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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
28 w

Dick Van Dyke Admits He’s “One Of Those Lucky People” Ahead Of His 99th Birthday
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Dick Van Dyke Admits He’s “One Of Those Lucky People” Ahead Of His 99th Birthday

For so many of us, Dick Van Dyke has been a part of our lives from the very beginning. Whether we loved him in the Dick Van Dyke Show, Mary Poppins, Diagnosis Murder, or the dozens of other ways he entertained, he’s always there for a smile. Dick Van Dyke will celebrate his 99th birthday on December 13, a feat most will never achieve. The star knows he won’t be around forever, but that doesn’t seem to bother him. Instead of fearing the unknown and wondering what happens at the end of life, he just keeps going. Ahead Of His Birthday, Dick Van Dyke Took On A New Project The legendary entertainer teamed up with Coldplay for the band’s newest music video for All My Love. Together, Dick and Chris Martin reminisce about his life, career, and what happens next. We see clips of his entertainment career along with snapshots of family amassed during nearly 10 decades on this earth. “I’m acutely aware that I, you know, could go any day now, but I don’t know why it doesn’t concern me,” Dick says with a smile. “I’m not afraid of it. I have that feeling, totally against anything intellectual, that I’m gonna be alright.” In addition to being candid, he’s also silly. He dances his signature way, which, even at nearly 100 years old, shows that he hasn’t lost his rhythm or ability to make people smile. Dick Van Dyke said he knows that a career you love is a blessing. “I think I’m one of those lucky people who got to do for a living, what I would have done anyway. When you think how lucky I am, I got to do what I do — play and act silly.” Happy Birthday, Dick Van Dyke you are a true legend. This story’s featured image is by Randy Holmes via Getty. The post Dick Van Dyke Admits He’s “One Of Those Lucky People” Ahead Of His 99th Birthday appeared first on InspireMore.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
28 w

Vanna White’s Son Reveals His True Feelings After Going Viral
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Vanna White’s Son Reveals His True Feelings After Going Viral

When Vanna White posted an Instagram video with her son, Nikko Santo Pietro, she had no idea how hungry people would be. But it wasn’t for her Uncle Roy’s chicken. The mother and son thought spending time in the kitchen together would be fun, but it turned Nikko into an overnight sensation. The handsome 30-year-old and his mom amassed 1 million views for their viral Instagram post. While Vanna White is no stranger to the spotlight, the sudden fame came as a bit of a shock to her son. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Entertainment Tonight (@entertainmenttonight) Vanna White’s Son Nikko Has Good Looks, And He’s A Great Cook Vanna and Nikko sat down for an interview with Entertainment Tonight to discuss his overnight launch to thirst trap status. They had no idea what was about to happen. “We did that just for fun and look what happened,” she laughed. Nikko said, “She turned to me and said, ‘Is this what viral means?'”  Of course, Vanna White’s son thought the attention was “flattering,” but some of the comments on his mom’s post were “interesting” to say it politely. “I had an outpour from her fans just really being kind and saying all kinds of interesting stuff in the comments,” Nikko said. But, some of the comments were a bit unhinged. Like this, “My oven is already preheated.” and “Is son on the menu, too.”  Vanna White’s son said he enjoys his real estate career but also loves the entertainment world. He told Entertainment Tonight he wants to remain active in his community, doing work for charity and “making an impact.” “People see me as this heartthrob. They’re thirsty for me,” Nikko joked. “I love it all, but at the same time it’s really good to remember the meaningful things in life.”  This story’s featured image is by Charles Sykes/Bravo via Getty Images. The post Vanna White’s Son Reveals His True Feelings After Going Viral appeared first on InspireMore.
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
28 w

5 Ways Biden-Harris Admin Working to ‘Trump-Proof’ Washington
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5 Ways Biden-Harris Admin Working to ‘Trump-Proof’ Washington

The Biden administration has gone into overdrive securing progressive policy goals from the impending Trump administration 2.0. From confirming progressive judges, to constraining American energy with environmental red tape, to simply spending every last unjustified dollar, the Biden-Harris administration is committed to ensuring its policies carry on into the second Trump administration for as long as possible. “It comes [down to] setting land mines and making it more difficult for the incoming administration to reverse those changes,” Cato Institute policy analyst Tad DeHaven told The Washington Times. “It matters or else they wouldn’t be doing it.” The American people have decisively rejected the Biden-Harris agenda. So, naturally, the administration has responded by forcing its agenda upon Americans even harder, right down to Donald Trump‘s inauguration Jan. 20. 1. Employees Across the bureaucracy, career government employees are lining up lawyers and setting up to lobby against mass firings, reports The Washington Times. At the end of Trump’s first term, by executive order he created a new class of federal workers (Schedule F) which would be easier to hire and fire. The Biden-Harris administration undid Trump’s change, and now the bureaucracy is afraid Trump might reinstitute it. Employees in two divisions of the Justice Department are also rushing to unionize, according to the Times. This would make it more difficult to fire them. It also provokes the question, why? Shouldn’t their unimpeachable integrity and relentless pursuit of nonpartisan justice be enough to protect their positions? 2. Rulemaking While executive branch employees rush to protect their jobs, executive branch agencies rush to protect their progressive policies. For instance, the Department of Education is rushing to finalize a proposed rule canceling student loans for people with “financial hardships,” which it previously expected to finish in 2025. Regulators at the Environmental Protection Agency have been particularly busy. They announced $3 billion in grants to facilitate a rule that requires local municipalities to replace lead pipes within 10 years. They finalized a rule Nov. 12 to fine oil and gas companies for “wasteful methane emissions.” EPA regulators are also rushing to impose penalties and reach settlements with companies accused of violating their environmental regulations. They plan to grant California a waiver to enforce its rule banning the sale of new gasoline-powered vehicles in the state by 2035. Meanwhile, bureaucrats in the Department of Energy are hurrying to complete a study on liquified natural gas exports that is expected to conclude that they’re not “consistent with the public interest” because of their climate impact, The Washington Post reported. This won’t directly stop the Trump-Vance administration from restoring America’s energy exports, but could help fossil fuel opponents challenge the new administration in court. “Biden’s decision on LNG [liquid natural gas] is the most consequential thing he can do on climate and fossil fuels before Trump takes office,” declared Fossil Free Media spokeswoman Cassidy DiPaola. Other environmental rules the Biden-Harris administration is rushing to finalize include “narrowing the scope of an oil and gas lease sale in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge,” “restricting drilling, mining, and livestock grazing across nearly 65 million acres … to save an imperiled bird,” and “finaliz[ing] three rules restricting the release of toxic chemicals.” “From what we can tell, they’ve done a very good job lining this stuff up, so there’s not a whole lot at risk of getting punted into the next administration,” said Aaron Weiss, deputy director of the Center for Western Priorities. “I think everyone learned that lesson in 2016.” The flurry of administrative rulemaking aimed to meet a late-November deadline that marked 60 days from Trump’s Jan. 20 inauguration. Rules finalized within 60 days of Trump taking office are subject to the Congressional Review Act, which means that the incoming Republican majority could block them with Trump’s approval. 3. Judges Another area requiring cooperation between the Biden-Harris administration and Congress is judicial appointments. Senate Democrats are hurrying to confirm Biden-nominated judges to the federal bench, leaving few slots open for Trump to fill. Positions in the federal judiciary, which are tenured for life, are officially not partisan, but it is generally acknowledged that judges appointed by Democratic presidents tend to lean more progressive, while appointees by Republican presidents tend to lean more conservative. This means that the federal judges Biden can get through a lame-duck, Democrat-controlled Senate in the final days of his administration will likely look favorably on his progressive policies. Before the Senate left for Thanksgiving break, Democrats and Republicans reached a compromise deal to vote on as many as 14 Biden nominees for district court appointments, but not to vote on four appellate court nominations. 4. Spending The Biden-Harris administration is also hurrying to spend the remaining money allocated by Congress’ stimulus spending in 2021-2022, so that it won’t be available to the Trump-Vance administration. The Washington Times’ reporting cites unnamed officials who plan to spend the remaining $46 billion available in fiscal year 2025, which ends next Sept. 30. 5. Foreign Policy The Biden-Harris administration is also spending its lame-duck session making major foreign policy moves—which it declined or refused to make earlier—in hopes of constraining Trump’s diplomatic options. Biden is trying to spend $6.4 billion in aid for Ukraine—funds Congress allocated in April but have not been spent—and cancel $4.65 billion in debt owed by Ukraine to the U.S. Also, Biden permitted Ukraine to fire longer-range missiles into Russia, provoking further Russian escalation. NPR reported that the Biden-Harris administration is working hard to finalize another major loan to Ukraine through NATO, before Inauguration Day. Meanwhile, in the Middle East, the administration pressured Israel to agree to a ceasefire with Hezbollah before Trump takes office. Why It Matters The Biden-Harris administration is hoping to outfox the incoming Trump-Vance administration in a high-stakes, bureaucratic game of hot potato. Every time the White House changes hands, the incoming administration seeks to undo the rules adopted by its predecessors. Thus, in 2021, the Biden-Harris administration reversed administrative actions taken by the outgoing Trump-Pence administration, just as the new Trump-Pence administration, in 2017, had reversed policy moves made by the Obama-Biden administration. This back-and-forth has gone on at least since President Bill Clinton reversed President Ronald Reagan’s Mexico City Policy, but it has recently expanded to cover an ever-growing number of issues. “It’s unfortunate but expected that [Biden officials] will try to throw as many roadblocks at what President-elect Trump has pledged to do,” Tom Pyle, president of the American Energy Alliance, told the Post. The reason why competing administrations play increasingly critical games of bureaucratic football is that they realize the legislative branch lacks either the ability or the will to stop them. And the sad truth of the matter is that progressives—with greater buy-in from employees of the executive branch and greater faith in the government’s problem-solving capabilities—are usually better at playing the game than conservatives. To the extent that there is a “Deep State” in “The Swamp,” this is it. Ordinary Americans don’t spend their lives obsessing over politics, except for occasionally wondering why voting for good people never seems to produce the desired results. In my conservative opinion, the answer resides not in electoral results but in the long-term executive and judicial strategies that round out our system of checks and balances (currently tilted in favor of the executive branch). This is why bureaucratic maneuvering like these by the Biden-Harris administration matter. When Trump takes the keys and slides behind the wheel on Jan. 20, the success of his whole second administration will depend on how quickly he can take America from zero to 60. This question—and particularly Trump’s first 100 days—will set the momentum for the next four years. And this question depends on how adroitly his deputies can remove these roadblocks thrown in their path by the Biden-Harris administration. If Trump wants to return America to the prosperous, cruising state of 2019, he must undo four years of rulemaking by the Biden-Harris administration, and he has only four years to do so. Can his bureaucracy work faster than Biden’s? We’ll soon find out. Originally published by The Washington Stand We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of The Daily Signal. The post 5 Ways Biden-Harris Admin Working to ‘Trump-Proof’ Washington appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
28 w

Joe Walsh on MSNBC: Trump Doesn't Give A S--- That 'Pretty Face' Hegseth Mistreats Women
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Joe Walsh on MSNBC: Trump Doesn't Give A S--- That 'Pretty Face' Hegseth Mistreats Women

As we wrote about him in 2022 [emphasis added]: "Joe Walsh is a washed-up Illinois politician and a chameleon. He's gone from being a liberal Republican to a hardcore Tea Partier and ardent Trump supporter, to becoming so fiercely anti-Trump that in addition to voting for Joe Biden in 2020, Walsh even announced, as our Tim Graham has noted, that he would vote for a "socialist" over Trump. "Walsh lasted just one term in Congress. And his 2020 'campaign' for the GOP presidential nomination didn't even last half as long as Kamala Harris' fleeting, failed effort on the Dem side. "So why does CNN regularly invite this loudmouth non-entity onto its air? Because he can be counted on to trash Republicans."  In that 2022 CNN appearance, Walsh smeared Republicans at large, saying: "Most Republican voters  . . . want their political opponents destroyed or killed." Walsh, vulgar piece of work that he is, was back earning his keep with the liberal media with an appearance Saturday on MSNBC's The Weekend. Discussing the Hegseth nomination, Walsh said that what's attractive to Trump about Hegseth is that he's a "pretty face." Continued Walsh: "Trump doesn't give a shit that Pete Hegseth has a history of treating women like shit. Because that's what Donald Trump has done. Trump doen't care that he's an abuser and a harasser of women, because that's what Trump has been." Rather than expressing any disapproval of Walsh's crudeness, co-host Michael Steele—another guy who's made a second career as a Republican who will reliably trash the GOP—expressed his agreement, uttering, "right." Introducing Walsh at the top of the segment, Steele went out of his way to call him, "my buddy."  You know what Aesop said, Michael.  Prior to unleashing Walsh, the show aired an advance clip from Trump's Meet The Press interview with host Kristen Welker, in which Trump said "every time I talk to him, all he wants to talk about is the military." Steele gratuitously branded Trump's comment a "lie." How would he know? Note: The Meet The Press clip was interesting in a number of ways. At least in the portion of the interview aired, Welker's questions about the Hegseth nomination were straightforward and not overtly hostile. And Trump's responses were measured. Yes, he still had confidence in Hegseth. But no, he has not received assurances from senators that Hegseth would be confirmed. And rather than expressing any particular support for Hegseth, Trump said that "we'll be working on his nomination, along with a lot of others." Here's the transcript. MSNBC The Weekend 12/7/24 6:02 am ET MICHAEL STEELE: The former Illinois congressman and 2020 presidential candidate,and my buddy, Joe Walsh, also joins us here at the table.  ALICIA MENENDEZ: Gooe morning to you both. You know, nothing says Saturday morning quite like a clip, an advance clip of Meet the Press. So let's watch this exchange. It's a back-and-forth clip between our colleague, Kristen Walker, and Donald Trump. Take a look. DONALD TRUMP: Looks like Pete is doing well now. I mean, people were a little bit concerned. He's a young guy with a tremendous track record. Actually went to Princeton and went to Harvard. He was a good student at both. But he loves the military and I think people are starting to see it. So, we'll be working on his nomination along with a lot of others. KRISTEN WELKER: Since you bring him up, do you still have confidence in Pete Hegseth? TRUMP: Yes I do. I really do. He's a very smart guy. I've known him through Fox, but I've known him a long time. And he's basically a military guy. I mean, every time I talk to him, all he wants to talk about is the military. He's a military guy. WELKER: Have you got assurances from senators that he's going to be confirmed? TRUMP: No, no. WELKER: Do you think he can make it? TRUMP: I think he will, yeah. I've had a lot of senators call me up saying he's fantastic. WELKER: You don't drink yourself. TRUMP: No. WELKER: You've talked about how devastating drinking can be. TRUMP: Yeah. WELKER: How concerned are you that the person who you picked for this top job at the Defense Department, at least according to those who've worked with him, have struggled with drinking. TRUMP: But I've spoken to people that know him very well, and they say he does not have a drinking problem.  STEELE: So, so Joe, "he's a military guy." You know, it's  He's a military guy. "Every time we meet and talk, we talk about military stuff." [Laughter ] JOE WALSH: Bull. STEELE: That's all, that's all a lie. You know, Donald Trump doesn't even really know anything about this guy, besides what he sees on Fox News. That's the attractive point for him. JOE WALSH: Besides the fact that he's a pretty face.  Let's cut to the chase because it is Saturday morning. Trump doesn't give a shit that Pete Hegseth has a history of treating women like shit. STEELE: Right. WALSH: Because that's what Donald Trump has done. Trump doen't care that he's an abuser and a harasser of women, because that's what Trump has been. So it's the drinking, I think, that Donald Trump has always considered to be a weakness. But, we were talking earlier, Michael. I don't think Trump wants to take another hit. He lost Gaetz. STEELE: I don't think his ego wants him to take another, lose another cabinet pick.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
28 w

iFixit fights for your right to repair
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iFixit fights for your right to repair

Liberty and property are closely linked and inseparable from civilization. A life without private ownership is not truly free. Property rights are enshrined in the Constitution. So most of us assume that we have a right to repair our own property. But what does that mean in the era of the subscription model, when much of what we own has been dematerialized into the digital? Apple, John Deere, and various automakers have resisted the right to repair movement, arguing that third-party repairs could compromise safety, security, and intellectual property. Modern electronics, cars, and farming equipment have become harder to fix due to locked software and complicated ownership boundaries, making us dependent on expensive repairs and unnecessary replacements. The giant corporations make a lot of money off the maintenance and replacement of their products, and they want to keep it that way. This means citizens increasingly have less claim to their own property. The right to repair movement arose from the indignation of crafty people, from tech users blocked by Apple’s strict proprietary terms to farmers locked out of repairing John Deere tractors. One of the most promising examples of pushback is iFixit. A tinkerer's dream iFixit is the libertarian tinkerer’s dream. The organization's motto, “Free repair guides for everything, written by everyone,” has made it the heart of the right to repair movement. Founded in 2003, iFixit empowers consumers with free guides, tools, and parts, fighting against the closed systems of major manufacturers. Its mission is simple: Extend the life of products and return control to the consumer. This mission was born out of frustration. It all started the way most tinkering does: with a broken machine, no instructions, and a lot of trial and error. I spoke with Elizabeth Chamberlain, iFixit’s director of sustainability, via email. As Chamberlain shared with me, “Kyle [Wiens, iFixit co-founder and CEO] dropped his laptop off his dorm room bed and couldn’t find a guide for how to fix it. He took it apart himself, wrote a guide, and put it online — and found a ton of other people who’d had the same problem. He teamed up with Luke [Soules, iFixit co-founder and "CxO"] to get people the parts and tools they need to get things fixed.” Their passion for empowering consumers has grown into a full-fledged movement. iFixit’s founders didn’t just want to fix their own devices — they wanted to inspire others to do the same. Apple bites back But iFixit is more than just a guide provider. In 2015, after iFixit published a tear-down of a pre-release Apple TV, Apple removed iFixit's app from the App Store for violating its nondisclosure agreement. Instead of backing down, iFixit got stubborn, improving its mobile site and continuing the fight. In 2022, the company teamed up with Google and Samsung to offer self-repair programs. But it cut ties with Samsung in 2024, citing poor repairability practices — note that iFixit severed the relationship. The Google partnership, however, endures, providing Pixel phone parts and consumer-driven repair. Rights shield us from external threats, including an unchecked state or, in this case, bloated corporate megaliths. Unsurprisingly, big corporations like Apple, John Deere, and various automakers have resisted the right to repair movement, arguing that third-party repairs could compromise safety, security, and intellectual property — the typical scare tactics used by powerful entities to maintain control. Apple claims that unauthorized repairs could void warranties and tamper with its proprietary designs. John Deere uses software restrictions to lock farmers out of fixing their own tractors, citing intellectual property concerns. Automakers keep repair codes locked behind dealerships, warning that unauthorized repairs could affect safety and security. The right to repair movement counters that third-party repairs, when done correctly, do not compromise security, that consumers should have the right to repair what they own, and repairability can be built into products without infringing on proprietary designs. Repairability also makes sense economically. Researchers determined that by fixing products instead of replacing them, consumers could save $882 million per year in Colorado alone. This shift supports a circular economy, where products are reused, refurbished, and repaired, rather than discarded. Legislative wins The right to repair movement has also gained significant legislative traction. New York’s Digital Fair Repair Act opened the door, followed by victories in Oregon, Minnesota, and California. Colorado has played a particularly valuable role in the fight, and Colorado state Rep. Brianna Titone proudly declared the state a world leader in right to repair. The state’s 2024 Consumer Right to Repair Digital Electronic Equipment Act set a new standard, possibly the most comprehensive defense of right to repair in the country, even gaining support from Google. Apple grudgingly complies. It is Colorado’s third right to repair law, following earlier wins for farmers’ equipment and powered wheelchairs, and targets practices like “parts pairing,” which manufacturers use to prevent independent repairs. iFixit has played a pivotal role in shaping these laws, providing expert testimony and educating lawmakers. As Chamberlain noted, “We want to fix the copyright barriers to repair, including the outdated Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which places unfair restrictions on the sale of repair tools. In the best possible world, those restrictions will be lifted and repair access for all products will become standard across the world.” Reclaiming control And the movement’s momentum isn’t just domestic. Laws protecting people’s right to fix their own stuff have passed in Canada, Australia, and the EU. India, Thailand, and Taiwan are developing repair frameworks. “Right to repair is winning,” Chamberlain told me. “Many other countries are considering possible legislation, too.” The future of right to repair hinges on continued legislative victories and overcoming corporate pushback. While Chamberlain expressed optimism, saying “We think the right to repair ball is rolling, unstoppably,” she also acknowledged the potential for setbacks if manufacturers tie legislation up in court. Still, the tide seems to be turning toward a more repair-friendly future. As Chamberlain suggested, everyday people can make a difference by engaging with the movement: “Visit https://www.repair.org/ to learn more about the movement and find out what’s happening in your state.” The call to action is simple — take ownership, take action, and repair what’s broken. At its heart, the right to repair is about more than just fixing things — it’s about reclaiming control. It’s about breaking free from the corporate grip, slashing repair costs, and reducing the endless cycle of unnecessary data. With iFixit leading the charge, everyday people may have a chance to shape the future — not just by consuming but by repairing its breakdowns.
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
28 w

Bang Up Job, Guys! CBS 'Fact Check' on Tom Homan's Fentanyl Death Figures Exposes Them As LIARS
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Bang Up Job, Guys! CBS 'Fact Check' on Tom Homan's Fentanyl Death Figures Exposes Them As LIARS

Bang Up Job, Guys! CBS 'Fact Check' on Tom Homan's Fentanyl Death Figures Exposes Them As LIARS
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Twitchy Feed
28 w

Rep. Mike Quigley Says Trump's Cabinet Picks Are 'Unserious', Trips Over Clowns Running Biden Admin
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Rep. Mike Quigley Says Trump's Cabinet Picks Are 'Unserious', Trips Over Clowns Running Biden Admin

Rep. Mike Quigley Says Trump's Cabinet Picks Are 'Unserious', Trips Over Clowns Running Biden Admin
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Twitchy Feed
28 w

Hall of WOKE: Eye-Opening Thread Shows How DEI Nonsense Has Tainted Science
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Hall of WOKE: Eye-Opening Thread Shows How DEI Nonsense Has Tainted Science

Hall of WOKE: Eye-Opening Thread Shows How DEI Nonsense Has Tainted Science
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
28 w

Pictures of Jill Biden With Donald Trump at Notre Dame Cathedral Spark Quite a Bit of Discussion
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Pictures of Jill Biden With Donald Trump at Notre Dame Cathedral Spark Quite a Bit of Discussion

Pictures of Jill Biden With Donald Trump at Notre Dame Cathedral Spark Quite a Bit of Discussion
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28 w

Hamas Is Supporting Antisemitic Columbia Students Who Publish Hate
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Hamas Is Supporting Antisemitic Columbia Students Who Publish Hate

Hamas Is Supporting Antisemitic Columbia Students Who Publish Hate
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