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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
37 w

FACT CHECK: Does This Image Show Trump Next To Rescued Israeli-American Hostage?
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FACT CHECK: Does This Image Show Trump Next To Rescued Israeli-American Hostage?

An image shared to X suggests to show former president Donald Trump pictured beside a rescued hostage from Gaza. Maybe b/c the kid that was kidnapped is standing next to him, which is why he’s smiling, you fucking deranged waste of oxygen pic.twitter.com/drbKeiTe1s — ?? MAGA Michelle S ?? (@MAGAMichelleS69) October 21, 2024 Verdict: Misleading […]
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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
37 w

CNN Panel Gets Into Near Shouting Match As Scott Jennings Brings Up Doug Emhoff’s Alleged Scandals
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CNN Panel Gets Into Near Shouting Match As Scott Jennings Brings Up Doug Emhoff’s Alleged Scandals

'I'm not gonna let you go into the far B.S.'
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
37 w

Behold: the Heaviest Pumpkin in Europe Weighing as Much as a Honda Civic
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Behold: the Heaviest Pumpkin in Europe Weighing as Much as a Honda Civic

In a Belgian town where the residents are nicknamed “pumpkin eaters,” celebrations are ringing out that a local claimed 1st prize in the European Pumpkin Championship. At 2,539 pounds, (1,152 kg) Mario Vangeel grew the biggest pumpkin of the year. His pumpkin had to be transported from his hometown of Kasterlee to Ludwigsburg in Germany […] The post Behold: the Heaviest Pumpkin in Europe Weighing as Much as a Honda Civic appeared first on Good News Network.
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Pet Life
Pet Life
37 w

Introducing Milly the Sassy Rescue and Her Owner Isabel
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Introducing Milly the Sassy Rescue and Her Owner Isabel

The post Introducing Milly the Sassy Rescue and Her Owner Isabel by Isabel Ludick appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com. Welcome to the Wednesday Cats of Catster! Every week, we share a story from one of our cat-loving Catsters. This week is about Isabel and her sassy rescue, Milly. Hi, Catsters! My name is Isabel Ludick and I’m the Marketing Director here at Catster. You may also recognize me from the Catster YouTube channel. I’m a certified cat lover and I’m so excited to share my experience as a lifelong cat owner with you all. I’ve been a cat lover since I can remember. My family has always had cats, dogs, bunnies, and fish, and although I love all animals deeply, cats have always been my absolute favorite animal and pet. When I was a kid and adults asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up, I used to say, “A cat, of course!” Now, please allow me to introduce my sassy rescue cat, Milly. Milly is my beautiful, six-year-old white/tabby cat. She’s a domestic shorthair and her cuteness is unmatched. Let me tell you the story of how we met and instantly became best friends. The year was 2018. I studied Psychology and English at the North West University in Potchefstroom, South Africa.1 Even though I’ve always had cats growing up, I’ve never had a cat of my own. As a student, living on my own for the first time, I thought this was the perfect opportunity to rescue a cat. I asked my boyfriend (now fiance), “Can we please go to the shelter this weekend to play with the cats and maybe we can bring one home?” He, never having cats (or pets) growing up, said, “Sure, why not!” Such a keeper. We planned our shelter visit and we were both so excited! A couple of days before we were supposed to go, a friend of his called him and said that he rescued a litter of kittens that was born in the back of the bar where he worked. The bar was called Die Mystic Boer (the mystic farmer) and it just so happened to be my favorite bar in town! The friend said that he had already found good homes for almost all of the kittens, but he had one left, and no one seemed interested in her because she wasn’t as pretty as the other kittens. What are the chances? In the same week I decided that I wanted a cat, a friend called us and said he had one. It was fate. I had to go meet this little unwanted kitten born in the back of my favorite bar. We went to his house that day and walked into his enclosed room to find the smallest little kitten with the dirtiest little mouth hiding between his shoes in the closet. My heart instantly melted and I dropped to my knees. She was very scared and a little feral so I knew I had to take my time. Luckily, being well acquainted with cats, I knew how to introduce myself. It took about an hour until she finally sniffed my hand. From that moment we both knew we’d be best friends forever. Baby Milly when I found her I stood up, we drove to the nearest pet store and bought a cat carrier, a soft blanket, food and water bowls, a litterbox, and cat litter. We went back to the friend’s house, gently picked her up, and placed her in the carrier. She was coming home with me. I couldn’t understand why no one would want her, she was the cutest, dirtiest little street cat I had ever laid eyes on. I named her Milly. I took her to the vet that next morning for a general checkup and to get her first vaccinations. The vet said she was about 4 weeks old and very malnourished. She probably only had bar scraps to eat in her first few weeks of life. We’re not sure if Milly was perhaps the runt of the litter and didn’t get any milk. The vet gave me everything I needed to nurse her back to health and that is exactly what I did. Fast forward to today, six years later, she’s the happiest, healthiest, sassiest little cat in Cape Town and I love her more than life itself. All those people who turned her down can eat their hearts out because look at her! She’s so beautiful I can cry (and I do sometimes). Just kidding. I did cry many times in our journey together at the thought of us never meeting. Where would she have been today if I didn’t find her? I don’t even want to know. All that matters is that we did find each other. Milly sunbathing I really do believe that fate brought us together and it brings me so much joy to share our story with my fellow Catsters! We have many more stories to share, of our journey getting to know each other in Potchefstroom, moving back home to Johannesburg after I graduated, meeting all our other cats, becoming a mom cat (by accident), moving cross country to Cape Town in an airplane, living on a golf course, becoming a YouTube star and so much more. Stay tuned! The post Introducing Milly the Sassy Rescue and Her Owner Isabel by Isabel Ludick appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
37 w

QUILTBAG+ Speculative Classics: Dreamsnake by Vonda McIntyre
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QUILTBAG+ Speculative Classics: Dreamsnake by Vonda McIntyre

Books QUILTBAG+ Speculative Classics QUILTBAG+ Speculative Classics: Dreamsnake by Vonda McIntyre In its depictions of disability, polyamory, gender and sexuality, this 1978 novel was ahead of its time. By Bogi Takács | Published on October 23, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share Today I’m reviewing Dreamsnake, Vonda McIntyre’s 1978 science fiction novel which has the rare distinction of winning both the Hugo and Nebula awards. Dreamsnake was expanded from a novelette, “Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand”—I already wrote about that novelette in my earlier review of McIntyre’s collection Fireflood and Other Stories in this column. The first chapter is essentially identical to the earlier story, and the plot develops from there. I’ve been hoping to read this novel for a while now, as mentioned in my earlier post, and now my local book club is reading it too—though I wrote my review before our discussion. (Page numbers that follow are from the 1994 Bantam Spectra edition, because this is the version I read.) The protagonist of Dreamsnake, Snake, is a healer who travels an Earth that’s been ravaged by nuclear war. She uses genetically modified snakes whose venom can be used to tailor treatments to the individual, healing even serious conditions such as large tumors. Each healer also carries a dreamsnake, a rare and precious extraterrestrial creature whose bite can bring dreams or a painless death. Yet as Snake strays far from the lands she is familiar with, she is caught up in a cross-cultural misunderstanding and loses her dreamsnake. She sets out to obtain another one, and encounters a wide range of trouble while trying to carry on her trade, meeting many people of different cultures and beliefs, sometimes bearing longstanding hatreds and superstitions. Before we take a look at the details, a caveat: this is a heartbreaking novel. I had to take multiple breaks just to assimilate the events, especially in the first half of the book. Please be advised that there are detailed descriptions of human and animal death; always thoughtful, never reveling in violence, which makes the impact of it even more forceful. There is also a recurring thread of both physical violence and sexual abuse directed at children, though the abuse itself is not shown. It is made clear on the very first page that Dreamsnake’s setting is polyamory-normative; Snake is attempting to heal the child of a triad. Later we meet another triad and also hear about another family group that’s comprised of six adults; though we also find out that not every culture on this postapocalyptic Earth is similar in this respect—I’ll say more about this in the spoilers section below. Even without giving away plot points, polyamory becomes important in more than one respect. And it’s important to note that this one aspect of non-normative gender-sex-sexuality doesn’t stand alone in the narrative; rather, we get to see other aspects incorporated into the world as well. An intriguing theme is how the book approaches contraception, by people learning through a process of… biofeedback, I assume, how to raise and lower the temperature of their gonads. This called “biocontrol” in the book and it is less science-fictional than it sounds. While I don’t know anyone who’s used this method for contraception, it is possible to learn to consciously control the temperature of tissues inside the body to an extent; autogenic training uses this to promote relaxation. (This method had already been developed when the book was written.) McIntyre was a biologist, and as a semi-lapsed health scientist, I can tell that both this and many other aspects of future science in the book are based on much less extrapolation than it might seem. There is a lot of queerness in the book and many related themes beyond that too, so it is interesting to see that Snake herself seems largely straight. She ends up in a relationship with a man rather abruptly, but people do ask her (and also the love-interest character separately from her) about whether they would be more interested in same-sex relations. This all happens matter-of-factly, just like casual sex, with a lot of care put toward considerations of consent. (This is clearly a pre-AIDS book, though there is mention of STDs.) The love interest feels bad when he finds out he’d accidentally turned down another male character due to a cultural misunderstanding—he simply didn’t realize he was being asked to spend the night together. There are many small but carefully considered details planted throughout the text, for example here is a small aside that reveals Snake is a gender-neutral appellation: “The Snake immediately preceding her had been only forty-three when he died, but the other two had each outlasted a century.” (p. 194) Another aspect of the story initially seems like one of these small details, but it has broader relevance, and keeps on recurring as something that affects Snake’s mobility. She has arthritis related to an autoimmune condition, and this is explicitly linked to her being a healer: “Arthritis! I thought you never get sick.”“I never catch contagious diseases. Healers always get arthritis, unless we get something worse.” She shrugged. “It’s because of the immunities I told you about. Sometimes they go a little wrong and attack the same body that formed them.” She saw no reason to describe the really serious diseases healers were prone to. (p. 154) The phrasing has not necessarily aged well, but keep in mind—this is almost two decades before the first disability-themed anthology project in SFF, a tiny chapbook, and almost forty years before widespread discussions of disability in SFF. (You can find my bibliography of disability and body positivity SFF anthologies on my website.) Because this text is such a forerunner to these later developments, I want to discuss further how it engages with disability and treatment/cures in many other ways—spoilers from here onward. North, the main antagonist, is a man who hoards dreamsnakes in order to distribute their venom to people, sort of like a drug dealer. He has albinism and pituitary gigantism, and this reads like the simplistic trope equating bodily difference with evil—except that McIntyre does a lot to destabilize the trope in the novel. First, in addition to Snake explicitly identified as mobility disabled, Snake’s adopted daughter Melissa is disfigured due to severe burns, which is immediately read by the City representative as evidence that she’s a mutant even though she isn’t. North can also be read as a kind of psychedelic healer as opposed to a drug dealer figure—even though he’s clearly positioned as the antagonist, he repeatedly states that he helps people deal with their trauma, and the depictions of his people lying on the ground in the clearing evoke Timothy Leary’s consciousness-expanding group sessions. The only person who is clearly addicted to dreamsnake venom—the “crazy” who stalks and attacks Snake (this term could use further analysis too)—takes a much higher dose than North’s other followers. If there is a moral—and Snake is the kind of person who likes morals—it is that some things are helpful only in moderation. That this is not some reactionary anti-drug message is further underscored by the way some other key aspects of the Sixties counterculture, like free love, are also major parts of the novel; and that Snake, her culture, and the other surrounding cultures all consider the dreamsnakes as an important part of healing. Snake sees North only in a negative light up until the very end. But then, intriguingly, she reconsiders her attitude toward him by noticing and acknowledging the negative aspects of her own motivations and behavior, not by seeing North’s action more positively: Was she so much like him, that she needed power over other human beings? Perhaps his accusations had been true. Honor and deference pleased her as much as they pleased him. And she had certainly been guilty of arrogance, she had always been guilty of arrogance. Perhaps the difference between her and North was not of kind, but only of degree. (p. 298) Earlier, North also pushes back on Snake’s ableism, which likewise didn’t exist as a term back then. Snake states that healers could have “helped” him if they had been able to treat him earlier, at which point North goes into a rage: “Do you think I want to hear that? Do you think I want to keep hearing that I could have been ordinary?” (p. 265) It’s not clear from this and his subsequent comments whether North refuses to be ordinary, or whether he disdains Snake’s ultimately useless comment that he should have been treated earlier, when that clearly hadn’t been possible, and he would have in fact preferred a chance to be ordinary. Possibly, maybe most likely, the answer has aspects of both. Another intriguing but spoilery aspect of the novel is the reveal that the dreamsnakes copulate in triplets. Why hasn’t this possibility occurred to Snake before? She worked on dreamsnake biology before she ventured forth and traveled in the lands of the desert peoples, who generally have larger partner groups than a male-female pair. Snake reflects on the healers’ isolationism and “ethnocentrism” (p. 287) that led to these biases—”mononormativity” as a term would come into being decades later, but I get the sense that McIntyre was circling around this and related concepts without having convenient terminology for them, just like with ableism. Even today, many elements of this novel read as innovative and/or uncommon. The focus on healing presents just as much plot difficulty and drama as the usual SFnal focus on conflict or even combat, but for me personally, it was more resonant, and Snake’s problems more relatable. Dreamsnake brings up topics from polyamory to disability, and doesn’t present any of these in simplistic ways; they are addressed with depth and empathy. When it was first published, this text was ahead of its time in so many ways—I am glad it was recognized with awards, and I would warmly recommend it. The Exile Waiting, McIntyre’s debut novel, is set in the same continuity, so I’m hoping to read that one soon too! Have any of you read it? But next time, we’ll take a look at something else entirely: a translated horror novella by a Mexican author. See you then![end-mark] The post QUILTBAG+ Speculative Classics: <i>Dreamsnake</i> by Vonda McIntyre appeared first on Reactor.
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
37 w

Dem Senate Candidate Shoots Reporter, Claims 'Great Day At the Range' UPDATED
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Dem Senate Candidate Shoots Reporter, Claims 'Great Day At the Range' UPDATED

Dem Senate Candidate Shoots Reporter, Claims 'Great Day At the Range' UPDATED
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
37 w

Why Are People Being Asked To Put Bowls Of Salt In Their Windows This Winter?
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Why Are People Being Asked To Put Bowls Of Salt In Their Windows This Winter?

Worth a shot?
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Strange & Paranormal Files
Strange & Paranormal Files
37 w

The Last of Us: Could Fungi Really Cause a Zombie Apocalypse?
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anomalien.com

The Last of Us: Could Fungi Really Cause a Zombie Apocalypse?

Matt Kasson: Zombies strike fear into our hearts – and if they’re persistent, eventually they get inside our heads. Animals taken over by zombies no longer control their own bodies or behaviors. Instead, they serve the interests of a master, whether it’s a virus, fungus or some other harmful agent. The term “zombi” comes from Vodou, a religion that evolved in the Caribbean nation of Haiti. But the idea of armies of undead, brain-eating human zombies comes from movies, such as “Night of the Living Dead,” television shows like “The Walking Dead” and video games like Resident Evil. Those all are fictional. Nature is where we can find real examples of zombification – one organism controlling another organism’s behavior. I study fungi, a huge biological kingdom that includes molds, mildews, yeasts, mushrooms and zombifying fungi. Don’t worry – these “brain-eating organisms” tend to target insects. Insect body snatchers One of the most famous examples is the zombie ant fungus, Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, which is part of a larger group known as Cordyceps fungi. This fungus inspired the video game and HBO series “The Last of Us,” in which a widespread fungal infection turns people into zombie-like creatures and causes society to collapse. In the real world, ants usually come into contact with this fungus when spores – pollen-size reproductive particles that the fungus makes – fall onto the ant from a tree or plant overhead. The spores penetrate the ant’s body without killing it. Once inside, the fungus spreads in the form of a yeast. The ant stops communicating with nestmates and staggers around aimlessly. Eventually it becomes hyperactive. Finally, the fungus causes the ant to climb up a plant and lock onto a leaf or a stem with its jaws – a behavior called summiting. The fungus changes into a new phase and consumes the ant’s organs, including its brain. A stalk erupts from the dead insect’s head and produces spores, which fall onto healthy ants below, starting the cycle again. Scientists have described countless species of Ophiocordyceps. Each one is tiny, with a very specialized lifestyle. Some live only in specific areas: for example, Ophiocordyceps salganeicola, a parasite of social cockroaches, is found only in Japan’s Ryukyu Islands. I expect that there are many more species around the world awaiting discovery. The zombie cicada fungus, Massospora cicadina, has also received a lot of attention in recent years. It infects and controls periodical cicadas, which are cicadas that live underground and emerge briefly to mate on 13- or 17-year cycles. The fungus keeps the cicadas energized and flying around, even as it consumes and replaces their rear ends and abdomens. This prolonged “active host” behavior is rare in fungi that invade insects. Massospora has family members that target flies, moths, millipedes and soldier beetles, but they cause their hosts to summit and die, like ants affected by Ophiocordyceps. Dozens of Massospora cicadina-infected 13-year cicadas being prepared for drying and analyzing in Matt Kasson’s mycology lab at West Virginia University. Matt Kasson, CC BY-ND The real fungal threats These diverse morbid partnerships – relationships that lead to death – were formed and refined over millions of years of evolutionary time. A fungus that specializes in infecting and controlling ants or cicadas would have to evolve vastly new tools over millions more years to be able to infect even another insect, even one that’s closely related, let alone a human. In my research, I’ve collected and handled hundreds of living and dead zombie cicadas, as well as countless fungus-infected insects, spiders and millipedes. I’ve dissected hundreds of specimens and uncovered fascinating aspects of their biology. Despite this prolonged exposure, I still control my own behavior. Some fungi do threaten human health. Examples include Aspergillus fumigatus and Cryptococcus neoformans, both of which can invade people’s lungs and cause serious pneumonia-like symptoms. Cryptococcus neoformans can spread outside the lungs into the central nervous system and cause symptoms such as neck stiffness, vomiting and sensitivity to light. Invasive fungal diseases are on the rise worldwide. So are common fungal infections, such as athlete’s foot – a rash between your toes – and ringworm, a rash that despite its name is caused by a fungus. Fungi thrive in perpetually warm and wet environments. You can protect yourself against many of them by showering after you get sweaty or dirty and not sharing sports gear or towels with other people. Not all fungi are scary, and even the alarming ones won’t turn you into the walking dead. The closest you’re likely to come to a zombifying fungus is through watching scary movies or playing video games. If you’re lucky, you might find a zombie ant or fly in your own neighborhood. And if you think they’re cool, you could become a scientist like me and spend your life seeking them out. Matt Kasson, Associate Professor of Mycology and Plant Pathology, West Virginia University This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. The post The Last of Us: Could Fungi Really Cause a Zombie Apocalypse? appeared first on Anomalien.com.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
37 w

Texas couple allegedly assaulted by police while praying on Jan. 6 sentenced to rot in prison
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Texas couple allegedly assaulted by police while praying on Jan. 6 sentenced to rot in prison

A Texas married couple who said police assaulted them while they were praying on Jan. 6 were sentenced to years in prison Oct. 22 on felony and misdemeanor charges stemming from their time outside the U.S. Capitol during protests and subsequent rioting.Mark Fulton Middleton, 54, and Jalise Kay Middleton, 54, of Forestburg, Texas, had asked U.S. District Judge Randolph D. Moss to sentence them to home detention and probation, while the U.S. Department of Justice sought sentences of 7.25 years in prison for each.Judge Moss sentenced Mark Middleton to 30 months in prison followed by three years of supervised release, while he gave Jalise Middleton 20 months in prison followed by three years of supervised release.In February, the Middletons were found guilty by a Washington, D.C., jury of assaulting, resisting, or impeding two police officers, civil disorder, entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds, disorderly and disruptive conduct, engaging in physical violence, and several other related misdemeanors.'The officer was pulling her scarf and choking her.'A guilty verdict on the felony charge of obstruction of an official proceeding was dismissed in September due to the June 2024 Supreme Court ruling in Fischer v. United States. That opinion vastly limits use of an accounting-fraud statute — 18 U.S. Code §1512(c)(2) — to prosecute cases that are not related to documents or other evidence. It was the most widely charged felony in Jan. 6 cases.The crux of the Middletons’ case was what took place at the police line on the Capitol's West Plaza at about 2:10 p.m. on Jan. 6. The large crowd on the north side of the plaza pressed against the bike racks police were using to hold demonstrators back.Police on the west front had been lobbing explosive munitions and firing other projectiles into the crowd for more than an hour, Capitol Police security video showed. A grenade exploded six people deep in the crowd about a minute before the Middletons had their tangle with police, security video showed. Tear gas swirled about in the stiff wind.The Middletons say if police had not picked up the bike rack barricades and pushed them into the protesters, they would not have made contact with the officers. What prosecutors described as the couple preparing to throw their bodies against the police line was actually the Middletons facing each other and praying, a defense attorney said.“The videos do show that at one point, Mrs. Middleton’s scarf was being pulled by a police officer and Mr. Middleton has testified that he tried to pull Mrs. Middleton away from the police line and to have the police let go of his wife,” wrote defense attorney Stephen Brennwald in Mark Middleton's 21-page sentencing memo. An incendiary grenade is lobbed into the crowd by a Metropolitan Police Department officer at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Not far away, Mark and Jalise Middleton scuffle with police at the barricades.U.S. Capitol Police CCTV“That is a natural reaction that any person would have, even if the two people hadn’t been married for decades as the Middletons have,” he said.Brennwald said there is no question that police initiated contact with the Middletons and others nearby.“Her behavior only happened because she was assaulted first — hit by a police officer and pushed by a large violent protester behind her,” defense attorney Kira West wrote in Jalise Middleton's 27-page sentencing memo.“The officer was pulling her scarf and choking her and Ms. Middleton indiscriminately swatted at him to escape what she perceived was going to be her sudden death,” West said.Prosecutors took a dimmer view of the 5- to 7-second encounter.“Mark Middleton heckled police officers, including by shouted obscenities,” wrote Assistant U.S. Attorneys Sean McCauley and Brendan Ballou in a 47-page sentencing supplemental memo. “Together, the Middletons then threw their bodies into the barricades. When officers tried to restore the barricades and ordered them to get back, both the Middletons assaulted two officers.”'I felt responsible to let my voice be heard and make a difference.'Prosecutors cited the political speech of both Middletons since Jan. 6 and accused them of “spreading falsehoods.”“Mark Middleton has used his Twitter to trumpet — on an at least daily if not almost hourly basis — convicted January 6 rioters, promulgate conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election, and spread baseless lies about January 6,” prosecutors wrote.The Middletons bragged about their deeds on social media and lied under oath during their trial, the DOJ said.“They have sought to personally benefit by using the notoriety of their crimes to raise money and seek fame,” the DOJ wrote.West rejected claims that her client lied at the trial.“Ms. Middleton made no false statements while testifying. Her testimony lines up with the video evidence in the case as well as other testimony and videos from other J6 trials,” West wrote.The Middletons had a right to exercise freedom of speech regarding their concerns over the 2020 presidential election, West said.“When this court considers all of the factors before it, the court must conclude that these are not the actions of someone there to overthrow the government or incite violence, but rather a concerned citizen who believed the election was stolen,” West said. Married couple Mark and Jalise Middleton of Forestburg, Texas, either assaulting police on Jan. 6, 2021, as prosecutors claim, or defending themselves after police pulled hard on Jalise Middleton’s scarf, as a defense attorney asserts. Photo from Metropolitan Police Department bodycam In his sentencing memo for Mark Middleton, Brennwald said he was not suggesting the Middletons “should have been where they were in the first place" or that police “did not have the right to, in some manner, move the crowd away from its location.” “But the aggressiveness demonstrated by the police in this instance was not the finest example of police behavior, and ended up being counter-productive, as it inflamed passions in the crowd,” he wrote.In an Oct. 19 letter to Judge Moss, Jalise Middleton said she was in fight-or-flight mode when the incident occurred.“I felt responsible to let my voice be heard and make a difference,” she wrote of her decision to come to Washington, D.C. “The truth is, Jesus Christ makes the difference. My only job that day was to pray and stand firm. Amidst the chaos that quickly ensued, I forgot to trust him."“Furthermore, I do passionately believe my actions that day were consistent with what any person would have done in our shoes,” Jalise Middleton wrote.The FBI seized Jalise Middleton's wedding ring while executing a search warrant at the couple's home. Agents then took it with them. The Middletons have been married since May 1990.“Wouldn’t a photograph of it suffice?” West asked. “Apparently not.”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
37 w

New horror game Haunted Bloodlines is like a first-person sequel to Silent Hill
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www.pcgamesn.com

New horror game Haunted Bloodlines is like a first-person sequel to Silent Hill

The Spencer Mansion from the original Resident Evil is one of the greatest settings in horror game history, surpassed only by RE2’s Raccoon City Police headquarters and the titular town of Silent Hill. Every room hides a new horror, an imaginative, mind-bending puzzle, and a lethal enemy - each time you enter an unexplored area, it feels like anything can, and will, jump out on you. Channeling the evil spirit of Capcom’s awful abode, Haunted Bloodlines also feels like a would-be sequel in the Silent Hill series, a first-person fear fest where reality warps around you and your sanity hangs in the balance. If you’ve just gotten finished with Silent Hill 2 Remake and want something fresh for the spooky month, you can try Haunted Bloodlines right now. Continue reading New horror game Haunted Bloodlines is like a first-person sequel to Silent Hill MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Best horror games, Best FPS games, Best puzzle games
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