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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

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Top 10 Yes Album Covers

Yes is undeniably one of the greatest progressive rock bands to emerge from the twentieth century, crafting a musical legacy that spans decades. If you were a rock fan growing up in the nineteen sixties or seventies, odds are you spent many hours staring at the cover art of the Yes albums. It was a very common experience to sit in your bedroom with the black lights on listening to the music of Yes while staring at images that transcended space and time knowing no boundaries but the ones of the individual imagination. Since the release of their debut album The post Top 10 Yes Album Covers appeared first on ClassicRockHistory.com.
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
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Biden-Harris Admin Paves Way for Bureaucrats to Take Gender-Confused Kids From ‘Non-Affirming’ Parents
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Biden-Harris Admin Paves Way for Bureaucrats to Take Gender-Confused Kids From ‘Non-Affirming’ Parents

DAILY CALLER NEWS FOUNDATION—“Transphobia is child abuse,” Alex Roque, who runs the Ali Forney Center for homeless LGBTQ+ youth in New York City, asserted on a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services webinar last fall. In less than three minutes, he cast a vision for completely transforming child protective systems nationwide. Family rejection of a child’s gender identity cannot be dismissed as a personal view, he argued. Non-affirmation must be treated as abuse. “If they were denying them food or denying them access to school or denying other things, there would be headlines,” Roque continued. “There would be prosecution.” Among gender activists the Biden-Harris administration has enlisted to shape its policies, Roque’s definition of abuse is not fringe, and his vision for reshaping the system is not hypothetical. While crafting its foster care rule finalized in April, HHS officials took inspiration from social workers in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, who spent years pioneering a program that strong-arms parents into affirming whatever confused beliefs children express about their gender. Parents who decline risk losing a voice in their child’s life. The program developed in Cuyahoga County using federal grant funds provided the HHS’ Administration for Children and Families with an ideal model for infusing gender ideology into foster care and social services, the Daily Caller News Foundation discovered in reviewing hundreds of documents and emails obtained via public record requests. The Biden-Harris administration’s new federal rule directs states to ensure foster children who identify as LGBTQ+ are placed in affirming homes. These “designated placements” must commit to creating an environment that supports a child’s “status or identity,” including through access to age-appropriate “resources, services, and activities.” To gender activists consulted by the Biden administration, being “affirming” means assuming the child knows best about his or her identity—even if what he or she claims to want is life-altering medical procedures like hormone blockers, cross-sex hormones, and surgeries to appear more like the opposite sex. To Cuyahoga County child protective services, being affirming often means providing kids access to items like chest binders or prosthetic packers that mimic a penis, according to an information sheet for caregivers on the Cuyahoga County Division of Children & Family Services website. Frequent communications with federal officials indicate Cuyahoga County played a prominent role in shaping the rule, which was just one part of a broader effort to support LGBTQ+ youth the agency undertook at the direction of President Joe Biden. But the voices of county social workers weren’t the only ones the agency heard. Julie Kruse, the Administration for Children and Families senior adviser for LGBTQI initiatives, who celebrated the Cuyahoga County team as “trailblazers,” reached out to dozens of other activists to weigh in on the agency’s efforts, emails obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation show. When the rule was announced in September 2023, it quickly faced resistance. A coalition of 19 Republican states slammed the proposed rule, arguing it would infringe on religious liberty and free speech protections. Religious groups warned it would restrict faith-based providers. Those concerns were well-founded: In states like Washington and Vermont, Christian couples have lost their foster care licenses due to similar state regulations. But as the activists consulted in the development of the federal rule show, these objections only scratch the surface of problems with the rule. Parents in a handful of states have already sounded the alarm, claiming local authorities deemed them unfit guardians for refusing to allow their children to undergo a gender transition. In light of federally funded programs, like the one operating in Cuyahoga County, stories like these sound more like harbingers of an organized effort to undermine the family than one-off incidents. Vernadette Broyles, president and general counsel of the Child and Parental Rights Campaign, told the Daily Caller News Foundation there has absolutely been “an uptick in families that are having their custody of their child taken away, investigated, or disrupted” because they believe in “biological reality.” “The underlying premise of the rule is that it is mistreatment and abuse if you do not affirm a child’s self-selected identity,” Rachel N. Morrison, director of the HHS Accountability Project at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “This premise is dangerous and could extend outside the foster care context to adoption, custody disputes, and schools.” Affirming LGBTQ+ children and youth in their gender expression document. (Kinnect/Affirm Me/ Cuyahoga County) ‘Conceptual Flaws’ At the tail end of the Obama administration, a group of researchers at the University of Maryland received a five-year, $10 million federal grant to establish a center aimed at supporting LGBTQ+ children in foster care. The idea was to work with child welfare agencies in multiple locations to develop “interventions” that ensured “affirming” placements for LGBTQ+ youth. The group established through the grant, cumbersomely known as the National Quality Improvement Center on Tailored Services, Placement Stability and Permanency for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Questioning, and Two-Spirit Children and Youth in Foster Care (QIC-LGBTQ2S), selected four implementation sites: Allegheny County in Pennsylvania, Cuyahoga County in Ohio, the state of Michigan, and Prince George’s County in Maryland. The Cuyahoga County site became particularly important, as federal officials drafting the rule later looked to it as a model for infusing gender ideology into foster care and social services. As Cuyahoga County Health and Human Services special project coordinator Jennifer Croessmann explained in a podcast interview quoted by the county, the aim was to “develop practices that inform everyone that understanding a youth’s SOGIE (and we all have one) is critical to determining their safety, stability, and service needs.” SOGIE is an acronym for sexual orientation, gender identity, and expression used frequently throughout the program’s materials. When the four-year grant project concluded in 2022, the agency boasted that the program had “provided a blueprint for Health and Human Services divisions throughout the nation to follow.” The county’s “AFFIRM.ME” model included four interventions: the first identifies LGBTQ+ youth, the second convinces parents to affirm their children, the third helps LGBTQ+ kids locate affirming adults in their circles, and the fourth trains prospective foster parents to become affirming. Though the grant has now ended, a county spokesperson confirmed elements of the program, including the Safe Identification and Youth Acceptance Project, are still used. “Programs like Affirm Me take for granted that affirmation is consistent with promoting the health and general welfare of a child, and conversely, that non-affirmation is akin to a form of emotional or psychological abuse,” Manhattan Institute Policy Analyst Joseph Figliolia told the Daily Caller News Foundation. These kinds of programs “are used to try and establish the intellectual architecture needed to advance policies that promote affirmation as the default intervention for gender dysphoria by linking it with the mental and emotional welfare of children,” Figliolia said. Yet, many studies cited in the federal foster care rule “rely on self-report surveys that cannot determine causality and often have other methodological or conceptual flaws,” Figliolia added. Affirm Me Theory of Change. (Cuyahoga County HHS Affirm Me Guide) Identification The first intervention is the “Safe Identification Initiative,” which is designed to identify LGBTQ+ youth. All youth over 13 years of age—along with some as young as 3—are to participate in a SOGIE conversation with their caseworker. The disclosure form walks the child through a series of leading questions about pronouns, feelings of gender, and expressions of gender. “Do you have crushes on boys, girls or other kinds of people?” one question asks. Another asks children to tell their social worker whether they “feel more like a boy or more like a girl, some other gender or maybe somewhere in between?” “The original goal was to serve LGBTQ+ youth, ages 12–21 in agency care, but the age range was later changed to 5–21 years old to account for younger children disclosing diverse gender identity or expression and to include youth involved with DCFS, not just those in the care of DCFS,” the county’s AFFIRM.ME guide states. Acceptance Once LGBTQ+ youth are identified, the Youth Acceptance Project can be implemented to persuade hesitant parents to affirm their child’s gender dysphoria. In an overview of the Youth Acceptance Project, the program’s creator, the California-based nonprofit Family Builders, touts the “success” story of a family who became involved with the system because they “struggled to accept their child as a transgender girl.” “After several months of work, there were significant improvements,” the document states. “The father consented to gender affirming medical care for Salima. The father gave Salima a purse for her birthday. And the father once helped Salima put on a wig.” The program is designed to help parents and caregivers of children already in the welfare system, or “at risk” of entering, become affirming, according to the AFFIRM.ME guide. The program also pushes families to “reconcile” their values, including their faith, to accept their child’s identity. Many caregivers are referred to the program because they are “not allowing their youth to express themselves fully in public (hairstyles, clothing, hygiene/ beauty products)” or resist using preferred pronouns and names, according to the Family Builders overview. The Youth Acceptance Project is currently being implemented in California, New York, Pennsylvania, and Missouri, along with Ohio, according to the SOGIE Center. Of the 34 Cuyahoga County families who started the program between 2018 and 2021, seven cases were successfully “closed” when parents stopped opposing their child’s gender-bending desires, according to SOGIE Center data. “I mean, they don’t say anything to my face anymore about it and they stopped being super religious around me because they used to,” said one young person who was part of the program in Spring 2021, according to the data sheet. “I don’t know what was their problem, but they used to try to push a lot of weird religion stuff on me.” Another adolescent reported having a “very conservative” family approve of transitioning after going through the Youth Acceptance Project. “So I could start testosterone and things of that sort soon,” the youth said. “And [mom is] helping me with the name change.” The Ohio-based nonprofit Kinnect, which received a contract from the state worth nearly $24 million, helped implement the Youth Acceptance Project in Cuyahoga County while the program was ongoing. “During the Affirm Me program, YAP was used as a prevention tool for young people who were at risk of leaving their caregiver’s home because of rejection,” Kinnect explains. When the grant ended, Frontline Services, a nonprofit that contracts with Cuyahoga County to provide homeless and trauma support services, “embedded the program as part of their existing work with the support and partnership of Family Builders,” according to Kinnect. Kinnect did not respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment. A Cuyahoga County spokesperson told the Daily Caller News Foundation the program works with LGBTQ+ youth or families who have an open case with the Division of Children & Family Services and desire additional support. “As with other supportive services offered by DCFS, this service is available to youth in county custody and those who remain in their homes in order to prevent them from coming into custody,” Cuyahoga County HHS deputy communications director Deonna Kirkpatrick told the Daily Caller News Foundation. Family Finding A third intervention helps foster children find adults who will affirm their identity and potentially become their legal caretaker, in some cases instead of their parents. Chosen Affirming Family Finding model, developed by Kinnect, helps LGBTQ+ youth “locate” affirming family members from existing connections, who can include “family, chosen family, or other important people that the young person has a relationship or contact with.” The ultimate goal is building “committed, life-long, and positive connections,” even if this is with “chosen family” and not blood relatives. “These connections lead to a robust network of affirming individuals who provide emotional and potentially legal permanency for LGBTQ+ young people,” the practice manual explains. During a first meeting, social workers ask questions, including who a young person “feel is their family,” would like to have in their lives, and are “current safe and affirming connections.” A report on the use of the Chosen Affirming Family Finding model in Cuyahoga County from 2019-2021 states that 12 youths completed the program, having an average of five identified connections joining their “network of support.” When the Affirm Me program ended in 2021, two other Ohio foster youth programs, Kinnect to Family and Youth-Centered Permanency Roundtables, have since integrated the Chosen Affirming Family Finding model into their programs “as a cultural adaptation to their work,” according to Kinnect’s website. Preparing Foster Parents The fourth program, called “AFFIRM Caregiver,” is designed to increase the number of homes available to LGBTQ+ youth already in the system by preparing foster parents to support kids in their care who desire to live as another gender, even if that means providing access to irreversible medical procedures. “The AFFIRM Caregiver model recognizes that pervasive exposure to homo/bi/transphobic attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors at multiple levels in society impacts the way caregivers may view and understand their child’s LGBTQ+ identity,” the Cuyahoga County guide states. “Through a variety of didactic and interactive activities delivered over seven sessions, the AFFIRM Caregiver model helps caregivers adopt an affirming approach toward their youth’s identity as a critical step toward creating safe and healthy environments for their LGBTQ+ youth.” A pre-test given to caregivers prior to the training asks them to rate their ability in areas like creating a “safe space” for LGBTQ+ youth or making “affirmative statements,” according to material obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation. Another form later asks caregivers how strongly they would support behaviors associated with different gender identities. “I would take my child to a medical facility for hormone treatment that would help them look like a different gender if that’s what they wanted,” one statement reads. Parents are also asked if they “display pro-LGBTQ+ symbols” in their home or would allow their child to bring a “same-gender significant other to family events and celebrations.” Chosen Affirming Family Finding test. (Daily Caller News Foundation) ‘Promising Model for Replication’ As the HHS developed its rule, grant-funded researchers who established the QIC-LGBTQ2S center helped connect federal officials with the team operating in Cuyahoga County. Angela Weeks, project director for the center, made the introduction in May 2023. Weeks told the county team that HHS senior adviser Julie Kruse had closely followed the work and was “really impressed with all that you did at Cuyahoga County,” according to an email obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation. “She would like to bring in ACF leadership to hear from you, including Assistant Secretary January Contreras,” Weeks said. Kruse quickly followed up on Weeks’ introduction by heaping praise on the Cuyahoga County group, calling them “trailblazers” and letting them know their work was “very appreciated at ACF.” The email exchange led to a June 9 call with Kruse and an invitation to present to Contreras in July. Emails indicate the Cuyahoga County team understood its conversation with HHS leadership to be part of fulfilling a direct charge to the agency from Biden, who announced in a 2023 Pride Month statement that the HHS would advance rulemaking designed to “protect LGBTQI+ youth in foster care” by requiring state agencies to provide affirming placements. In preparation for the July call, the Cuyahoga County team put together a presentation agenda to explain why its program was “a promising model for replication.” One staff member shared “real life experiences” from implementing the interventions, according to an agenda obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation. The team was thrilled to speak to the administration. “You’re obviously a group of rock stars!” Karen Anderson, deputy director of resources and placement at the Division of Children & Family Services, wrote in a July 7 email to Kruse. “This is life saving work and we are grateful that this administration is so thoughtfully considering how to imbed it inpolicy [sic]” Kinnect included the meeting in its August 2023 newsletter, sharing that the organization was invited to participate in a meeting about affirming LGBTQ+ youth with federal officials at HHS. The feeling was mutual. Catherine Heath at the Administration for Children and Families’ Children’s Bureau emailed the county group that participated in the July call to thank it for a “great virtual site visit.” She also noted a previous visit she made to Cuyahoga County had been important. “We put many aspects of your work into the latest Program Instructions issued to states,” Heath said. The July meeting wasn’t the last time the Cuyahoga County team interfaced with federal officials. Members of the team also agreed to participate in an interview with Mathematica, a research and data analytics consultancy firm contracted by the Administration for Children and Families to visit child welfare agencies to learn about data practices “that could potentially help develop nationwide requirements for SOGIE data collection,” per an email obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation. In September 2023, Kruse emailed multiple individuals from the Division of Children & Family Services and Kinnect to invite their comments on the proposed rule and help them “identify LGBTQI+ foster and adoptive parents” who could talk to top officials. Family Builders, which developed the Youth Acceptance Project, submitted public comments on the proposed foster care regulation in November 2023, telling the agency that offering religious exemptions would provide a “license to discriminate and to do harm.” “Any provider that is unwilling to provide safe and proper care for youth who are LGBTQI+ are unable to provide safe and proper care to any youth,” it advised. “We recommend all placement providers and child welfare agencies be held to a standard of care where they are prohibited from discrimination based on all protected classes, including sexual orientation, sex, and gender.” Kinnect also submitted a public comment in support of the proposed rule. HHS modified the final rule’s wording in response to some concerns raised by faith-based groups, calling providers for children who identify as LGBTQ+ “designated placements” rather than “safe and appropriate.” It also noted the rule does not require religious foster parents to become designated placements. The final rule must be implemented by October 2026, according to the federal register. Administration for Children and Families spokesperson Pat Fisher told the Daily Caller News Foundation the administration considered each of the nearly 14,000 comments it received while developing its final rule. He said the ACF “believes that all children deserve to grow up in a safe home.” “For most children, that is with their parents, which is why ACF has invested substantially in funding supports and services to parents in order to maintain family unity and prevent entry into foster care,” he said. “For all youth that do enter the foster care system, including those who are LGBTQI+, federal law requires they receive safe and proper care.” A Cuyahoga County spokesperson told the Daily Caller News Foundation that the Division of Children & Family Services “has not confirmed what influence its program had on the federal rule.” Intertwined Work To become a “designated placement” for LGBTQ+ children, HHS’ final rule also requires foster parents to “be trained with the appropriate knowledge and skills to provide for the needs of the child related to the child’s self-identified sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression.” While the rule does not identify specific training, many of the resources developed through the QIC-LGBTQ2S center can now be found directly on the Administration for Children and Families’ Children’s Bureau website. For instance, the website lists the Youth Acceptance Project and Chosen Affirming Family Finding interventions developed in Cuyahoga County. It also lists the National Center for Youth with Diverse Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity & Expression (SOGIE), which is run by many of the same individuals who previously lead the QIC-LGBTQ2S center, including principal investigator Marlene Matarese and project director Angela Weeks. The SOGIE Center is an effort led by the Innovations Institute at the University of Connecticut School of Social Work. Its website houses materials developed through QIC-LGBTQ2S, including the Cuyahoga County interventions. The SOGIE Center’s work is likewise heavily intertwined with the Administration for Children and Families. Weeks is featured in a training session on sexual orientation and gender for agency staff. The SOGIE Center also influenced the foster care rule. In a comment on the proposed foster care regulation, the Innovations Institute recommended the agency require affirming placements for all children, not just those who identify as LGBTQ+. It suggested having placements and staff undergo LGBTQ+ trainings, advising the Administration for Children and Families to look at trainings offered by its own SOGIE Center. The Innovations Institute wrote in its comment that it is best practice to ask children as young as 6 about their gender identity, noting “this identity component forms as early as two-years-old.” The final rule released in April cites the federally funded research conducted by activists tied to the SOGIE Center. A study on Cuyahoga County authored by Weeks, along with Matarese, Elizabeth Greeno, and Paige Hammond, is cited multiple times. The study was funded through the QIC-LGBTQ2S and cites “intersectionality, queer theory, and minority stress theory” as its guiding frameworks. It surveyed 252 youth in the foster care system, finding 32% of those surveyed had a “diverse SOGIE.” The regulation also cites a literature review co-authored by Matarese, titled “Youth with Diverse Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Expression in Child Welfare: A Review of Best Practices,” which was also produced through the federally funded QIC-LGBTQ2S, according to the document. The ties between these activists also predate the Biden administration. In 2019, the Biden Foundation also partnered with the University of Maryland, Baltimore School of Social Work, where the QIC-LGBTQ2S center was based, to make a video on affirming youth. This is a clip teaching a dad to ‘affirm’ his sons choice to be a girl from a 2019 video that was part of the Biden Foundation ‘As You Are’ campaign. No one should be surprised how hard this administration is pushing transgender ideology onto children and families. pic.twitter.com/1vVYqtPvvn— Meg Brock (@MegEBrock) December 8, 2023 The Affirm Me program should raise “further alarm” about the foster care rule, American Principles Project President Terry Schilling told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “The purpose of such programs is clearly to ensure that gender-confused foster kids are funneled into environments where their confusion is only further reinforced, while also excluding potential foster parents who wish to help their children become comfortable in their own bodies,” he said. While the rule only applies to foster care, Schilling said “families of all stripes should be very concerned about what a Harris presidency might have in store next.” Non-Affirmation as Abuse  Lifeline Children’s Services, a Chrisitan nonprofit that supports foster youth and families, opposed the rule when it was announced, in part due to a concern that biological families’ opinions about where their child is placed would be ignored. The organization told the Daily Caller News Foundation it was alarmed to see government entities at both the federal and state level labeling people of faith as “unsafe.” “Foster homes are not public squares; they are private homes that deserve the basic religious freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution, as every other American home,” the group told the Daily Caller News Foundation. In recent years, there have been multiple reported instances of parents losing their children to the foster system because they did not affirm a transgender identity. Maryland parents lost custody of their autistic son after staff at the Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C., informed them he was transgender, according to a lawsuit filed in March. Officials told them to “remove passages from their Bibles that affirm traditional sexual values” and refused to return their son until “they renounced their lifetime faith,” the complaint alleges. The child’s parents reside in one of the four locations—Prince George’s County, Maryland—that was an implementation site for the QIC-LGBTQ2S center grant. In Montana, another family allegedly lost their teenage daughter to child protective services when they did not allow her to live as a boy, Reduxx reported in January. In California, the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services took a 14-year-old girl from her mother’s home because she would not affirm her daughter’s desire to transition to a boy, according to The Daily Signal. Officials accused the mother of emotional abuse and put her daughter in a foster home. An Ohio judge granted custody to a transgender-identifying teen’s grandparents in 2018 after the parents opposed her wishes to begin hormone therapy and denied her identity as a male. The judge wrote their daughter had “a legitimate right to pursue life with a different gender identity than the one assigned at birth.” Broyles’ organization, the Child and Parental Rights Campaign, is currently handling one case involving a California family whose child was taken by child protective services. She is familiar with several similar cases in other states. “Because juvenile courts or dependency proceedings are shrouded in secrecy, we have no real idea how much this is happening,” Broyles told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “But given this Ohio program and given what the Biden administration and HHS has been putting out there as guidance for states, there’s no question in my mind that this is happening in a substantial way.” The Biden administration’s rule creates an assumption that parents who have a scientific or religious belief that there are two genders are emotionally abusive—or worse, failing to provide for their child’s needs, she said. As schools increasingly embrace gender ideology, parents may face greater threats than policies against disclosing when a child identifies as transgender. Teachers are mandated reporters who are obligated to call child protective services if they believe a parent is inflicting harm, Broyles noted. “The only reason why we’re not seeing it on a mass scale is that somewhere inside they know that’s not true,” she said. “Some common sense inside them is questioning the truth of that assertion, however, you can imagine that there’s going to be some number of school officials that don’t question it.” “I totally see parents being at a much higher risk right now for school systems becoming their adversary and being the conduit through which child protective services now begins to interfere with their families,” she said. Kinnect’s executive director did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Kruse, Weeks, and Matarese also did not respond to requests for comment. Originally published by the Daily Caller News Foundation The post Biden-Harris Admin Paves Way for Bureaucrats to Take Gender-Confused Kids From ‘Non-Affirming’ Parents appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Pet Life
Pet Life
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Stray Cat Picks the Right Home for a Meal, Later They Discover She Has Many Kittens to Feed
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Stray Cat Picks the Right Home for a Meal, Later They Discover She Has Many Kittens to Feed

A stray cat picked the right home for a meal. Later, they discovered she had many kittens to feed. OrianaBestFriendsFelinesA cream tabby had been living on the streets for a long time, "diving into the drain to avoid neighborhood kids chasing her."One night, a stroke of luck led her to the doorstep of a kind family who offered her food. "Hungry, she kept returning morning and night to be fed and started sleeping over," a local rescue, Best Friends Felines, shared.As the cat warmed up to the family, they noticed her insatiable appetite and friendly nature and devised a plan to help her. BestFriendsFelinesKnown as the local "street cat," she remained unclaimed, and no microchip was found. "The kind people took her to the vet, where she was found pregnant; no wonder she was hungry!"She had been scrounging the neighborhood for extra meals until she encountered the caring family. BestFriendsFelinesWhen they contacted Best Friends Felines, volunteers at the rescue swiftly arranged a foster home and welcomed in the friendly stray named Oriana.Oriana felt right at home, weaving around her carer's legs, begging for a head scratch. Delighted with her arrangements, she plopped her plump belly down on the floor, rolling around and filling the room with purrs. "I didn't think such a round kitty could sploot." BestFriendsFelinesBefore long, she fell fast asleep in the comfort of her room, with her outstretched limbs reaching for the stars. "Oriana is a very sweet and cuddly cat and settled in very fast. She loves head rubs and will snuggle right into you."After a few days in foster care, her purr grew louder, and her belly expanded, seemingly ready to pop. BestFriendsFelinesShe kept her carers on their toes, rearranging the blankets several times a day. They couldn't help but wonder how many little lives were brewing inside.Shortly after they shared an update about Oriana, wondering when the kittens would arrive, she decided it was go time. She gave birth to five little kittensBestFriendsFelinesWhile most cats prefer to give birth overnight in a dark, quiet place - an instinct to keep themselves and the babies from harm's way - Oriana delivered her five in the daytime with her carers by her side."Oriana decided to have her kittens in the middle of the room, where she could be closest to her carers, rather than tucked away in one of the cozy 'den' areas that had been set up. She must be feeling pretty safe here, further showing off her friendly and trusting nature." BestFriendsFelinesBy nighttime, Oriana finally approved the "den" and moved her babies one by one into the nest. "It helps to keep the kittens contained and safe while they're still so little."All five bundles of joy turned out to have the same color pattern. "Oriana did a copy and paste with them, as they are all gorgeous little dilute calico girls, mostly gray with hints of white and cream." BestFriendsFelinesWith Mama's complete devotion to her litter, the kittens are gaining weight, showing off their rotund bellies, and wiggling around with newfound strength."We weigh them every morning to keep a close eye on weight. Oriana is clearly taking great care of her babies. They're chunky, clean, and nearly always in a contented, quiet kitten puddle unless they're calling for the milk bar." BestFriendsFelines"She is also a rather chill mother, content to relax and hang out in her room away from the kittens after their needs are met. She loves to greet her carers with a little chatter and purr, head boop and snuggle."Oriana is full of gratitude whenever her people enter the room, offering the warmest cuddles and sweetest purrs she can muster. BestFriendsFelinesWith a second chance, the family of six is thriving. No more running through the streets, fighting to survive - Oriana and her kittens will now enjoy the comfort of a loving home and the promise of a brighter future. BestFriendsFelinesShare this story with your friends. More on Oriana, her kittens, and Best Friends Felines on Instagram and Facebook.Related story: Stray Cat Steps into a Home for the First Time After Being Outside for Years, His World Completely Changes
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Hot Air Feed
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Tim Walz: Vote for Me Because I Haven't Got a Clue About Economics
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Tim Walz: Vote for Me Because I Haven't Got a Clue About Economics

Tim Walz: Vote for Me Because I Haven't Got a Clue About Economics
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The Blaze Media Feed
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Kids can't draw scary faces
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Kids can't draw scary faces

My kids love to draw. They are always setting up shop at the kitchen table. Commandeering the place we eat for their own artistic creations. Some days it feels like the floor is permanently littered with colored pencils and markers. Every night when the whole family cleans the house after dinner, we always discover some stragglers. The other day, our son accidentally whacked his sister in the face when they were playing outside. She cried pretty bad. He’s such a good kid, he didn’t mean to.An orange pencil under the piano. A green crayon at the bottom of the laundry. A blue marker in the bathroom. How the hell did a marker get in the bathroom? Oh, someone drew on the wall.Ferocious beastsThe kids draw all sorts of things. Cars, trucks, animals, people, our family. They also try to draw scary pictures. They draw monsters. They draw ferocious beasts with big claws. But they can’t draw scary faces. They don’t shake me. They don’t send a shiver up my spine or make me want to look away. They make me smile in a terribly sad way.Kids just can’t draw scary faces. And why is that? They try and try, but they can’t. A vampire with a little fang hanging out of his mouth. The other side of his lips curl up in a little smile. His eyes are a little misshapen and asymmetrical. His face is soft and funny. Kind and cute. It was the scariest thing my son could draw, and it wasn’t scary at all. He excitedly shows us his drawing, and we pretend to be scared. “Ooohhh that is scary! A vampire!” But we aren’t scared. I feel that lump in my throat. It’s a rush of confusing feelings that all come at the same time, and I can’t explain any of them. And truthfully, I don’t want to either. This boiling hot ball of feeling makes me feel so good and so bad. I am so happy and so sad.A very long timeKids can’t draw scary faces because they haven’t seen scary things. They haven’t seen a scary world. They are innocent. They are pure. They live in the world that we create for them. We protect them. We don’t tell them scary things, and we don’t show them scary movies. When they ask when we are going to die, we tell them that we aren’t going to die for a very long time and that they don’t have to worry about that.Their world is sweet and kind. Simple. Even when they are mad, they don’t know how mad you can really be. The knob goes all the way up to 10, but they think it only goes to 3. 'Even when I'm old'The other day, our son accidentally whacked his sister in the face when they were playing outside. She cried pretty bad. He’s such a good kid, he didn’t mean to. He said that he’s never going to forget it. “Even when I’m old, I’m going to remember it,” he said.They read old books and old fairy tales. There are scary drawings of witches and giants. My son is currently obsessed with dragons. He has this red toy dragon that he loves. It looks pretty fierce. It has a split tongue that sticks out through razor sharp teeth. But still, he can’t translate that onto paper. He can’t draw a scary face. They are always cute. They are always happy. The world as he feels it betrays what he aims to draw. We can’t be someone we are not. We can’t feel something we don’t know. They can’t draw scary faces because they don’t know them. They don’t feel them. They aren’t them. They are innocent. They are small. They are sweet. We, on the other hand, are sullied. We are corrupted. We are conniving. We are ugly and hateful. We are liars and cheats. Children remind us that we are not, in fact, good. It’s easy for me to draw a scary face. Just give me a pencil.Layer after layerWe hang all their pictures around the kitchen. We have a line of string lights that run from one wall to another. We hang them up there. My God, there are so many dangling, barely holding on under the weak pressure of these little micro-clothespins. We keep adding to our collection every day. They keep bringing them to us. Layer after layer on top of one another.The world is tragic. Things go so wrong. Why do they have to go so wrong? I don’t know. But when I see those little drawings, I smile somewhere inside. Their little hands drew those little faces. They try so hard to make them scary. But they can’t, and it’s adorable, and I love them for it. I stare at them, and I think of how different I am than they are. How much worse I am. And, of course, they make me so sad because they aren’t going to be innocent forever. They will eventually grow up and see a scary world, and they will know how to draw scary faces.
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Motorist allegedly tries to run over trio standing on home's lawn after argument. Driver's downfall? One victim has a gun.
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Motorist allegedly tries to run over trio standing on home's lawn after argument. Driver's downfall? One victim has a gun.

A motorist in Columbus, Ohio, earlier this month allegedly tried to run over three people who were standing on a home's lawn after an argument.But one of driver's alleged targets was carrying a gun — and the victim's aim was true.'Let this be a lesson. Don't bring a car to a gunfight.'Police said 32-year-old Alexander Oglesby after an argument "used his vehicle as a weapon, driving it off the roadway in an attempt to strike the three victims" in the 1800 block of Noe Bixby Road around 2 a.m. Oct. 5. Police added that "tire tracks at the scene show that Mr. Oglesby drove at the victims, who were approximately 40 yards away in the grass in front of their residence. One of the victims fired shots at Mr. Oglesby in self-defense and struck Mr. Oglesby. He was taken to an area hospital and treated for the injury."Police said Oglesby was charged with three counts of felonious assault and taken to the Franklin County Jail. According to jail records, Oglesby on Tuesday was still incarcerated.Police also said those with information about the incident are asked to contact Columbus Police Felony Assault Det. Reffitt #222 at 614-645-4323 or Central Ohio Crime Stoppers at 614-461-TIPS (8477) — and that callers may remain anonymous.How are observers reacting?A handful of commenters underneath WCMH-TV's Facebook post about the incident completely backed up the person who pulled the trigger:"Yeaaa, right, guns are the problem," one commenter noted sarcastically."Let this be a lesson," another user warned with tongue planted firmly in cheek. "Don't bring a car to a gunfight.""The gun grabbers hate stories like this," another commenter declared.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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M.I.A. explains why artists like Cardi B are destroying the music industry: 'What is cool is Satan’s playground'
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M.I.A. explains why artists like Cardi B are destroying the music industry: 'What is cool is Satan’s playground'

British rapper and record producer M.I.A. recently made an appearance on James Poulos’ “Zero Hour.” The duo broached a number of subjects, including the “Paper Planes” singer’s anti-Big Tech clothing line OHMNI, therapy addiction in the West, tyranny in the U.K., and, of course, the music industry. On the latter subject, M.I.A. was candid about the decline of music due to the influence of Satanism and the AI programming that paves the path for it. - YouTube www.youtube.com “Where do you see music going? And do you think music is doing what it needs to be doing for us as human beings?” Poulos asked. “Music is healing, and it can change a lot of people’s mood or vibe ... and I think it’s been hijacked because it became a business,” M.I.A. explained, adding that as an artist, “You have to put [your music] through the channel of an industry [where] it gets corrupted.” “This is the image that has to be put with this song, and a girl has to look like this, and she has to do this dance,” she said, regurgitating what artists are told by producers and marketing personnel. As a newer Christian, M.I.A. pointed to Satan as the root cause of the music industry’s degeneracy. “Satan was the director of music, you know? It is a great tool to get to people because music directly accesses your spirit, so you bypass the mind and your soul and your logic,” she told Poulos. “There's a level of responsibility to practice when you make music and a level of knowledge you have to have.” She explained that “what is cool” in our modern culture “is never that.” “What is cool is Satan’s playground,” she remarked. Unfortunately, artificial intelligence has also become integral to the music industry. While M.I.A. says that AI in and of itself is basically “a fun toy,” the programmers of AI are what’s problematic. Being keenly aware of what sells, these people design AI to essentially do Satan’s bidding. She points to popular musicians Cardi B and Ice Spice – who are likely popular because they’re “skirting very close to porn” – as examples. “It’s like merging Only Fans and the music industry is where we’re at,” she said, adding that this is why she’s “taking a time out.” To hear more of the conversation, watch the clip above. Want more from James Poulos?To enjoy more of James's visionary commentary on politics, tech, ideas, and culture, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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13-year-old tragically crushed to death at haunted hayride in Minnesota
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13-year-old tragically crushed to death at haunted hayride in Minnesota

A 13-year-old was crushed to death by a trolley wagon being pulled by a tractor at a haunted hayride event in Minnesota. The Stearns County Sheriff’s Office said they received a call at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday about a boy being injured after being run over at the hayride in St. Augusta. Despite their efforts to save his life, the boy was pronounced dead at the scene. 'Hold your babies tight. I would do anything to hold my baby again.' Police said that several members of staff and bystanders tried to save his life, including an off-duty police officer and an off-duty medic. The boy was later identified as Alexander "Xander" Mick, an eighth-grader at Sauk Rapids-Rice Middle School. A post on social media from the Harvest of Horror Haunted Hayride said the attraction is shutting down for the season out of respect for the victim and his family. The owner of the hayride told KMSP-TV that he was good friends with the father of the child because they were both teachers at a high school. He said Xander's father, who is a music teacher, was organizing the event to help pay for a choir trip, and his son had come along to help his dad. "Xander was an amazingly unique child who loved Jesus with all his heart and is happily in the arms of Jesus right now," said Teri Dahlberg Mick, the boy's mother. A GoFundMe donation page has been set up to help the family pay for his funeral costs. "Hold your babies tight. I would do anything to hold my baby again," said the mom on Facebook. Video and images from the hayride can be viewed on the news video report from KMSP on YouTube. 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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WATCH: Tim Walz Makes an Absolute KNUCKLEHEAD of Himself Trying to Dunk on J.D. Vance
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WATCH: Tim Walz Makes an Absolute KNUCKLEHEAD of Himself Trying to Dunk on J.D. Vance

WATCH: Tim Walz Makes an Absolute KNUCKLEHEAD of Himself Trying to Dunk on J.D. Vance
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Kamala's Husband Offers a Really Strange Glimpse into Their Very Weird Marriage
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Kamala's Husband Offers a Really Strange Glimpse into Their Very Weird Marriage

Kamala's Husband Offers a Really Strange Glimpse into Their Very Weird Marriage
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