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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
2 yrs

DOJ Tries To Shut Down Case That Exposed Biden Admin Colluded On Medical Standards Used To Justify Child Sex Changes
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DOJ Tries To Shut Down Case That Exposed Biden Admin Colluded On Medical Standards Used To Justify Child Sex Changes

'Supreme Court deserves to know the full story'
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Daily Caller Feed
2 yrs

CNN Conducts Zero Fact-Checks Of Biden Leading Up To Debate Night Despite Hammering Trump
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CNN Conducts Zero Fact-Checks Of Biden Leading Up To Debate Night Despite Hammering Trump

CNN stopped fact-checking President Joe Biden leading up to debate night
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
2 yrs

How to start Ness003 quest in Destiny 2
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How to start Ness003 quest in Destiny 2

Destiny 2’s first part of Episode 1 Echoes has fully released and Guardians are able to go through the first few missions. Once you’ve finished The Final Shape campaign and the main story of Echoes, there’s even more to do. So let’s investigate and figure out how to start Ness003 in Destiny 2 Episode Echoes. When does Ness003 unlock in Destiny 2 Episode Echoes? Screenshot: PC Invasion The Ness003 is part of the Ness questline that has been happening for a few weeks since Episode 1 was released. The first two quests, Ness001 and Ness002 unlocked after completing the first two weeks of episodic quests so naturally, people assumed the third quest would unlock after the story mission in week three. However, according to players on Reddit, they did not receive any quest after completing the last story mission of Episode 1 Part 1. I myself was a bit confused that I didn’t get a new quest after already completing the story missions as well as the prev...
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
2 yrs

Darklight Catacombs walkthrough in Shadow of The Erdtree
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Darklight Catacombs walkthrough in Shadow of The Erdtree

The Darklight Catacombs in Shadow of The Erdtree suck for a few reasons. The first is that they are completely dark, requiring a lantern and some guesswork. The second is that there are enemies whose entire face is gun. Table of contentsHow to navigate the Darklight Catacombs in SoTEHeading to the first liftTo the second Darklight Catacombs liftHow to beat the Bigmouth Imp How to navigate the Darklight Catacombs in SoTE To reach the Darklight Catacombs, you can follow this easy guide on the Abyssal Woods. This will put you right at the entrance, ready to enjoy every brutal minute of this stupid goddamn cave. Before you do anything else, equip your lantern. This can be bought from the merchant sitting right by the Liurina Lake Shore Site of Grace for 1800 runes. This is an essential piece of equipment. Heading to the first lift Descend the lift into the Darklight Catacombs. Head immediately forward to the item at the end but beware of the attack from the left. You wil...
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
2 yrs

How to reach Midras Manse- Abyssal Woods walkthrough Shadow of The Erdtree
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How to reach Midras Manse- Abyssal Woods walkthrough Shadow of The Erdtree

Getting to the Abyssal Woods in Shadow of The Erdtree is hard enough, but once you arrive there and want to reach Midras Manse, it gets so much worse. Here is how I made it through the maddening fields to the relative safety of the hall. Check our guides hub for all your Elden Ring tips and tricks. Table of contentsReach the Abyssal WoodsNavigating the Abyssal Woods in Shadow of The ErdtreeLeaving Shadow Keep to the Darklight CatacombsForsaken GraveyardSay goodbye to your HorseThrough the Abyssal Woods to Midras ManseHow to get past the unkillable Lantern madness enemies in Abyssal WoodsThe last leg to Midras Manse Reach the Abyssal Woods I would recommend using the guide for the second illusory wall in Shadow of The Erdtree to get to the Abyssal Woods and Midras Manse early. Our full guide on it is here. In brief, you need to begin at the Main Gate Plaza Site of Grace in Shadow Keep and head up the stairs through the door. At the top of these stairs, take a right and look...
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
2 yrs

Administration Is Shifting Health Care Resources From Veterans to Illegal Aliens
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Administration Is Shifting Health Care Resources From Veterans to Illegal Aliens

The Biden administration is under scrutiny for prioritizing medical care for noncitizens and illegal immigrants at the expense of service members and veterans. Inadequate care, restricted access to medical treatments, a complex filing process, and lengthy wait times are fueling the ongoing veteran suicide crisis. These issues impact military readiness and recruitment, evident in the collapse of recruiting numbers over the last four years in America’s military branches. Senate Veterans Affairs Committee member Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., and House Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Mike Bost, R-Ill., have raised concerns about redirecting resources from wounded warriors and veterans to noncitizens. Since 2021, over 7 million illegal aliens have been encountered at America’s borders, both at official ports of entry and between them. This overwhelming volume has strained federal agencies, requiring resources from other agencies like the Department of Veterans Affairs to help cover costs and/or workload. VA Deputy Assistant Secretary Terrence Hayes claimed, “At no time are any VA health care professionals or VA funds used for this purpose.” While this statement may be true, Hayes carefully chose his words to sidestep the question by specifically mentioning health care professionals. While the administration denies diverting funds directly from the Department of Veterans Affairs, the reality is VA administrative personnel are being diverted to process noncitizen claims and ensuring payments for noncitizen care instead of addressing long-standing problems that lower the quality of care for veterans. Despite improving wait times and mental health care access, veterans still wait almost three weeks to see a medical professional. This shortage affects VA processing times and appointment availability. Over 300,000 claims are backlogged, and more than 950,000 claims are pending for service members and veterans awaiting their final benefits package. Following the botched withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, the Biden administration directed the Department of Homeland Security to coordinate efforts across the federal government and redirect resources to support vulnerable Afghans under Operation Allies Welcome. These policy changes come when veteran care facilities like Walter Reed National Military Medical Center are understaffed and overburdened. As part of this directive, a medical ward and staff at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center were reallocated to treat Afghan nationals evacuated to the United States. Service members were moved to other areas throughout the hospital for recovery. While no wounded warrior went without care, our nation’s heroes are being pushed aside to prioritize individuals from other countries. Despite improving wait times and mental healthcare access, veterans still wait almost three weeks to see a medical professional. This shortage affects VA processing times and appointment availability. Over 300,000 claims are backlogged, and more than 950,000 claims are pending for servicemembers and veterans awaiting their final benefits package. The administration denies diverting funds directly from the Department of Veterans Affairs, but personnel within the VA system are tasked with processing claims and ensuring payments for non-citizen care. For over 20 years, the veteran community has faced a suicide epidemic due to an inadequate understanding of post-traumatic stress disorder, a lack of access to mental health care, and limited resources—with no signs of improvement. From 2001 to 2021, the United States lost 133,857 veterans to suicide, with no year reporting fewer than 6,000 successful attempts. Veterans are 1.6 times more likely to die by suicide than the general population, making it the second leading cause of death among veterans under 45. But this is only half the story, as an additional 20 veterans die every day from non-suicidal self-inflicted injuries—with the most common being overdose deaths. Factoring in these self-inflicted deaths over the same period reveals the true scale of the VA’s failures in addressing suicide within the veteran community. Moreover, failing to fulfill our nation’s promises reduces the likelihood that people will choose a military career and that service members and veterans will recommend military service to others, making this a national security issue affecting U.S. military readiness and recruitment. Today’s Army recruits, over 80% coming from military families, see a direct link between the government’s failure to follow through for veterans and its impact on their own families. Benefits rank as the second highest reason for joining the service (26%). Since 2014, the Army has not met its recruitment goals. In fiscal year 2023, the military services collectively missed recruiting goals by approximately 41,000 recruits, despite lowering those goals as well as their recruitment standards. Bureaucracy, understaffing, and poor accountability at the VA already meant fewer veterans received necessary care. Now, add the fact that we are prioritizing the health care of noncitizens over them, and we are leaving our nation’s heroes unsupported. Sadly, in many cases, these individuals resort to suicide. If resources are diverted from veterans under the Biden administration, Congress must reaffirm its commitment to supporting veterans by supporting the “No VA Resources for Illegal Aliens Act” and exercising its power of the purse. Anything less would fail those who bravely served our nation. Without accountability on this issue, veterans will continue to take their own lives, military families will opt out of service, and the all-volunteer force will be at risk of disintegration—along with our national security. The post Administration Is Shifting Health Care Resources From Veterans to Illegal Aliens appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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2 yrs

Americans’ Right to Speak Suffers a Body Blow From Supreme Court
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Americans’ Right to Speak Suffers a Body Blow From Supreme Court

In a setback for First Amendment free speech rights, the Supreme Court on Wednesday held in Murthy v. Missouri that no plaintiff in the case had established standing to challenge the government’s coordinated censorship of dissenting views on COVID-19 and the 2020 election on social media platforms. Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote the majority opinion, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Brett Kavanaugh, and Ketanji Brown Jackson. Standing, the issue that comprises the entirety of Barrett’s opinion, is a legal doctrine that limits the power of courts to hear a case. To have standing, a plaintiff must demonstrate that he has suffered a concrete injury, traceable to government action and redressable by a ruling in his favor before he can challenge a government action in court. Despite a comprehensive record developed in the lower courts, the majority held that none of the states or individuals involved met that standard. Barrett also criticized the plaintiffs for not suing the social media platforms that censored their posts. Barrett noted that their standing claims “depend on the platform’s actions—yet the plaintiffs do not seek to enjoin the platforms from restricting any posts or accounts.” Instead, she wrote, they “seek to enjoin the Government agencies and officials from pressuring or encouraging the platforms to suppress protected speech in the future.” The evidence was clear that the federal government used back channels between the White House and other executive branch officials, including the FBI, and social media platforms to suppress opinions and views, even factually supported ones, at odds with the positions taken by the Biden administration on everything ranging from COVID-19 to the 2020 election. The White House’s barrage of demands came paired with intimations and implied threats that the administration might pursue increased antitrust enforcement against the platforms or might push to revise laws to remove immunity from civil liability that the platforms currently enjoy for their content-moderation practices should they decline to comply with the government’s desires. The parties affected by the executive branch’s censorship that filed the lawsuit included the states of Louisiana and Missouri, which sued on behalf of their residents, as well as epidemiologists Jay Bhattacharya and Martin Kulldorff, famous for the Great Barrington Declaration that criticized mass lockdowns and advocated for targeted prevention strategies during the COVID-19 pandemic. During the discovery process in the lower courts, the challengers uncovered reams of evidence demonstrating the lengths to which executive branch actors went to ensure that views contrary to those of the White House and the Biden administration would not be disseminated online, and that accounts of members of the public that the administration didn’t like were suspended or terminated. After months of emails and phone calls in which White House officials accused platforms such as Facebook of “killing people” and fomenting “insurrection,” the platforms caved and rewrote their content-moderation policies to suit the Biden administration’s preferences. The lower courts were aghast. Having reviewed the large evidentiary record, U.S. District Court Judge Terry Doughty deemed the White House’s effort “the most massive attack against free speech in United States’ history,” and broadly enjoined executive branch agencies from communicating with the platforms. On appeal, the 5th Circuit narrowed the scope of Doughty’s injunction, but affirmed that, by threats and encouragement, the executive branch had co-opted the social media platforms’ content-moderation process, making the downgrade or deletion of plaintiffs’ posts a form of state action that violated the First Amendment. Regrettably, a majority of the justices on the U.S. Supreme Court did not agree. The decision solidifies Barrett’s reputation as the court’s hawk on standing, by raising the burden of proving standing to new heights. At a minimum, Barrett declared, each plaintiff must show that “a particular defendant pressured a particular platform to censor a particular topic before that platform suppressed a particular plaintiff ’s speech on that topic.” And that would only begin the required labors. Because plaintiffs sought to stop the government from censoring future posts, the court held that they would have to demonstrate from proven past censorship some substantial likelihood of future censorship. Barrett spends pages dissecting the evidence for standing with all the exacting verve of an IRS auditor. She determined that the plaintiffs failed to establish the causal connection between government action and censorship with the level of particularity that the majority desired. Even Jill Hines, co-director of Health Freedom Louisiana, who had her vaccine information groups repeatedly deleted by Facebook, had, in Barrett’s estimation, “little momentum going forward.” Barrett concluded that “without proof of an ongoing pressure campaign,” the court would not exercise “general legal oversight of the other branches of Government.” But less than a month ago, the court was singing a different tune. In NRA v. Vullo, the court unanimously held that the First Amendment prevented government officials from coercing third parties to suppress unpopular speech. That approach, wrote Sotomayor, “allows government officials to be more effective in their speech-suppression efforts because intermediaries will often be less invested in the speaker’s message and thus less likely to risk the regulator’s ire.” That description fits Murthy as well as Vullo, so what happened? That’s what Justice Samuel Alito asks pointedly in a dissent joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch. Alito wrote: “Officials who read today’s decision together with Vullo will get the message: If a coercive campaign is carried out with enough sophistication, it may get by. That is not a message this Court should send.” Alito conducted a review of the record no less searching than Barrett’s, but came away with the opposite conclusion: Hines, at the very least has standing, because her posts were removed by policies caused by the government’s threats, and those policies remain in effect. Hines, said Alito, was not required to prove that the government’s unlawful pressure was the sole cause of her injury to establish standing. The majority avoided the First Amendment dispute and ruled on procedural grounds. But as Alito pointed out, even procedural rulings can have obvious effects on substantive guarantees like free speech. He reminded the majority that the White House and other executive branch agencies plainly “engaged in a covert scheme of censorship.” Facebook, he notes, was vulnerable to the White House’s pressure after officials repeatedly threatened the platform’s most valuable legal asset: its immunity from publisher’s liability under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, a 1996 relic of the pre-social media era. The Murthy decision is the most recent in a lengthening line of significant cases to reach the Supreme Court only to be turned back for lack of standing. In just the past few terms, the court pulled similar maneuvers in cases involving student loan cancellation, border enforcement, and federal approval of abortifacients. And yet, as Alito pointed out, past Supreme Court decisions had no difficulty finding standing when plaintiffs offered strained theories of injury arising from climate change, the denied entry of a communist foreign national, and the Trump administration’s census citizenship question. Perhaps, the Supreme Court is engaged in legitimate retrenchment on standing, one which will depart from those older precedents and make it more difficult for litigants of all stripes to challenge government action in court. But for now, the court’s use of standing seems to cut only against litigants of a conservative persuasion, making the deployment of standing look more opportunistic than principled. Alito warned at the end of his dissent that the Supreme Court “unjustifiably refuses to address this serious threat to the First Amendment.” Unfortunately, he’s right. The post Americans’ Right to Speak Suffers a Body Blow From Supreme Court appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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2 yrs

Here’s the Truth About the ‘Pay Your Fair Share’ Malarkey
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Here’s the Truth About the ‘Pay Your Fair Share’ Malarkey

Politicians on the Left portray the rich in America as a bunch of freeloaders who don’t pay their fair share of taxes. These politicians suggest that many of society’s problems could be solved if only the rich would be less greedy and hand over more of their money to the government to spend. There are three problems with this argument. First, many of society’s problems are caused by the government spending too much—inflation is a prime example. Second, the argument ignores the greed of the politicians who want to spend other people’s money. Third—and this is the crux of the matter—the rich already pay a disproportionate share of federal taxes. Here are the numbers, according to the government forecasters at the Joint Committee on Taxation. In 2024, about 1 out of 180 American taxpayers will make $1 million or more of total income, based on a broad definition of income used by the forecasters. Altogether, these million-dollar earners will earn about 15% of the nation’s income next year. But they will pay 39% of all federal income taxes. The million-dollar earners will pay an average federal income tax rate that is 3.5 times higher than the other 99.4% of Americans. Politicians also peddle the claim that millionaires and billionaires pay a lower tax rate than schoolteachers, nurses, firefighters, sanitation workers, or whatever group they’re pandering to on that particular day. President Joe Biden has even suggested that millionaires pay not only a lower rate, but “less in taxes” than these other Americans. That couldn’t be further from the truth. Based on the government forecasters’ estimates, those earning a million dollars or more in 2024 will pay an average of about $776,800 in federal income taxes, about 475 times as much as the average American taking home between $50,000 and $100,000. As a percentage of income, it’s somewhat more even. But still, for every dollar of income, the millionaire category will fork over more than 10 times as much in federal income taxes as their middle-income compatriots. However you look at it, the rich directly pay a huge share of federal income taxes. But for politicians who routinely propose trillion-dollar increases in federal spending, the higher priority seems to be convincing voters that somebody else can and should pay for their spending sprees. After all, if every household paid an equal share of taxes, each household would be on the hook for more than $7,500 in additional taxes for each trillion dollars of new federal spending. The “pay your fair share” malarkey is a diversion meant to distract Americans from seeing just how big of a share the federal government is taking out of the economy. America’s economic malaise isn’t a consequence of the rich being allowed to keep too much of the money they earn, it’s a consequence of the federal government draining massive amounts of resources out of the private economy by spending about $7 trillion a year—more than $50,000 per American household. America’s economic troubles are multiplied by the federal government’s regulating businesses to death and by the Federal Reserve’s inflating away the purchasing power of each dollar by printing more and more money to buy up federal debt. The inflation that comes with a bloated federal government is a hidden tax that hits all Americans, but that doesn’t show up in tax distribution charts. And that brings us to another Biden claim: that those making less than $400,000 won’t pay a penny more in federal taxes under his policies.  In fact, Biden has implemented and proposed numerous tax increases that would directly hit middle-income Americans. But none of them has hit as hard as the hidden and indirect tax known as inflation that followed Biden’s runaway spending. And this is a critical point. Tax distribution charts show that the rich pay a disproportionate amount of federal taxes, but they don’t show how much of the economic fallout of excess taxes and spending ultimately lands on the middle class.   When excess federal spending and taxes drive up businesses’ costs and force business owners to raise their prices, nurses and schoolteachers must pay more for their groceries, rent, and gas. When high taxes lead a manufacturer to eliminate bonuses, cut benefits, or move jobs overseas, workers pay the price. When high taxes discourage entrepreneurship and stifle innovation, firefighters, sanitation workers, and everyone else who would have benefited from better, more affordable products suffer. These downstream effects on the middle class don’t show up in tax distribution charts, but they’re no less real than the taxes that come out of Americans’ paychecks. If the solution to what ails the middle class was more government and high taxes on high-income Americans, then Americans would be sitting pretty right now. But if that’s not working for everyday Americans—and there’s every indication that it’s not—maybe it’s time to make the federal government tighten its belt for a change. The post Here’s the Truth About the ‘Pay Your Fair Share’ Malarkey appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
2 yrs

A Few Parting Thoughts on Julian Assange
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A Few Parting Thoughts on Julian Assange

A Few Parting Thoughts on Julian Assange
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2 yrs

MA Gov Saying 'No' But Migrants Still See 'Please Come to Boston' Signs
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MA Gov Saying 'No' But Migrants Still See 'Please Come to Boston' Signs

MA Gov Saying 'No' But Migrants Still See 'Please Come to Boston' Signs
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