YubNub Social YubNub Social
    Advanced Search
  • Login
  • Register

  • Night mode
  • © 2025 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Install our *FREE* WEB APP! (PWA)
Night mode
Community
News Feed (Home) Popular Posts Events Blog Market Forum
Media
Headline News VidWatch Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore Jobs Offers
© 2025 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Group

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

Jobs

Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
31 w

Trump Confirms He Will Declare National Emergency, Use Military Assets For Mass Deportation
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

Trump Confirms He Will Declare National Emergency, Use Military Assets For Mass Deportation

'Largest deportation program'
Like
Comment
Share
The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
31 w

Father-Son Were Trying to Find Roman Road but Found a Shovelful of 16th C. Silver Coins Instead
Favicon 
www.goodnewsnetwork.org

Father-Son Were Trying to Find Roman Road but Found a Shovelful of 16th C. Silver Coins Instead

In the Polish forests north of Warsaw, a father and son were out with a local historical society when they found 17 pre-modern coins which may be worth around $120,000. They were supposed to be looking for the remains of a Roman road, but the metal detectors found the coins instead. The treasure was discovered […] The post Father-Son Were Trying to Find Roman Road but Found a Shovelful of 16th C. Silver Coins Instead appeared first on Good News Network.
Like
Comment
Share
The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
31 w

Son Surprises Dad With Car 41 Years After He Gave It Up For Diaper Money
Favicon 
www.sunnyskyz.com

Son Surprises Dad With Car 41 Years After He Gave It Up For Diaper Money

Like
Comment
Share
SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
31 w

She’s All That and Then Some: Steve Alten’s The Loch
Favicon 
reactormag.com

She’s All That and Then Some: Steve Alten’s The Loch

Books SFF Bestiary She’s All That and Then Some: Steve Alten’s The Loch A book with plenty of silliness, along with a solid ration of blood, gore, and generational trauma… By Judith Tarr | Published on November 18, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share Thanks to TheKingofKnots for suggesting I add Steve Alten’s The Loch to the annals of Nessie lore. I won’t say it’s quite Monty Python, but there’s plenty of silliness, along with a solid ration of blood, gore, and generational trauma. Alten’s book was published in 2005, after the Surgeon’s Photo was proved to be a hoax. It mentions the Ted Danson film Loch Ness, and takes a fair bit of inspiration from it, too. Protagonist Zach Wallace is a severely down-on-his-luck academic, a marine biologist who loses his job and just about everything else after a research expedition goes drastically wrong. He set out to find the biggest of all the giant squid, and succeeded, but his department head grabbed all the credit and left Zach with the blame for destroying expensive equipment and nearly dying in the process. Zach has an interesting history. He was born in Scotland and his estranged father still lives there. At age nine he nearly died in Loch Ness, and he still has the scars from the ordeal, both physical and mental. His search for the squid adds another layer of both, and leaves him with a water phobia. He comes to believe that the two events are related; that the monster that attacked him in the Sargasso Sea is connected with the one that he can’t quite remember in Loch Ness. Weirder yet, he believes he’s found the source of the Bloop, a loud and eerie noise first detected in the ocean in 1997. It’s an animal. A monster. He thinks he knows what it is. (Actually, years after the novel was published, the Bloop was identified as the sound of glaciers calving or ice scraping the sea floor.) Just as he hits bottom, he’s summoned back to Scotland by the father he hasn’t seen in seventeen years. Angus Wallace is being tried for murder, and he wants to see his son again. The last thing Zach wants to be associated with is either his father or the Loch Ness Monster. He ends up deep in it on both counts. Angus claims that the man he’s accused of murdering was killed by Nessie. This causes a furor, and sets Zach off on a wild ride around, over, and through the loch. Alten is not a minimalist writer. He Does His Research, and he makes sure you know it. It’s all there. He’s diligent, too. In an Author’s Note he reveals that just as he was getting ready to hand in the ms. of the novel, he found out about a new theory as to the species of the monster, and rewrote that part of the book to accommodate it. He does not name the cryptozoologist to whom he’s indebted, which is odd considering how many other sources he takes care to include, but he’s suitably and profusely grateful. The theory he settles on is the eel theory. He ties in the life cycle of the creature, which spawns, he says, in the Sargasso Sea. Once the eggs hatch, the larval form of the eel migrates to Europe and North America. There it undergoes metamorphosis and settles in fresh water, either rivers or lakes. After some years, it reaches sexual maturity, metamorphoses again, and returns to the Sargasso Sea to mate and die. Female eels are considerably larger than males. Alten, and presumably his source, speculates that a female who for some reason is prevented from mating and therefore dying will keep growing indefinitely—to fifty feet or more. And there’s your enormous brownish greyish slithery humpy thing that’s been seen so often in and around Loch Ness. This theory has been debunked since The Loch was published, but it makes good fiction. Alten piles even more on top of it, turning the normally harmless Nessie into a vicious predator. Tourists, mostly Americans, are being literally shredded while camping beside the loch, and Zach himself is attacked by killer eels. That’s not normal eel behavior. Zach discovers that the eels are being poisoned by pollution that’s leaked into the loch from oil drilling nearby. Lesions in their brains have turned them from peaceable pescatarians into savage maneaters. It doesn’t help that salmon, their normal prey, haven’t shown up in the loch this year, also thanks to pollution; the eels are starving, and they’re going after anything that moves. So we have the weird and complex life cycle of the eel, man-made destruction of food sources, a murder mystery, and a historical mystery on top of it all. Zach and his father Angus are descendants of William Wallace, as in Braveheart. The brave heart itself is the heart of Robert the Bruce, which is supposed to have been preserved and hidden against the time when Scotland will once more be independent of England. Also, Templars. Because why not. Back in the fourteenth century, the warrior knights built a shrine under Loch Ness for the heart of the Bruce, and trapped eels in the loch to guard it. Zach runs afoul of the blood oath of the Black Templars, a secret order within the order, who know all about the killer eels but can’t and won’t tell him what’s really going on. It’s a mismash, but it’s entertaining. It reads as if it’s meant to be a film. The rights were sold and were in the works according to the Author’s Note, but the film never seems to have been made. I imagine it would have looked a bit like The Loch Ness Horror, with added family drama and bonus flashbacks to nine-year-old Zach and fourteenth-century Templar knights. I kind of like that the eels have a reason for being bloodthirsty monsters; they’re not ripping people apart Just Because. There’s a bit of environmental activism there, which is fitting for a protagonist who’s a marine biologist. In addition to proving the existence of Nessie and solving the murder mystery and the mystery of the Templars, Zach uncovers political corruption and helps save the ecosystem of the loch. And, of course, salvages his career and gets the girl. It’s a pretty good ending, and a beginning. Zach will go on to star in further adventures, which from what I can gather are just as far over the top as this one.[end-mark] The post She’s All That and Then Some: Steve Alten’s <i>The Loch</i> appeared first on Reactor.
Like
Comment
Share
Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
31 w

Hilarious! Mourning Joe and Mika Kissed Trump's Ring at Mar-a-Lago on Friday
Favicon 
hotair.com

Hilarious! Mourning Joe and Mika Kissed Trump's Ring at Mar-a-Lago on Friday

Hilarious! Mourning Joe and Mika Kissed Trump's Ring at Mar-a-Lago on Friday
Like
Comment
Share
Strange & Paranormal Files
Strange & Paranormal Files
31 w

New Study Explores How Alien Civilizations Could Harvest Energy from Stars
Favicon 
anomalien.com

New Study Explores How Alien Civilizations Could Harvest Energy from Stars

One of the most challenging aspects of astrobiology and the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) is anticipating what life and extraterrestrial civilizations will look like, reports www.universetoday.com. Invariably, we have only one example of a planet that supports life (Earth) and one example of a technologically advanced civilization (humanity) upon which to base our theories. As for more advanced civilizations, which statistically seems more likely, scientists are limited to projections of our own development. However, these same projections offer constraints on what SETI researchers should search for and provide hints about our future development. In a series of papers led by the Blue Marble Space Institute of Science (BMSIS), a team of researchers examines what Earth’s level of technological development (aka. “technosphere”) will look like in the future. In the most recent installment, they offer a reinterpretation of the Kardashev Scale, which suggests that civilizations expand to harness greater levels of energy (planet, host star, and galaxy). Instead, they suggest that the Kardashev Scale establishes upper limits on the amount of stellar energy a civilization can harness (a “luminosity limit”) and that civilizations might circumvent this by harnessing stellar mass directly. As with the previous study in this series, the research was led by Jacob Haqq-Misra, the Senior Research Investigator at the Blue Marble Space Institute of Science. The paper “Projections of Earth’s Technosphere: Luminosity and Mass as Limits to Growth” is being reviewed for publication in Acta Astronautica. The Kardashev Scale, named after Soviet-Russian astrophysicist and radio astronomer Nikolai Kardashev (1932 – 2019), was first proposed in his seminal paper, “Transmission of Information by Extraterrestrial Civilizations,” released in 1964. In it, Kardashev suggested what types of radio frequencies (and at what energies) scientists should search for to discern possible transmissions of an extraterrestrial civilization (ETC). In keeping with the idea that there may be civilizations billions of years older than humanity, he reasoned that these civilizations could harness levels of energy beyond human capabilities. To characterize the level of an ETC’s development, Kardashev proposed a three-level scale based on the amount of energy they could harness. Energy consumption estimated in three types of civilizations defined by the Kardashev Scale. However, this scale reflected the assumption that civilizations and their energy needs will grow exponentially. This is in keeping with observations of humanity’s own “technosphere,” which refers to the human-made infrastructure, machinery, communications, and other indications of technological activity (aka “technosignatures”). Basically, it reflects our limited perspective when it comes to the kinds of behaviors advanced ETCs would exhibit. As Haqq-Misra told Universe Today via email: “Earth is our only known example of a planet with technology, so the search for extraterrestrial civilizations must begin by thinking about how to search for analogs to Earth’s technosignatures today and possible technosignatures that could arise in Earth’s future. We should also try to stretch our minds to consider other, non-terrestrial, and more exotic possibilities, but even such imaginative possibilities will always either begin with (or contrast with) what we know is possible based on existing or known physics on Earth.” Traditional applications of the Kardashev Scale predict that growth will be exponential and have even considered how this could give rise to a civilization capable of utilizing the energy output of all stars in the Universe – a Type IV Cosmic Civilization! This application has motivated many searches for civilizations that have reached these scales of vast energy utilization, as indicated by megastructures (e.g., Dyson Spheres, Clarke Bands, etc.) and other advanced technospheres. For their study, Haqq-Misra and his colleagues took a different approach: “Our study re-examines these assumptions by noting that civilizations can follow different trajectories for their expansion in space and their energy consumption. This involves tradeoffs between ‘exploration’ and ‘exploitation,’ and there are many possibilities for how a civilization might develop along these two dimensions. “Some civilizations may prioritize exploration in physical distance without ever needing to expand their energy consumption to Kardashev Type I or Type II scales. Other civilizations may focus on exploitation and increase their energy use more locally. Some civilizations may attempt to find an optimal balance between exploration and exploitation. “We also point out that the Kardashev scale is better considered as a theoretical limit to a civilization that utilizes stellar energy (luminosity). Rather than describing a trajectory that advanced civilizations will follow, the Kardashev scale is the uppermost limit for a civilization’s energy use, as it relates to expansion in physical distance, but a limit that may never actually be achieved due to thermodynamic efficiency limits. “In other words, the Kardashev scale describes an upper-limit to the tradeoffs between exploration and exploitation, and a civilization that is dependent on stellar luminosity for its energy needs will always fall below the energetic and spatial limits described by the Kardashev scale.” Artist’s impression of a Dyson Sphere, a proposed alien megastructure that is the target of SETI surveys. Finding one of these qualifies in a “first contact” scenario. The scenario Haqq-Misra and his colleagues proposed presents some new and interesting possibilities for advanced civilizations. For example, suppose humanity ever reaches the limit of how much energy it can harness from our Sun. In that case, it may not choose to explore and settle other star systems (with the intent of harnessing the energy of more planets and more stars). Instead, they may turn to harvesting stellar mass itself. “Civilizations like this that consume stars, which we call ‘stellivores,’ would be able to expand in energy use beyond the luminosity limits of the Kardashev scale,” said Haqq-Misra. “We are not at this level as a civilization on Earth yet, but we can at least think about the possibility that harvesting mass and converting it into energy (as Einstein’s famous equation describes) provides a way for a civilization to reach energy use scales beyond those envisioned by the Kardashev scale.” Like all projections on humanity’s future development, this study also has implications for future SETI surveys. This is in keeping with the assumption that ETCs in our galaxy would be older and more advanced than humanity at this point. It’s also consistent with the principle that “if we can conceive of it, someone else has probably done it already.” As Haqq-Misra explained, future SETI surveys should examine “accreting binaries,” closely orbiting binary stars with mass flowing from one star to another. Maqq-Misra and his colleagues recommend that scientists observe accreting binaries to search for abnormal behavior, which could indicate technological activity: “If some civilizations actually do evolve into stellivores, then some of these may look like such accreting binary star systems. We cannot claim that all, or even most, accreting binaries are actually technological civilizations, but we also cannot rule out the possibility that some of them could in fact be technological. It is worth keeping our minds open and actually searching for such evidence of advanced and exotic civilizations rather than ruling them out before we look.” The post New Study Explores How Alien Civilizations Could Harvest Energy from Stars appeared first on Anomalien.com.
Like
Comment
Share
NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
31 w

CBS Sitcom King Chuck Lorre's Political Rants Resurface After Trump Win: 'Existence' is 'Futile'
Favicon 
www.newsbusters.org

CBS Sitcom King Chuck Lorre's Political Rants Resurface After Trump Win: 'Existence' is 'Futile'

It’s been many years since the MRC began calling out CBS’s “King of Comedy,” producer Chuck Lorre for his political rants via his sitcoms, as well as his vanity cards that display at the end of his shows. And for a while, we’ve enjoyed a nice reprieve after Lorre waved a white flag and began leaving politics out of his attempts to entertain us. (Minus one blip in 2022.) But when Trump won the 2024 presidential election, it was just too much for Chuck. The TDS took hold again, (albeit in a much milder form than what we’ve witnessed from most on the left) and led him to write Vanity Card #749 which aired in the credits after Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage and Ghosts: The card reads as follows: I’ve been playing around with writing a sitcom based on the ancient Greek myth of Sisyphus. In my rendition Sisyphus is not unhappy about his soul-crushing, assembly-line gig building children’s swing sets in the underworld. He’s actually pleased to have job security in a down economy. And he’s fine with living in the underworld because it has a terrific transit system. His real torment comes when he learns the truth about his name. Before he was born, Zeus told his mother that her son would struggle with a speech impediment. In an ill-fated attempt to mock the prophecy, she named the baby Sisyphus. My working title for the show is, “Swing and a Myth.” I’m sorry. I can’t do this anymore. I’m not really writing a Sisyphus sitcom. “Swing and a Myth?” Please. Give me some credit. This is just what came out while I was trying to avoid writing about the election. I do find it amusing that the subtext of Sisyphus is the futility of existence. Read into that what you will.                                                          The futility of existence? Correct us if we’re wrong, Chuck, but the way it reads to us is you believe existence is futile now that Trump was elected again by an unequivocal mandate from a majority of Americans. In which case, we highly suggest seeking treatment for your TDS so you can learn how to still live in the world when things don’t go your way, and to un-brainwash yourself from all the fearmongering the left has been pushing for years now. No, democracy won’t crumble. No, Trump won’t be a dictator. And no, existence won’t be futile. We can’t wait to see what your vanity cards say in 2028 when you realize you had nothing to fear all along. Then again, you are part of the propaganda machine that is Hollywood, so you probably won’t ever admit you were wrong. You know, kind of like how you never admitted to being wrong about the Russian collusion hoax, and instead tried to double down on it long after it was disproved. Please just go back to doing what you do best- comedy- and leave the politics out of entertainment for good this time.
Like
Comment
Share
NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
31 w

Friendly with 'Fascists'? Joe and Mika Meet Trump at Mar-a-Lago!
Favicon 
www.newsbusters.org

Friendly with 'Fascists'? Joe and Mika Meet Trump at Mar-a-Lago!

When last week Mika Brzezinski said that she and Joe Scarborough would like to have a face-to-face meeting with Trump, I wrote: "As for scoring an interview with Trump himself any time soon, don't bet the rent money at Polymarkets on it, Mika!" Oy, was I wrong! On today's Morning Joe, Mika announced that this past Friday, she and Joe did indeed meet with Trump at Mar-a-Lago. She described Trump as being "cheerful, upbeat, and interested in finding common ground with Democrats on some of the most divisive issues." Mika and Joe apparently suffer from an exaggerated sense of self-importance. Mika said that whereas they and Trump disagreed on many issues,  "We did agree to restart communications. My father often spoke with world leaders with whom he and the United States profoundly disagreed." Mika, two TV talking heads speaking with Trump ain't exactly Nixon goes to China!   Mika and Scarborough seemed intent on preserving their liberal-media street cred. Mika assured viewers that she and Joe would "will continue to speak truth to power, and push back hard when called for." And Scarborough similarly said: "Don't be mistaken. We're not here to defend or normalize Donald Trump. We're here to report on him." Mika also proclaimed: "We have been as clear as we know how in expressing our deep concerns about President Trump's actions and words in the coarsening of public debate." Oh, so, MSNBC hasn't "coarsened" the debate with their incessant wild talk about Trump being a fascist who's going to end democracy? Mika uncorked this talk of America's "final hours" on The View just a month ago.  Mika did admit that her "hair on fire" approach to attacking Trump hasn't worked. And if Mika's hair has been on fire, Scarborough's entire head has been exploding for years. We'll see if the pair continue to restrain themselves. Here's the transcript. MSNBC Morning Joe 11/18/24 6:04 am ET MIKA BRZEZINSKI: So here is where we are. Over past week, Joe and I have heard from so many people, from political leaders to regular citizens, deeply dismayed by several of President-elect Trump's cabinet selections. And they are scared. Last Thursday, we expressed our own concerns on this broadcast, and even said we would appreciate the opportunity to speak with the President-elect himself. On Friday, we were given the opportunity to do just that. Joe and I went to Mar-a-Lago to meet personally with President-elect Trump. It was the first time we have seen him in seven years. JOE SCARBOROUGH: We talked about a lot of issues, including abortion, mass deportation, threats of political retribution against political opponents and media outlets. We talked about that a good bit. And it's going to come as no surprise to anybody [chuckles] who watches this show, who's watched it over the past year or over the past decade, that we didn't see eye-to-eye on a lot of issues, and we told him so. MIKA: What we did agree on was to restart communications. My father often spoke with world leaders with whom he and the United States profoundly disagreed. That's a task shared by reporters and commentators alike.  We had not spoken to President Trrump since March of 2020, other than a personal call Joe made to Trump on the morning after the attempt on his life in Butler, Pennsylvania. In this meeting, president Trump was cheerful, he was upbeat, he seemed interested in finding common ground with Democrats on some of the most divisive issues.  And for those asking why we would go speak to the President-elect during such fraught times, especially between us, I guess I would ask back -- why wouldn't we?  Five years of political warfare has deeply divided Washington and the country. We have been as clear as we know how in expressing our deep concerns about President Trump's actions and words in the coarsening of public debate.  But for nearly 80 million Americans, election denialism, public trials, January 6th, were not as important as the issues that moved them to send Donald Trump back to the White House with their vote. Joe and I realized it's time to do something different, and that starts with not only talking about Donald Trump, but also talking with him. SCARBOROUGH: As somebody close to Donald Trump told me this past weekend, this is a president who's not seeking re-election. So maybe, just maybe, now could be the time for both parties to get to work.  I know. Given the jarring headlines that we read every day, that may seem like a stretch. But think about this. Of the 150 million votes cast, Donald Trump got 50%. Kamala Harris got about 49%. So, I don't know, it seems to make sense for leaders of both parties to seek common ground, if it's possible at all. And I will tell you, a lot of Democratic leaders we've talked to this past week, since the election, have told Mika and me, it's time for a new approach. And when I say top Democrats, I mean top Democrats. They said we're open -- and this was before we talked to Donald Trump -- they said, listen. We're open to working with the incoming president if the incoming president is open to working with us. MIKA: Yeah. The question is, though, how do we get there? Hyperbole and personal attacks will not work. My hair on fire doesn't work. We've all seen that!  What also does not work is threatening political opponents with arrest, harassment, and even jail. That is a failed path. Recent history has proven that impeachments and trials turn those on trial into political martyrs, and only make them more popular with the American people. Just ask Bill Clinton and Donald Trump! We know this will be a consequential presidency. The question is whether it will be constructive. It will take a new approach from all sides, from both parties, and a leader who can bring them together. And only time will tell if Donald Trump isthat leader. As for us, we also let him know that we will continue to speak truth to power, and push back hard when called for, as we have with all presidents. SCARBOROUGH: Don't be mistaken. We're not here to defend or normalize Donald Trump. We're here to report on him, and to hopefully provide you insights that are going to better equip all of us in understanding these deeply unsettling times. And I am reminded of what Marty Baron, legendary editor told his Washington Post reporters back in the first term. We're not going to war, we're going to work.
Like
Comment
Share
The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
31 w

Head election judge arrested over questionable ballots in Walz's home state
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

Head election judge arrested over questionable ballots in Walz's home state

A man working as an election judge in Minnesota — home of failed Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz — has been accused of allowing nearly a dozen people to cast ballots even though they were not registered to do so.Shortly after Election Day, Timothy Michael Scouton, 64, of Nevis, was arrested after auditor Kay Rave could not find voter registrations for 11 new voters who had cast ballots in the Badoura Township Precinct in Hubbard County, about 175 miles north of Minneapolis.According to one election judge, Scouton told the registrants not to use the forms. According to the other, Scouton insisted to the registrants that they need only sign the back of a book.Minnesota is one of 23 states that allow same-day voter registration — so long as the prospective voters provide proof of residence, take an oath, and complete an application, according to Bring Me the News. As Scouton was serving as the head election judge for the precinct, he should have had voter registration materials for each of those new voters.When questioned, Scouton allegedly said he could not locate the proper forms. When Rave found them, Scouton allegedly said he did not use them.Two days after the election, Rave sent an email to the county attorney, prompting an investigation from the county sheriff's office.Investigators then spoke with two other election judges familiar with the situation. According to one of them, Scouton told the registrants not to use the forms. According to the other, Scouton insisted to the registrants that they need only sign the back of a book, the AP reported.One of those two election judges further claimed that Scouton's son was also working as an election official involved in same-day voter registration in the same precinct, according to KSTP. The outlet did not indicate that Scouton's son has been accused of involvement in any of his father's alleged schemes.Officials confirmed that Scouton completed required trainings to become a head election judge back in July.Scouton was later questioned at the sheriff's office, where he was apprised of his rights but declined to make a statement. He was subsequently arrested and charged with two felonies: accepting the vote of an unregistered voter and neglect of duty by an election official.The criminal complaint did not offer a possible motive.Scouton appeared in court on Friday and is now out without bond pending another hearing on January 6, per Minnesota Public Radio News. He faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted.The office of Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, a member of the state's Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, demanded a thorough investigation into the allegations, which he described as "extremely serious.""Election judges take an oath to administer elections in accordance with the law. A deliberate failure to do so is unlawful and a betrayal of the public trust," Simon's office said in a statement, according to the AP.Scouton did not respond to the outlet's request for comment, and his attorney declined the request on Saturday.Legacy media outlets have frequently reported that instances of voter fraud are "rare."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
Like
Comment
Share
The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
31 w

Trump signals major media shake-up with FCC chairman pick
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

Trump signals major media shake-up with FCC chairman pick

Jessica Rosenworcel, the Democrat presently running the Federal Communications Commission, has been antagonistic to President-elect Donald Trump and dismissive of conservatives' concerns in recent years, particularly regarding rogue liberal broadcasters, the foreign-funded takeover of hundreds of American radio stations, and other pressing issues pertaining to the regulation of wire, television, radio, cable, and satellite communications in the homeland. Trump announced his nominee to replace Rosenworcel Sunday evening: Brendan Carr, currently the senior Republican commissioner on the five-member, Democrat-controlled FCC. After highlighting that he first nominated Carr to the commission in 2017 and that Carr has been confirmed unanimously by the U.S. Senate thrice, Trump noted, "Commissioner Carr is a warrior for Free Speech, and has fought against the regulatory Lawfare that has stifled Americans' Freedoms, and held back our Economy. He will end the regulatory onslaught that has been crippling America's Job Creators and Innovators, and ensure that the FCC delivers for rural America." 'We must dismantle the censorship cartel.' Prior to serving the independent federal agency as commissioner, the father of three was the FCC's general counsel, an attorney at Wiley Rein LLP, a clerk for Jude Dennis Shedd on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, and an editor for the Catholic University Law Review. "Thank you, President Trump!" Carr responded on X. "I am humbled and honored to serve as Chairman of the FCC. Now we get to work." Carr, a lead-bellied critic of tech censorship and identity politics, immediately made clear that he was ready to make waves. "We must dismantle the censorship cartel and restore free speech rights for everyday Americans," wrote Carr. Insinuating that the FCC as currently led and composed has failed in its duties, the commissioner noted further, "Broadcast media have had the privilege of using a scarce and valuable public resource — our airwaves. In turn, they are required by law to operate in the public interest. When the transition is complete, the FCC will enforce this public interest obligation." A FCC under Carr would likely take another look at leftist billionaire George Soros' takeover of over 200 American radio stations with cash from unvetted foreign nationals. After all, he was a vociferous critic of the takeover while his Democratic peers were virtually silent. Carr previously told Blaze Media co-founder Glenn Beck, "Foreign company ownership of U.S. radio stations is not supposed to exceed 25%. But Soros took foreign investment to make his bid, and then he asked the FCC to make an exception to the usual review process." The three Democratic appointees on the FCC signed off on both approving the assignment of licenses under the control of a Texas bankruptcy court to the Soros-controlled company Audacy and to sparing the company from complying with Section 310(b)(4) of the Communications Act, which prohibits foreign owners from having a stake in a radio station license exceeding 25%. "Never before has the Commission voted to approve the transfer of a broadcast license — let alone the transfer of broadcast licenses for over 200 radio stations across more than 40 markets — without following the requirements and procedures codified in federal law," Carr said in his dissenting statement. "Not once." A Carr-led FCC might not be so willing to look the other way. On Sunday, Carr indicated that in addition to fulfilling its obligations to the public, his FCC would give the boot to the racist ideology that has taken hold at the institution in recent years. "The FCC's most recent budget request said that promoting DEI was the agency's second highest strategic goal," wrote Carr. "Starting next year, the FCC will end its promotion of DEI." — (@) Rather than obsessing over Americans' immutable characteristics, Carr indicated in Project 2025's "Mandate for Leadership" what the commission should instead be focused on: "Reining in Big Tech, Promoting national security, Unleashing economic prosperity, and Ensuring FCC accountability and good governance." According to Carr, reining in Big Tech would require the elimination of its immunities that courts added to Section 230; the imposition of transparency rules on tech giants like Google and Facebook; support for legislation that ensures internet companies "no longer have carte blanche to censor protected speech while maintaining their Section 230 protections"; and Big Tech companies to pay their "fair share" into the Universal Service Fund. Tackling tech censorship appears to be a matter of critical importance to Carr. 'Carr will be an outstanding FCC Chairman.' Days prior to Trump's announcement, Carr penned a letter to the top executives at several social media companies, putting them on notice for their collusion with the "Orwellian" organization NewsGuard, which he noted leveraged its partnerships with advertising agencies "to effectively censor targeted outlets" — including Blaze Media. "Facebook, Google, Apple, Microsoft & others have played central roles in the censorship cartel. The Orwellian named NewsGuard along with 'fact checking' groups & ad agencies helped enforce one-sided narratives. The censorship cartel must be dismantled," tweeted the commissioner. Where national security is concerned, Carr seeks to curb foreign influence, subterfuge, and sabotage through and on various communications systems and social media platforms, especially TikTok. He appears to be focused primarily on countering the threats posed by communist China. Carr, who has in recent days and months echoed Argentine President Javier Milei and Trump's proposed Department of Government Efficiency leaders, also stressed the importance of ending the wasteful spending policies pursued by the Biden-Harris administration and of maximizing efficiency. Following Trump's landslide re-election earlier this month, Patrick Yoes, president of the National Fraternal Order of Police, insisted that Carr was the best choice for the job, writing: Mr. Carr has more than 20 years of private and public sector expertise in communications and technology policy as well as a deep institutional knowledge of the FCC. As Commissioner, he is known as 'Mr. 5G' for his passionate commitment to cutting through the bureaucratic red tape to get 5G technology into the marketplace. He was instrumental in the FCC's recent action to authorize the use of the 4.9 GHz spectrum within the Nationwide Public Safety Broadband Network (NPSBN) and granting a nationwide license to the First Responder Network Authority (FirstNet) to administer it. Yoes added that "Carr will be an outstanding FCC Chairman." The chairman nominated by the previous president customarily resigns when a new commander in chief of a different political party takes power; however, this is apparently not required by law. Time will see whether Rosenworcel will leave the position kicking and screaming. Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 3526 out of 56666
  • 3522
  • 3523
  • 3524
  • 3525
  • 3526
  • 3527
  • 3528
  • 3529
  • 3530
  • 3531
  • 3532
  • 3533
  • 3534
  • 3535
  • 3536
  • 3537
  • 3538
  • 3539
  • 3540
  • 3541

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund