and you had right-wing pundits like Tucker Carlson calling for this for a year.” Left-wing: Even the few left-wing references came with caveats. On February 15, 2024, substitute anchor John Yang hemmed and hawed to Shaun Harper, Executive Director of the USC Race and Equity Center: “Shaun, I don't want to put words into Greg's mouth [Greg Lukianoff of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression], but I have heard others argue against DEI, saying that colleges and universities are essentially indoctrinating students in sort of left-wing views. What do you say to that?” On August 6, 2024, Bennett used one of the liberal media’s favorite words to neutralize Trump’s criticism of the “left-wing” Kamala Harris-Tim Walz ticket: “The Trump campaign is already pouncing, calling [Tim Walz] dangerously liberal and saying that the Harris/Walz ticket is the most left-wing ticket in American history.” One of the very few genuine “left” labels aired -- not a quote, not one made sarcastically or dismissively -- was Bennett on the June 24, 2024 show talking to USA Today reporter Francesca Chambers about an upcoming Democratic primary race, in which more moderate Democrat George Latimer would defeat radical Democrat incumbent Jamaal Bowman: “Francesca, without reading too much into any one race, I mean, how much will this tell us about the strength of the Democrats’ left-wing faction."   Labeling Disparity by Guests: 52 right to 19 left Guests interviewed on the PBS News Hour also unloaded ideological labels upon conservatives and Republicans, though not at quite the same sharp tilt as the PBS crew. The right-left label disparity from PBS guests (often political journalists) was 52-19. For example, Dr. Peter Hotez complained that the government's COVID response faced "an entire ecosystem of elected officials on the far right, together with Fox News and other outlets."   SIDEBAR: “Fascist” Trump vs.” Communist” Kamala PBS’s labeling disparity wasn’t limited to the terms above. A “fascist” smear campaign against Donald Trump came to a head after October 22, 2024 comments made by John Kelly, the retired Marine general who served as Trump’s White House chief of staff, claiming the former president fit “into the general definition of fascist.” PBS relished using Kelly’s quotes to smear Trump as a “fascist,” without caveats or hesitation.  Desjardins on October 23, 2024: “In scathing comments in audio interviews with The New York Times, Kelly said Trump, behind the scenes, displayed the tendencies of a fascist.” Bennett repeated it that same night: “As we just heard, retired Four-Star General John Kelly, who was one of Donald Trump’s White House chiefs of staff, told The New York Times, Donald Trump would rule like a fascist if reelected.” PBS didn’t let up. Here’s Bennett on October 25: "John Kelly, Donald Trump's longest-serving White House chief of staff, told The New York Times that he believed Donald Trump met the definition of a fascist, that he would govern like a dictator if allowed, and had no understanding of the Constitution or the concept of the rule of law.” Barron-Lopez got in some last licks against Trump on November 4, the day before Election Day, that Kamala Harris "was repeatedly quoting former Trump officials like his longest-serving Chief of Staff John Kelly, as well as the former Joints Chief of Staff. And their words, as they described him as -- they described Donald Trump as fascist and as dangerous.” In all, 10 NewsHour reporters and seven guests labeled Trump or his policies as “fascist,” often in the course of repeating Kelly’s accusation, with no criticism that the label was a smear or an extreme exaggeration, save a typically mild comment from David Brooks. Only during PBS’s special Election Night coverage, with Trump cruising toward victory, did PBS’s resident poll-watcher Amy Walter mildly suggest that calling Trump a fascist perhaps hadn’t been an effective tactic for the Democrats.  In contrast, PBS fiercely resisted when the Trump camp referred to Kamala Harris as “Comrade Kamala” or her or Democrats in general as “Communist.” The description aired a total of three times, each time by a PBS staffer -- and two of those three happened in the course of denying Harris was a communist! On June 6, 2024, Barron-Lopez said that referring to Democrats as Marxist or communists were “common slurs” by Republicans.  Desjardins assured viewers on July 22, 2024 that Republicans were wrong about Harris: “Obviously, [Harris] is someone who is a part of a democratic republic. She is not a communist. But that is something that they’re going to try and tag her with.” The labeling disparity documented in this study goes beyond the standard media tilt of “liberal” and “conservative” labeling, and is a grossly inappropriate stance for a tax-funded network with a congressional mandate to maintain "strict adherence to objectivity and balance in all programs or series of programs of a controversial nature.”     Methodology: MRC analysts tabulated every use of the phrases “far right, “hard right,” “right wing, “far left,” “hard left,” “left wing,” “extreme,” “hard-line,” fascist,” and “communist” (and all variations of those phrases, i.e. with or without hyphens or spaces) pertaining to political figures, policies, and movements in American politics, that were said on air by PBS News Hour staffers (anchors, reporters, commentators, and occasional substitute commentators) during the 18 months up to and after the 2024 election (June 1, 2023 – November 30, 2024). Labels spoken by guests were also counted. Clips of politicians or other talking heads using the labels were not included.
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48 w

RIGHTEOUS: Why Dr. Jay Bhattacharya may be Trump’s BEST pick
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RIGHTEOUS: Why Dr. Jay Bhattacharya may be Trump’s BEST pick

One of the first serious academics to push back against the onslaught of novel, non-pharmaceutical interventions during COVID-19, like lockdowns, masks, and school closures, was Stanford’s Dr. Jay Bhattacharya. Now, he’s Trump’s pick to lead the National Institutes of Health. In his statement, Trump said, "Dr. Bhattacharya will work in cooperation with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to direct the Nation's Medical Research, and to make important discoveries that will improve Health and save lives." “This kind of stuff is biblical to me, man,” Steve Deace of “The Steve Deace Show” comments. “It’s not just that Francis Collins was replaced by a man who followed actual science and did so bravely, but Jay Bhattacharya is also a man of faith.” “This has been a spiritual battle for so long, guys,” he continues. “If all you get out of your vote for Donald Trump, and you’re like me and you supported Ron DeSantis in the primary because of what happened during COVID, and all you get out of this and that vote is Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as the head of HHS and Jay Bhattacharya as the head of NIH — the two most powerful health care policy making positions on this continent, on this entire continent, maybe in the world, frankly — if that’s what you got out of this, then your vote has more than paid off.” However, not everyone is as thrilled as Deace. “At the gym this morning, I watched MSNBC do a 10-minute segment on Jay Bhattacharya, losing their mind,” Deace says, noting that they didn’t mention his credentials. Bhattacharya is a tenured professor at Stanford University, one of the top five medical schools in the United States of America. “They kept forgetting to mention his credentials and expertise, but they were literally opening a spleen over this,” he says. Want more from Steve Deace?To enjoy more of Steve's take on national politics, Christian worldview, and principled conservatism with a snarky twist, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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48 w

Bearded lady set to fight child sex-change ban before SCOTUS tells CNN toddlers can be trans
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Bearded lady set to fight child sex-change ban before SCOTUS tells CNN toddlers can be trans

To the chagrin of LGBT extremists, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (R) ratified Republican legislation in March 2023 protecting children in the state from sex-change mutilations and puberty blockers. Three teen transvestites and their parents, later joined by the Biden Department of Justice, sued the state, seeking to put sterilizing puberty blockers and deformative hormone therapy back on the kids' menu. The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing arguments for and against the Republican mutilation ban Wednesday. The court's decision could ultimately reinforce or spike similar bans in dozens of other states. Ahead of the hearing before the high court, a bearded woman with the American Civil Liberties Union — the radical outfit representing the plaintiffs — explained to CNN Tuesday why she felt the law should fall, claiming at one point that toddlers can know they are transvestites. Chase Strangio, the transvestic ACLU attorney formerly known as Kate who is set to argue against the Tennessee law before the Supreme Court, told talking head Jake Tapper that this case "is a critical inflection point for transgender people across the country. We're coming off of an election season where transgender people played an outsized role in people's consciousness in terms of the way in which we were situated as — as a threat to others." The election helped highlight a trend: Americans are increasingly rejecting gender ideology and radical LGBT policies. The New York Times noted that an analysis conducted by Future Forward, failed presidential candidate Kamala Harris' top super PAC, found that the campaign ad with the tagline, "Kamala is for they/them. President Trump is for you," shifted the race nearly three percentage points in President-elect Donald Trump's favor. Ahead of announcing that he was stepping down, Texas Democratic Party Chairman Gilberto Hinojosa effectively admitted on the basis of fellow travelers' electoral failures that the "a big bulk of our population does not support" extreme "transgender" policies. While some Democrats may be shocked, the turning tide is no secret. A Washington Post-KFF poll found last year that 57% of Americans say gender is biologically determined; 68% oppose the use of puberty blockers by children; 58% oppose hormonal treatments for teens; and 62% say male transvestites should not be able to compete in girls' sports. "When we look at the map of states that ban this type of evidence-based health care, we went from zero states that had these bans in 2020 to now more than half the country," continued Strangio. The ACLU attorney indicated that she will argue before the high court that the Tennessee law, Senate Bill 1, is a form of sex discrimination. When Tapper raised the question of whether there is sufficient data to prove that sex-change treatments for kids is beneficial, Strangio replied, "We have decades of both clinical experience and research data showing that this is medical treatment that provides critical benefits to adolescents who need it." Strangio apparently missed the memo about the Cass Review, which revealed earlier this year that where so-called gender science is concerned, "There is not a reliable evidence base upon which to make clinical decisions, or for children and their families to make informed choices." The massive multiyear investigation commissioned by NHS England found that most of the "research" underpinning so-called gender science is of "poor quality," demonstrating "poor study design, inadequate follow-up periods, and a lack of objectivity in reporting of results." In the case of puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones foisted on children, the review made clear that the uses "are unproven and benefits/harms are unknown." "In addition to this making it difficult for clinicians to know whether these are appropriate treatments to offer, it is also challenging to provide children, young people, and families with sufficient information on which to make an informed choice," said the review. "The duty of information disclosure is complicated by many 'unknown unknowns' about the long-term impacts of puberty blocker and/or masculinizing/feminizing hormone during a dynamic developmental period when gender identity may not be settled." Strangio suggested to Tapper that toddlers' confusion is actionable and that in some cases, the "best" remedy is life-altering drugs. "These are doctors who are wanting to treat their patients in the best way that they know how, based on the best available evidence to us," said Strangio. "And these are young people who may have known since they were two years old exactly who they are, who suffered for 6 or 7 years before they had any relief. And what's happening here? It's not the kids who are consenting to this treatment; it's the parents who are consenting to the treatment." Journalist Mia Hughes highlighted in her 242-page report, published in March by Michael Shellenberger's think tank, Environmental Progress, that Dianne Berg, a member of World Professional Association for Transgender Health and co-author of the child chapter of the organization's Standards of Care 8, indicated that while adolescents are not mature enough to understand "the extent to which some of these medical interventions are impacting them," some parents also lack the requisite health literacy to understand the treatments. "What really disturbs me is when the parents can't tell me what they need to know about a medical intervention that apparently they signed off for," said Berg. "As a parent, I would say we — when our children are suffering, we are suffering," said Strangio. "And these are parents who love their children, who are listening to the advice of their doctors, of the mainstream medical community, and doing what's right for them, for their kids in the state. ... Tennessee has displaced their judgment." Those keen to prevent or remedy suffering might take into account the Cass Review's indications that: the "systematic review showed no clear evidence that social transition in childhood has any positive or negative mental health outcomes, and relatively weak evidence for any effect in adolescence"; puberty blockers compromise bone density and have no apparent impact on "gender dysphoria or body satisfaction"; there is "insufficient and/or inconsistent evidence about the effects of puberty suppression on gender dysphoria, mental and psychosocial health, cognitive development, cardio-metabolic risk, and fertility"; there is "a lack of high-quality research assessing the outcomes of hormones for masculinisation or feminisation in adolescents with gender dysphoria or incongruence and few studies that undertake long-term follow-up"; and so-called gender-affirming care is "an area of remarkably weak evidence." Other studies have similarly demonstrated the fallout of the drugs Strangio wants kids to access. For instance, a 2022 study published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy confirmed that puberty blockers adversely impact bone density and noted that there "is increasing evidence for negative effects on cognitive and emotional development and on sexual functioning." Tennessee noted in February that the state "acted rationally, reasonably, and compassionately to protect its children, and the Act survives any level of review. Nothing in the Constitution deputizes Petitioners to override the legislature's judgment and demand a policy they believe to be more favorable. Concluding otherwise would violate 'the most deeply rooted tradition in this country ... that we look to democracy to answer pioneering public-policy questions.'" The Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Skrmetti is not expected for several months. 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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48 w

Mayor Eric Adams dares left to ‘cancel’ him for backing Trump’s deportation plan
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Mayor Eric Adams dares left to ‘cancel’ him for backing Trump’s deportation plan

New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, challenged the left to "cancel" him after he voiced his support of President-elect Donald Trump's plan to deport criminal illegal aliens.On Tuesday, Adams shared that he intends to meet with Trump's incoming border czar, Tom Homan, to hear his thoughts on how to solve the immigration crisis. He dismissed the idea that Democrats supporting the deportation of criminals is a new position.'Look at what they are saying. And then look at what I have been saying for years.'"My position is people who commit crimes in our city, you have abdicated your right to be in our city, and I am open to figure out the best way to address that," he said.Adams does not support sweeping deportations of all immigrants. He clarified whom he was referring to, stating, "Those who are here committing crimes, robberies, shooting at police officers, raping innocent people have been a harm to our country." "Those are the people I am talking about. And I would love to sit down with the border czar and hear his thoughts on how we're going to address those who are harming our citizens," Adams continued. The mayor stated that the city's taxpayers have spent more than $6.4 billion to assist over 200,000 immigrants. He explained that the cost of the crisis forced New York City to pull back funding from seniors and young people."We all should be angry at what happened to our city under this administration," Adams said.A reporter asked the mayor whether he was "open" to cooperating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.He responded, "You know what's interesting? … I want you to all go back and Google 'Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.' Google what they said about those who commit crimes in our city.""They said those who commit crimes need to get out right away. That was their position. So this is not a new position," he remarked.Adams explained that in the "era of cancel culture," some politicians have been afraid to voice their positions."Well, cancel me, because I'm going to protect the people of this city," Adams declared.The mayor noted that the criminal illegal immigrants are harming not only locals but other migrants as well. Homan previously told the New York Post that he wants Trump to pull federal funding from sanctuary jurisdictions, which would include New York City. He also stated that he plans to send additional immigration agents to jurisdictions that refuse to cooperate with the federal government."We're going to do the job with you or without you," he stated.Adams pledged that he would not be "warring" with Trump but instead plans to work with the incoming administration.Adams' critics have speculated that he has agreed to cooperate with the Trump administration because he hopes to be pardoned in the federal criminal investigation against him."It's interesting that whenever I agree on what this administration is doing, people say, 'Oh, you know, you're agreeing because you're hoping he looks favorable on you.' Look at what they are saying. And then look at what I have been saying for years, for years," the mayor said.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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Gamers Realm
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48 w

Marvel Rivals tier list - best heroes December 2024
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Marvel Rivals tier list - best heroes December 2024

Who are the best Marvel Rivals characters? Marvel and NetEase's star-studded hero (and villain) shooter is filled with fan-favorite characters from across the multiverse. While each character brings their unique gameplay flair to the game, some are far mightier than others. Our Marvel Rivals tier list divides the multiplayer game's cast into multiple bands of viability, taking into account their innate power and ability to define the meta. Once you've found a top-tier Marvel Rivals hero to climb the ranked ladder with, learn all about them in our Marvel Rivals characters guide. Continue reading Marvel Rivals tier list - best heroes December 2024 MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Marvel Rivals release date, Marvel Rivals characters, Marvel Rivals System Requirements
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The DDR5 gaming RAM clock speed record has just been smashed, thanks to G.Skill
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The DDR5 gaming RAM clock speed record has just been smashed, thanks to G.Skill

PC gaming RAM maker G.Skill has just seen its hardware break an overclocking world record. Performed by Allen Golibersuch, better known as Splave, the new overclock saw some G.Skill Trident Z5 CK RGB memory overclocked 15MHz beyond the previous record holder. As the maker of some of the best gaming RAM, G.Skill’s PC hardware has already broken records this year. In October, a competing overclocker, Safedisk, managed to crack 6,056MHz (12,112MT/s effective) and now, this record has been beaten again with 6,333MHz (12,666MT/s effective) being hit. Continue reading The DDR5 gaming RAM clock speed record has just been smashed, thanks to G.Skill MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Best graphics card, Best gaming PC, Best SSD for gaming
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Voyagers of Nera is a survival game championing the best part of AC Black Flag
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Voyagers of Nera is a survival game championing the best part of AC Black Flag

We've all dreamed of abandoning everything and taking to the high seas at some point in our lives. Whether it's to channel your inner scallywag a la Captain Jack Sparrow, or to venture forth to discover brave new worlds like Moana, the ocean's song calls to all of us. Voyagers of Nera, a gorgeous new survival crafting game from Treehouse Games, lets you live out that latter fantasy, tasking you and your friends with traversing a gorgeous Polynesian-style world and building your own settlements. With Moana 2 on the horizon, this feels like the perfect way to round out 2025. Continue reading Voyagers of Nera is a survival game championing the best part of AC Black Flag MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Best survival games, Best multiplayer games, Best open-world games
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48 w

CBS News' Banner Year of Shameless #Journalism Continued With This 'INSANE' Open About Pete Hegseth
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CBS News' Banner Year of Shameless #Journalism Continued With This 'INSANE' Open About Pete Hegseth

CBS News' Banner Year of Shameless #Journalism Continued With This 'INSANE' Open About Pete Hegseth
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10 Best Sonic Fangames You Need to Try
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10 Best Sonic Fangames You Need to Try

Sonic has had massive support from the super dedicated community formed around the games, which also extends to fan games. This is especially because the creators of fan games got to make Sonic Mania, an official game and retro revival that's been almost universally praised.
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
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10 Best RPGs With Amazing Skill Trees, Ranked
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10 Best RPGs With Amazing Skill Trees, Ranked

One of the fundamental aspects of RPGs is that they allow us to customize our characters to our liking.
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