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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
42 w

Blinken Reportedly Holding Back On Presenting Post-Gaza War Plan Until After Election
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Blinken Reportedly Holding Back On Presenting Post-Gaza War Plan Until After Election

Closed-door debates between Blinken and senior State officials
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42 w

LINDA McMAHON: America Needs The Trump Tax Cuts
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LINDA McMAHON: America Needs The Trump Tax Cuts

'Trump’s tax cuts made an immediate, positive impact'
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42 w

It’s Pretty Bold For Kamala To Hit Trump On One Of Her Own Biggest Vulnerabilities
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It’s Pretty Bold For Kamala To Hit Trump On One Of Her Own Biggest Vulnerabilities

A new talking point memo must have gone out
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42 w

Tom Brady Gets Approved By NFL Owners To Purchase Minority Stake In Las Vegas Raiders
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Tom Brady Gets Approved By NFL Owners To Purchase Minority Stake In Las Vegas Raiders

Tom Brady is a Sin City hierarchy
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42 w

House GOP PAC Dishes Out Another $12 Million For Ads
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House GOP PAC Dishes Out Another $12 Million For Ads

The sum is aimed at ad reservations in key House races
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42 w

World’s Top Supermodels Strutted Their Stuff In Epic Victoria’s Secret Comeback
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World’s Top Supermodels Strutted Their Stuff In Epic Victoria’s Secret Comeback

The show returned with a vengeance, and a whole lot of sex appeal
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
42 w

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10 Best Songs With The Word ‘Look’ In The Title

“Look” and “looking” have been some of the most frequently used words in rock and roll music for the past seven decades. Whether used to describe longing, introspection, or searching for something elusive, these words have formed the foundation of countless classic songs. From heartfelt ballads to driving rock anthems, “look” has captured the essence of love, reflection, and personal journeys in memorable and powerful ways. In the Beatles’ “I’m Looking Through You,” Paul McCartney reflects on a changing relationship, with a sense of disillusionment. Heart’s “If Looks Could Kill” brings fierce energy as a woman confronts her lover’s betrayal. The post 10 Best Songs With The Word ‘Look’ In The Title appeared first on ClassicRockHistory.com.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
42 w

New Wearable Cuff ‘Rewires’ Brains of Stroke Patients by Stimulating Nerves
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New Wearable Cuff ‘Rewires’ Brains of Stroke Patients by Stimulating Nerves

A discreet and flexible armband made of electrodes has been found in a small study of stroke patients to aid in restoring flexibility in their disabled arms. Manufactured by a startup called Neubond the device is intended to seamlessly integrate into daily routines, allowing patients with impaired motor functions to maximize time spent performing rehabilitation activities. […] The post New Wearable Cuff ‘Rewires’ Brains of Stroke Patients by Stimulating Nerves appeared first on Good News Network.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
42 w

Reconsidering Red Dawn After 40 Years
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Reconsidering Red Dawn After 40 Years

Featured Essays Red Dawn Reconsidering Red Dawn After 40 Years By Paul Morton | Published on October 16, 2024 Credit: MGM/UA Entertainment Company Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: MGM/UA Entertainment Company American pop culture can be inspiring. Hopefully, it inspires the right people. Popeye the Sailor Man served as the mascot of an Anarchist group during the Spanish Civil War. Pro-democracy demonstrators in Thailand in 2014 and Myanmar in 2021 employed the three-fingered salute from The Hunger Games. And in April 2022, a photograph from Ukraine circulated on social media: a downed Russian tank spray-painted with a single word in English, “Wolverines.” It was a reference to John Milius’ Red Dawn, a classic of the late Cold War. Red Dawn, which enjoyed massive box office success upon its release 40 years ago in August 1984, tells the story of an insurgent group of teenagers who resist the Soviet invasion of a fictional small town in Colorado. The Wolverines’ guerilla tactics are more Việt Cộng than U.S. Army, but with a name taken from the high school football team, they’re true children of the Mountain West. It was one of many youth-oriented films of the 1980s and it featured several soon-to-be stars, among them Patrick Swayze—the Wolverines’ leader Jed—Charlie Sheen, Jennifer Grey, and Lea Thompson. But it was no romp. If anything, the film was anchored by the melancholic veteran character actors in supporting roles, among them Harry Dean Stanton, Ben Johnson, and Powers Boothe. The Ukrainian fighters’ identification with the Wolverines is poignant not only for what it says about the Ukrainians but also for what it suggests about the film’s American audience. “Red Dawn” is a verb in our lexicon, as in “I’m going to Red Dawn your ass,” and the film’s admirers include libertarian and pro-gun intellectuals. If you look closely, however, you will see that the film’s narrative does not differ all that much from the mainstream media coverage of the war in Ukraine. It is an encapsulation of how Americans talk about war in general, both the wars we fight ourselves, as well as the causes we support with either our soft power or our treasure. * * * Milius was a friend and collaborator of New Hollywood’s auteurs. He had written a draft of Apocalypse Now—his favorite pastime is said to have influenced the surfing sequence—and offered informal advice during the shooting of Jaws that led to Quint’s iconic speech about the U.S.S. Indianapolis. Like Steven Spielberg, Francis Ford Coppola, and George Lucas, he was a child of the 1960s—but not their ’60s. He called himself a “frustrated fire pilot,” whose attempt to enlist during the Vietnam War was thwarted by his asthma. And his aesthetic was hyper-masculine and ultra-violent; Conan the Barbarian, his previous film, was almost rated X. He was an avid collector of firearms; Darren Dalton, who played one of the Wolverines, described him to me as “a teddy bear with a machine gun.” According to a not quite substantiated rumor, the Coen brothers used Milius as the inspiration for John Goodman’s Walter Sobchak in The Big Lebowski. The audiences may have loved Red Dawn, but the critics were hostile. One predicted the movie would be remembered solely as the first to obtain a PG-13 rating—inappropriate for pre-teens, even as it catered to an adolescent appetite for blood and guns. Another wrote, “If only Milius’ narrative were as clear as his right-wing sentiments.” The New York Times’ Janet Maslin called it “rabidly inflammatory.” Credit: MGM/UA Entertainment Company Milius met the criticism with good humor, and he charmed one journalist with a joking self-caricature: “the Hermann Göring of the cinema.” He defended Red Dawn as anti-war in spirit, a study of how armed conflict dehumanizes both the occupier and the occupied. In the film, the Soviets establish Stalinist camps, but their Central American allies, former insurgents themselves, face a crisis of conscience and are genuinely sympathetic to the small-town Americans. The souls of Milius’ baby-faced heroes, meanwhile, are diminished with every life they take. C. Thomas Howell, who had starred as Ponyboy Curtis in The Outsiders, plays Robert, one of the most memorable of the Wolverines. He first appears wearing a Star Wars baseball cap, but after the Soviets leave him an orphan, he gives up on fantasy and transforms into a cold-blooded killer, eager to wear camouflage, indifferent to his enemies’ pain. He is an embodiment of the fears of Eugene, an I.T. worker from Kharkiv, whom The Daily interviewed for an episode which aired on March 1, 2022. Eugene lived a normal life before the invasion. He shopped for PlayStation games, brought baked goods into his office. The media reports of Ukraine’s early victories did not bring him joy, as he saw in them records of the deaths of young men who just happened to be born in Vladimir Putin’s Russia. “Every time we’re winning, somebody losing a father, son, friend.” He had never killed anyone in his life, but he was now researching a specific kind of Molotov cocktail, one with an additional ingredient that caused severe burns if it contacted skin. He imagined the situation that would lead him to use that weapon. “I will have psychological circumstances after that,” he said. “But what other choice do I have?” While Eugene was trying to adjust to a new conception of himself as an annihilator of human lives, the American public became jingoistic cheerleaders. A full year into the conflict, in February 2023, Malcolm Nance, a counterterrorist expert who had fought for the Ukrainian Foreign Legion, appeared on Real Time with Bill Maher, where he bragged about kicking Russia’s ass to the cheers of the studio audience. I hope even now, two-and-a-half years in, as the war settles into attrition, and as Volodymyr Zelensky reveals himself to be an at-best imperfect protector of democratic norms, that North America and Europe continue to aid the Ukrainian people. I also know that war isn’t football. We are confused, as were Milius and his critics. Is Red Dawn really anti-war? Is it a study of trauma? A celebration of everything that leads to trauma? War is not a game, we say, even as we practice war games. There’s nothing heroic about war; every soldier is a hero. There are rules in warfare; war is crime. * * * You can debate the politics of Red Dawn, but if it has one, unambiguous policy message, it is a broad interpretation of the Second Amendment. In an early scene, the Soviets obtain a registration list from the local library in order to confiscate the Americans’ firearms, a dramatization of a dystopian scenario often described by gun rights activists. For Milius, though, guns were as recreational as they were necessary. According to Dalton, Milius would fire a machine gun instead of yelling “Action!” and “Cut!” If he was frustrated on set—Doug Toby, another cast member, told me—he would pull out a pistol, shoot a few blanks, then settle down and drink a Pepto Bismol. (Toby appears in the film’s most famous scene, holding a rifle aloft and shouting “Wolverines!”) One night, he offered to drive Howell back to the hotel. “Here we were speeding down the road and he screeches to a halt, leaps out and fires six rounds into a Stop sign out in the middle of nowhere. And he hopped back and he looks at me and says, ‘That felt so good.’” “I don’t think we would have flinched if John came to set decked out in bandoliers with an RPG over his shoulder,” Dalton wrote me. “He was enjoying his opportunity to lead like General Patton as much as we loved going to battle for him.”  At the beginning of the shoot, he gathered his main cast into a room. “He lined us all up and in sort of a drill sergeant manner,” Howell says. “John sort of exuded a militaristic aura. He looked us all in the eye and said, ‘Men,’—of course there were two women there—‘when I hired you I didn’t hire any pussies. I want to take the next half hour answering questions about your characters and after that I don’t want to hear another word about it.’” Milius took his core cast to a gun range, where they learned the basics of shooting. The actors needed to know the feel of a gun in their hands, the feel of a kickback. Apparently, this was his version of playing an acting coach. “Which weapon is right for your character?” he asked them at the end. Not everyone enjoyed the atmosphere. In her memoir, Jennifer Grey called the film “right-wing propaganda” but also her opportunity to play a “badass guerilla fighter.” It was a boys’ club, and she did not much appreciate the pranks. Her castmates, among them Howell and Sheen, had set off firecrackers outside her hotel room in Las Vegas, New Mexico, where the movie was filmed, and she mistook the sounds for gunshots.  Screenshot: MGM/UA Entertainment Company The young actors trained under the guidance of former mercenaries, Green Berets, and Navy Seals. “There was a learned skill of being in those situations where you have to maintain your senses,” says Toby. “People are coming at you, around you. It’s a freak-out moment. And you have to move calmly, in a thoughtful manner.” The Wolverines, of course, are not highly trained Green Berets, but young boys striving and working towards that mindset. The evolution of Howell’s Robert into a killing machine is a tragedy. The Wolverines’ first battle is the most dramatically interesting. The inexperienced teenagers miss their targets, scurry along the mountain, barely know how to hold a gun or a bow-and-arrow. The scene is fun and genuinely scary, but also the first step the young boys take down a dark road from which they will not return. The Wolverines take no prisoners. The scene ends with Swayze’s Jed executing a Russian soldier, who turns away from his pistol. Milius may have loved guns, but he knew why they had been invented. Screenshot: MGM/UA Entertainment Company Milius indulges world-building humor—the movie theater in the occupied town plays Alexander Nevsky and the Soviets set up their own canteen—but, at heart, the film is responsible enough to be depressing. In some ways, it’s more responsible than the anti-war Vietnam films of the 1970s and ’80s. Coppola may have intended the opening sequence in Apocalypse Now, in which the sound of helicopters and The Doors merge over napalm and Martin Sheen’s real-life breakdown, as an evocation of the psychosis of modern warfare, but viewers have long grooved to his tone poem.  The Wolverines die brutally. Howell’s Robert commits suicide by willingly exposing himself to enemy fire. The boys execute Dalton’s Daryl when he is exposed as a traitor. My older brother was shaken when he saw the film on cable a few years after its release, when he was a pre-teen. I was shaken too when I saw it earlier this year for the first time. Unlike his previous collaborators, Milius was not an artful filmmaker; his action scenes are smart but they lack rhythm, and his indulgence of Greatest Generation-style iconography, including Basil Poledouris’ drumbeat heavy score, is unintentionally funny. But other than Spielberg, he is one of the few mainstream directors to communicate the atrocity inherent in the death of a child. * * * There are many factors—economic, social, and cultural—that lead teenagers to join the U.S. military. More than a few will cite movies, and Red Dawn is one of several Reagan-era entertainments that influenced a generation of young men to later serve in the Gulf War and the War on Terror. Others on the list include G.I. Joe and Top Gun. An ex-Marine once told me he had been attracted by the firm, proud posture of the soldiers in Full Metal Jacket. Of them all, Red Dawn captures the contradiction between rhetoric and experience, and permits its viewers to hate combat while still indulging a love for adventure. Even in the era of modern warfare, whether they be members of the occupying force or the occupied, the argument—the argument each of us has with ourself, is the same. “But if it be a sin to covet honour, I am the most offending soul alive,” says Henry V, as he rouses his “band of brothers” to take France. His old companion is more cynical. “What is honour?” asks Falstaff. “A word. What is in that word honour? What is that honour? Air.”[end-mark] The post Reconsidering <em>Red Dawn</em> After 40 Years appeared first on Reactor.
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
42 w

Sex Trafficking of Migrant Girls Exploded Under Biden-Harris Admin, Expert Says
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Sex Trafficking of Migrant Girls Exploded Under Biden-Harris Admin, Expert Says

DAILY CALLER NEWS FOUNDATION—An activist who fights sex trafficking argues that the trafficking of migrant girls has exploded since the beginning of the Biden-Harris administration, according to The Free Press. A woman who identifies herself as Lisa and runs a nonprofit dedicated to dismantling sex trafficking rings said that the number of girls being trafficked has drastically changed in the past few years as open border policies have made it easier for criminals to operate in the U.S., The Free Press reported Monday. The claims follow the entrance into the United States of hundreds of thousands of unaccompanied alien children, dubbed UACs, from Latin America and warnings from observers that federal officials aren’t properly tracking these children or vetting their sponsors. “Nearly all of my sex-trafficking rings now are migrant girls,” Lisa, who runs Shepherd’s Watch, a nonprofit group dedicated to locating victims of sex-trafficking rings and handing over their locations to police, told The Free Press. Much of the information Lisa and her team provided to police over the years resulted in suspected human traffickers being arrested and exploited girls being placed into proper care. The Shepherd’s Watch leader pointed to internet sites—including Facebook, TikTok, and OnlyFans—which have served as platforms to advertise trafficked girls to potential buyers. “The ads exploded within the first three months of the border being open. We started noticing new sites and ads in Spanish,” Lisa said. “That was very few before. Then sites dedicated to Latino girls popped up everywhere.” Lisa said the ads are increasingly in Spanish, unlike in years past, The Free Press reported. She said that more than 90% of these advertisements now are for migrant girls. When President Joe Biden entered office in January 2021, he immediately worked to undo the border enforcement policies of the Trump administration, according to an analysis by the Migration Policy Institute. The Biden-Harris administration took 296 executive actions in its first year, with 89 of them specifically reversing or beginning the process of undoing President Donald Trump’s immigration policies. Biden went on to shutter other major Trump-Pence administration border enforcement initiatives, such as the “Remain in Mexico” policy, construction of a border wall, and the Title 42 public health order during the COVID-19 pandemic. What followed was a major increase in illegal immigration at the U.S.-Mexico border, according to data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection. More than 7 million migrants attempting to illegally cross the southern border have been apprehended by Border Patrol agents, including hundreds of thousands of unaccompanied minors. Federal immigration agencies have encountered nearly half a million unaccompanied alien children at the U.S.-Mexico border since Biden entered office, according to Rep. Lance Gooden, R-Texas, who has demanded that the Department of Homeland Security provide answers on the whereabouts and safety of these children. The Office of Refugee Resettlement, part of the Department of Health and Human Services, has lost track of over 85,000 UACs in the U.S., and hundreds of thousands of other migrant children could be at risk of exploitation as the government is unable to properly track them, Gooden said. “Human trafficking has swollen into a multibillion-dollar industry further enabled by the current administration’s lax border policies,” Gooden wrote to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas last month, a copy of which was first obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation. “Drug cartels, human traffickers, and smugglers are further incentivized by the policies of this administration to use UACs to easily slip across the border undetected.” HHS’ Office on Trafficking in Persons provides an array of benefits to individuals who have escaped human trafficking, with authorities sending a previously trafficked adult or minor an eligibility letter when approved. The number of child eligibility letters rose dramatically under the Biden-Harris administration, from 672 letters in 2020 to 1,143 the next year and peaking in 2022 at 2,226 letters. The Office of Refugee Resettlement is tasked with sending fingerprints of non-family sponsors to the FBI to confirm whether they have a criminal record or history of child abuse, according to The Free Press. However, when the HHS inspector general conducted a study earlier this year of hundreds of randomly chosen minors to confirm whether a sponsor had been properly vetted, the office concluded that nearly 20% of the children were handed over to sponsors before the background checks were completed, meaning that these migrant children could’ve been placed with criminals. “If I wanted to, I could order a girl within 15 minutes,” Lisa told The Free Press, speaking of the sex- trafficking situation. “It’s that easy.” The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Originally published by the Daily Caller News Foundation The post Sex Trafficking of Migrant Girls Exploded Under Biden-Harris Admin, Expert Says appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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