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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
1 y

Trump’s Spending Plan To Eke Out 270 Rests On Two States
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dailycaller.com

Trump’s Spending Plan To Eke Out 270 Rests On Two States

AdImpact compiled data on presidential ad-spending slotted for now until the election.
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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
1 y

US, Partners Capture Accused ‘ISIS Facilitator’ Of Escaped Terrorists
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US, Partners Capture Accused ‘ISIS Facilitator’ Of Escaped Terrorists

'Over 9,000 ISIS detainees remain in over 20 SDF detention facilities'
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

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10 Most Heartbreaking Songs About An Ex

Heartbreak knows no boundaries, and neither does music. In our list of the “10 Most Heartbreaking Songs About An Ex,” we traverse across genres, from punk to blues, hard rock to pop, each song offering its unique take on the pain of lost love. These tracks may differ in style, tempo, and instrumentation, but they all share a common theme: the raw, often overwhelming emotion that comes when a relationship ends. Whether it’s the searing intensity of the Ramones’ “Listen To My Heart,” where punk’s primal energy meets the sting of rejection, or the soul-baring confessionals found in Elvis Costello’s The post 10 Most Heartbreaking Songs About An Ex appeared first on ClassicRockHistory.com.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Tuscany’s New Airport Terminal Will Have a Vineyard on the Roof, Obviously
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Tuscany’s New Airport Terminal Will Have a Vineyard on the Roof, Obviously

With more visitors than ever before, the new airport terminal in Florence will have a green roof and sport a vineyard. The Italians are passionate about greening their buildings, with the famous Bosco Verticale in Milan being the flagship example. To celebrate its heritage as one of the wine capitals of the world, the Amerigo Vespucci International […] The post Tuscany’s New Airport Terminal Will Have a Vineyard on the Roof, Obviously appeared first on Good News Network.
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Pet Life
Pet Life
1 y

Young Cat Found at Job Site Undergoes Dramatic Transformation After Just a Few Weeks in a Home
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Young Cat Found at Job Site Undergoes Dramatic Transformation After Just a Few Weeks in a Home

A young cat found at a job site underwent a dramatic transformation after just a few weeks in a home. FurbyDeejOver a month ago, a scraggly, raggedy kitten was found behind a tire at a job site. She was emaciated, covered in fleas, and missing a lot of fur.The finders immediately contacted Deej, cofounder of Inked Kittens Club (a kitten rescue), for help. "As soon as she arrived at my place that afternoon, it was clear she was very sick," Deej told Love Meow.The kitten named Furby used every bit of her strength and willpower to eat and fight to live. DeejHaving already used several of her nine lives, Furby had an indomitable spirit. She kept purring and "baking her little bread" and seemed relieved to finally have a safe place to land and attention from a loving human.At around seven weeks old, she came with a host of health issues, including the dreaded panleukopenia, with about a 10% chance of survival for her age. She was found behind a tire at a job siteDeejFurby was determined to defy the odds, and with intensive daily supportive care, she began to turn around.After a week of fluids, syringe-feeding, and meds, Furby wrestled back her appetite and a new zest for life. "(When) she started to willingly eat on her own, I knew we were in the home stretch of getting her on the mend." DeejFor a while, Furby clung to her bed and wouldn't move aside from using the litter box. Then, one day, she came out of her shell and decided to trust. "From the moment she decided we were pals, we've been inseparable."Furby was missing a substantial amount of fur on her chest, legs, and tail due to severe malnutrition. DeejAs she continued to put on weight, her fur slowly grew back, and her endearing, mischievous side emerged. "She seems to have two faces: a flat brow grumpy face or a tongue blep. The more I stare at her, the cuter and funnier she gets."With her newfound energy, Furby started to play and demand more attention. Deej"She's decided pets are more important than eating. If I'm not giving her enough pets, she'll reach her little paw up to grab at my hand, all with her tongue blepped out. She's a kitten with a big personality that packs a real punch."Once Furby recovered and was ready to socialize, she was overjoyed to have constant playmates after being isolated for so long. Her missing fur gradually grew backDeejShe quickly hit it off with her feline friends, romping around the room and showing them how to play with toys. Through her interactions with other cats, she learned to play appropriately and respect boundaries."Her favorite pastime is still chasing me around the house. She loves her stuffed animals, and every night, she makes sure to show her stuffy snake who's boss." She was excited to have friends to play withDeejFurby is about three months old now, and her ear tufts are getting longer with age."As she's getting older, her little bald spots are growing back out beautifully. She's come a long way with socializing, even though she still enjoys chasing your feet around the house." DeejIt's hard to believe that, just a few weeks ago, Furby was a scraggly little gremlin, missing a lot of her fur. Now, she has blossomed into a gorgeous young cat with enough energy to power a village. Deej"She still has a big goofy head and the weirdest coat I've seen in a while, but I couldn't be more obsessed with her if I tried." DeejShare this story with your friends. More on Furby and Deej's fosters @deejandthecats on Instagram and Inked Kittens Club on Instagram.Related story: Feral Kitten Pushed Everyone Away But Decided to Trust for the First Time After 2 Weeks of Being Indoor Cat
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
1 y

Russia About to Take Pokrovsk
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Russia About to Take Pokrovsk

Russia About to Take Pokrovsk
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

Globalists push to have Elon Musk arrested as global assault on free speech kicks into overdrive
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Globalists push to have Elon Musk arrested as global assault on free speech kicks into overdrive

Over the past month, the left-wing Guardian newspaper in England has run no fewer than three op-eds calling for Elon Musk's arrest: one from in-house columnist Jonathan Freedland, one from former Twitter VP Bruce Daisley, and most recently one from former U.S. Secretary of Labor Robert Reich — for simply operating his publishing platform, X, in accordance with American law. It bears mentioning that X is not the first open-access publishing platform that follows American content moderation rules, not foreign ones. And it will not be the last. Those who are paranoid about the 'rise of the far right' in Europe counterintuitively suggest that the answer to this bogeyman is to grant the state sweeping censorship powers. American regulations on publishing platforms follow two rules: first and foremost, the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment, which creates a near-absolute American right to nonviolently express any opinion on practically any matter of public importance or operate a publishing platform that hosts those opinions. Second, there is Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which codifies at the federal level a judge-made First Amendment jurisprudential principle that you cannot impute liability to a publisher for a statement of which the publisher does not know the content in advance of its publication. Although Musk is a controversial figure, one thing we can all agree on is that he is an American. This means that unlike, say, Pavel Durov, Musk has the choice to remain in the United States and use his effectively infinite wealth to project free speech abroad and take refuge behind the impervious shield of the American Constitution. No state powers on Earth combined — not Brazil, the European Union, or the United Kingdom — have the power to stop America or, by extension, if Musk avails himself of his American civil rights, to stop him. In a world where the most powerful country with the largest nuclear arsenal guarantees its citizens the right to host, impart, or receive whatever political ideas they want, even from abroad, the rest of the world needs to get used to the idea that Americans will always create spaces for free speech online and that no legislative or judicial intervention by any foreign power will prevent them from doing so. If Elon and X were not, some other company would, and indeed, numerous other, smaller companies already do). What European commentators want is for tech companies to all band together and eliminate American-style free speech online once and for all. As long as America exists and there is market demand for free speech, this will never happen; as long as Americans exist, they will disobey. Once the rest of the world gets the memo, civil servants outside the United States will have three choices: (a) punish their own people for engaging in free speech; (b) legislate partially effective domestic blocks to try to deny their own people access to free speech; or (c) collectively punish or pressure innocent parties subject to their jurisdiction who have nothing to do with the speech in question, such as is the case when countries threaten to imprison "local representatives" — hostages — whom many nations, including Brazil and Germany, demand that American social media companies employ in their jurisdictions. In its recent enforcement actions against X, Brazil has tried to do all three. When X refused to name a local representative for Brazil to arrest, in addition to ordering X’s blocking at the ISP level, Brazil's supreme court ordered the app’s removal from the Google and Apple app stores, threatened Brazilians with daily fines of approximately $8,000 U.S. dollars for using the app, and briefly even considered banning VPN apps in the country (a move that it later rescinded). Chillingly, the court also ordered the seizure of Starlink’s bank accounts in-country; seeing, however, that Starlink and X are different companies, without common ownership structures, any coherent legal system possessing even a basic notion of fairness and due process would refuse to impute liability for the torts or crimes of one company — or one person — to another company, or other people, who have no relationship to the alleged criminal acts in question. The only thing these two companies have in common is that they are partially owned — in Starlink's case, not even majority-owned — by one man. Despite many attempts to do so in the last 230-odd years, Europe has proven unable to stop Americans from being American. The question is how far Europe is willing to go, what punishments it is willing to inflict, what privacy tools it is willing to take away, and how much power it is willing to give the state to prevent disfavored political thought from circulating within its own borders. Historically, Europe has been willing to go “all the way” to punish political dissenters — by which I mean it murders them. The United States’ laws on free speech were informed by this history, which includes such examples as the case of William Anderton in 1693, a printer who was convicted of treason and executed for daring to refer to the then-king of England as the “Prince of Orange” — a true statement of fact — in a written pamphlet. Censorship-motivated crimes against humanity such as this are why the First Amendment exists, and it is why Elon Musk cannot and will not be arrested in the United States for running his platform as he pleases. Those who are paranoid about the "rise of the far right" in Europe counterintuitively suggest that the answer to this bogeyman is to grant the state sweeping censorship powers. Crushing dissent (a) won't silence American servers and (b) is not a surefire way to win a political fight, having failed, in catastrophic fashion from the perspective of the ruling regimes, under the ancien régime, in apartheid South Africa, in the Weimar Republic, and in the former Soviet Union. If European moderates are truly afraid that the far right will start winning elections, the sensible thing to do is to create institutions and rules that will act as a bulwark against state power, not to expand it. In Europe and the U.K.'s cases, this would involve scrapping the comparatively weak human rights protections of European Convention, repealing existing censorship law, and replacing the current rules with hardened, American-style inviolable civil liberties as quickly as possible. Ultimately, the worst-case scenario for incumbent parties and ideologies in the weaker democracies is not what happens if the far right expresses itself nonviolently on foreign servers; it is what it will do with powerful censorship laws, once wielded in anger against it, when it wins.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

Female athletes balk after receiving apparent offer of up to $2,400 to promote Montana Democrat on social media
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Female athletes balk after receiving apparent offer of up to $2,400 to promote Montana Democrat on social media

Some female college athletes in Montana raised an eyebrow after they apparently received an offer of up to $2,400 to promote the re-election efforts of a Democrat senator who previously voted to allow men to participate in women's sports.Lily Meskers — a junior at the University of Montana who majors in journalism and competes on the women's track team — broke the story last week.'Where is your endorsement for us? Where is you standing up for us as female athletes?'Meskers claimed that she and all other student-athletes at UM received an email forwarded to them by Jean Gee, the senior associate athletic director. The original email reportedly came from Montana Together, a group working to re-elect Democrat Sen. Jon Tester of Montana.The email offered student-athletes between $400 and $2,400 in exchange for up to four unscripted videos promoting Tester on Instagram Reels, Meskers reported. The offer was apparently pitched as a name, image, and likeness deal, often abbreviated NIL, and addressed to "athletes who attend college in Montana and are interested in spreading the word about Senator Jon Tester and causes you care about.""Let’s work together to inform your audience about Senator Tester’s track record in office and encourage him to maintain his support of these vital policies," the email read in part, according to the New York Post.Meskers said she and some of her fellow female athletes were stunned to be asked to tout a Democrat senator who voted against the Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act of 2023, introduced by Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, a former head football coach at Auburn University.Meskers called Tester's vote against the act "a direct hit against women's sports.""I think me and a lot of the girls on the team honestly shared a really similar reaction to this," Meskers explained on "Montana Talks with Aaron Flint." "Why would we endorse something that fundamentally goes against us? As women athletes, you know, we work really hard to get to the level that we're at to be Division I athletes, and to have biological men take away these positions from us, it's really frustrating.""Where is your endorsement for us? Where is you standing up for us as female athletes?" Meskers asked, referring to Tester.Katie Whitehurst, another member of the UM women's track team, similarly grimaced at the offer. "I stand by biological women competing fairly in women’s sports and the offer seemed guided towards only one political part," she said, according to Meskers' reporting.Kent Haslam, UM athletic director, defended the forwarded email, claiming that recipients had the option to consider or ignore the offer."When athletics gets these type of general NIL requests, it is our practice to forward those out to all student-athletes, unless the requestor is looking for a specific athlete or team," Haslam's statement read in part.Haslam also claimed that the email actually came via Opendorse, a company which facilitates NIL opportunities. "Athletics sent along the opportunity to all of the athletes in case any were interested," his statement added. "The athletes could then reach out to [Opendorse] for more information."Tester, 68, is currently in a tough re-election battle against Republican nominee Tim Sheehy, a 37-year-old Navy SEAL veteran who has been endorsed by former President Donald Trump. Montana is also one of the reddest states in the country, so Tester has had to campaign as a moderate.Meskers isn't buying it."People describe Tester as a moderate person, but this vote against the protection of women and girls' sports was not a moderate vote," Meskers insisted. "I think most of Montana would absolutely agree with that. You know, this is not a moderate vote."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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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

4 sleeping passengers fatally shot on train, mayor of Chicago suburb says; suspect arrested; gun recovered
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4 sleeping passengers fatally shot on train, mayor of Chicago suburb says; suspect arrested; gun recovered

Four sleeping passengers aboard a Chicago Transit Authority train were fatally shot Monday morning, according to the mayor of Forest Park, a Chicago suburb.CTA workers discovered the shooting victims around 5:30 a.m., WLS-TV reported, adding that Forest Park police said they received a 911 call about the shooting. Three victims were pronounced dead at the scene, and a fourth died at Loyola University Medical Center, the station said.'It's a Monday morning on a holiday. Everyone is supposed to enjoying their time off, time with their families; it's Labor Day. ...'Forest Park Mayor Rory Hoskins told WLS the victims, all adults, were sleeping at the time they were shot."These victims likely never saw it coming," Hoskins added to the station. "They were executed on Labor Day. In our community, people go to the pool. They go to the park. You know, they barbecue. But today a lot of people were calling the mayor's office, expressing concern and asking if they were safe." Police told WLS the shooter fled the scene, but officers took a suspect into custody within 90 minutes and recovered the gun allegedly used in the shooting."We believe he got off at the Forest Park stop, and he was apprehended at a Pink Line station in Chicago somewhere, so he may have gotten on a train going the opposite direction," Hoskins added to the station. Police told WLS the shooting occurred on two train cars. "I mean, it's a horrible situation," Forest Park Police Deputy Chief Christopher Chin added to the station. "It is definitely something you don't want to wake up to. It's a Monday morning on a holiday. Everyone is supposed to enjoying their time off, time with their families; it's Labor Day." Forest Park police and the West Suburban Major Crimes Task Force are investigating the shooting, WLS said, adding that police said it appears to be an isolated incident, and there is no ongoing threat to the public.Neither the shooting suspect nor the shooting victims have been identified, the station said. - YouTube youtu.be 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
Gamers Realm
1 y

Helldivers 2 dev delays update, promises further details coming soon
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Helldivers 2 dev delays update, promises further details coming soon

Helldivers 2 has been suffering recently under a series of community backlashes that has seen its once colossal star begin to grow dim. Developer Arrowhead Game Studios has been working on a 60-day plan to turn the ship around, but some adjustments need to be made to accommodate the work on the game. As a result, an expected patch has been delayed - but Arrowhead will reveal more details about what it's been working on very soon. Continue reading Helldivers 2 dev delays update, promises further details coming soon MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Helldivers 2 weapons, Helldivers 2 stratagems, Helldivers 2 system requirements
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