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Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
43 w

Trump Shares Why He Had To Go Back To Butler After Rally Shooting
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Trump Shares Why He Had To Go Back To Butler After Rally Shooting

Former President Donald Trump said “unfinished business” drew him back to Butler, Pennsylvania, after he survived an assassination attempt there at a campaign rally in July. During an interview on Fox News, “Sunday Morning Futures” host Maria Bartiromo asked Trump about his rally last weekend in the same place a bullet struck his ear nearly three months prior. “Why did you have to go back to Butler?” Bartiromo queried. BARITOROMO: "Why did you have to go back to Butler?… You started with 'as I was saying.'" PRES. TRUMP: "Unfinished business I think… It was a beautiful thing because the audience understood it immediately." pic.twitter.com/beweZVF5ii — Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) October 13, 2024 Before Trump could answer, Bartiromo added, “I liked the way you started: ‘As I was saying.'” She was referencing how Trump re-introduced a chart on illegal immigration that he credits with saving his life because he turned his head to it just as the gunman opened fire. “Yea, unfinished business, I think,” Trump told Bartiromo in response to her question. In reference to the chart, Trump said, “I wasn’t sure if I should start it that way, but I guess it was a good thing.” He added, “It was a beautiful, too, because the audience understood it immediately,” alluding to the cheers in the audience when he brought the chart back out. Trump also talked about a moment of silence last weekend at the same time of day the shooting took place at his rally on July 13. It was a gesture that honored Corey Comperatore, a fireman who was killed in the shooting, which also injured Trump and other attendees. The gunman was killed by Secret Service counter-snipers. “We had a moment of silence, and then we had the great bells of Notre Dame. We had a taping of the great bells of Notre Dame,” Trump told Bartiromo. “You heard the bells going. And there are no bells like that in the village. So we had the great bells,” he added. Trump went on to discuss a performance of “Ave Maria” by classical singer Christopher Macchio. “And then we had a — Christopher, a great opera singer. And he sang ‘Ave Maria.’ And it — and I was looking at this massive audience,” Trump said. Trump continued, “Half of the people were crying. I mean, it was incredible. Everybody. I mean, the place was going wild.”
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Daily Wire Feed
43 w

Mayorkas: It’s ‘Disinformation’ To Suggest Admin Intentionally Encouraged Illegal Immigration
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Mayorkas: It’s ‘Disinformation’ To Suggest Admin Intentionally Encouraged Illegal Immigration

Embattled Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas claimed over the weekend that it was “disinformation” to claim that the Biden-Harris administration was intentionally trying to bring illegal aliens into the U.S. so they could vote in U.S. elections. Mayorkas, who had falsely claimed for years that the U.S. southern border was secure, made the remarks during a Sunday interview on CBS News’ “Face The Nation” with host Margaret Brennan when she noted that the majority of Republicans believe that the Biden-Harris administration is intentionally allowing illegal aliens into the country. “Our CBS polling shows 65% of Trump voters believe the Biden administration is trying to intentionally increase the number of migrants at the border,” she said. She continued, “And among the people who do believe that, three quarters of them say it’s because the administration wants them to vote, and the Speaker of the House just told us that he thinks noncitizens are going to vote.” Mayorkas claimed that the belief was a “powerful example of disinformation.” “There is no facts underlying these assertions,” he claimed, despite illegal immigration into the U.S. sharply spiking once the Biden-Harris administration took office. “They are extremely damaging,” he claimed. “It causes people to lose confidence in the integrity of the election system, and we need people in positions of authority to actually communicate accurate information to the voting public.” WATCH: Harris-Biden DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas says the documented cases of illegal aliens voting in U.S. elections are a “powerful example of disinformation” that “causes people to lose confidence” in elections ? pic.twitter.com/qvFpETlL8B — Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) October 13, 2024 The Biden-Harris administration issued 94 executive orders on immigration in its first 100 days in office that undid the Trump administration’s border policies. “And the notion, the notion, that we in law enforcement have sought the, to intentionally allow individuals to cross the border illegally for the purpose of voting is preposterous,” he claimed. “And everyone should condemn that rhetoric, everyone, regardless of party affiliation,” he added. WATCH: Mayorkas says it’s “preposterous” to suggest the Harris-Biden administration would “intentionally allow individuals to cross the border illegally.” They took 94 executive actions in their first 100 days to dismantle President Trump’s border security — that’s intentional. pic.twitter.com/Y23USDcYgG — RNC Research (@RNCResearch) October 13, 2024
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Hot Air Feed
43 w

Sunday Smiles
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Sunday Smiles

Sunday Smiles
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NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
43 w

PBS or MSNBC? 'News Hour' Pundits Hit Shameless GOP for Hurricane Misinformation
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PBS or MSNBC? 'News Hour' Pundits Hit Shameless GOP for Hurricane Misinformation

The Friday night pundits on the PBS News Hour worried out loud about how Kamala Harris is slipping, and David Brooks upset Jonathan Capehart by saying it was a “major mistake” for Harris to say she’d do nothing differently than Biden. But at the end, they came back around to screaming about hurricane disinformation from the Republicans. Anchor Geoff Bennett touted a “great piece” on misinformation attacking the Republicans. Bennett began with a bizarre tweet from Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene implying nefarious people can control the weather: GEOFF BENNETT: And we have seen how the response has been hampered by just a torrent of misinformation and disinformation from Donald Trump and others, to include Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Republican from Georgia, who claimed the federal government can control the weather. You know, Charlie Warzel of The Atlantic has a great piece, where he says, this isn't just a misinformation crisis. It's something darker. It's a cultural assault on institutions and individuals that operate in reality. How do you see this moment that we're living in? It's only natural that PBS would tout The Atlantic, since PBS agreed to let the Atlantic take over its Washington Week show, and The Atlantic just endorsed Kamala for President. Warzel argues there are the good guys -- scientists, journalists, people who deal in reality -- and the bad guys -- MAGA. They're just mad Kamala is losing, and blame reality deniers. Warzel wrote: Misinformation is too technical, too freighted, and, after almost a decade of Trump, too political. Nor does it explain what is really happening, which is nothing less than a cultural assault on any person or institution that operates in reality. If you are a weatherperson, you’re a target. The same goes for journalists, election workers, scientists, doctors, and first responders.  Bennett threw a softball to Jonathan Capehart so he could go Full Stelter: "Well, one, let's just call it what it is. I will call it what it is. It's not just misinformation and disinformation. It's lies. Lies that are putting people's lives at risk, that is tearing apart communities, people who are in danger, who are at the most stressful point in their lives trying to outrun a hurricane and being told that your government is not — where you pay taxes, your government's not coming to help you, your government is giving money away to other people?" Capehart demanded the Republicans rebuke their own for questioning FEMA's response. Everyone should just acknowledge Team Biden has done well: "I give the governors of Georgia and Florida, the Republican governors of Georgia and Florida credit for saying the Biden administration has been very helpful, pushing back against the misinformation. But I want Republicans to be more direct in saying, who's feeding the — who's feeding the disinformation and the lies and to hold that person accountable." PBS pretends only strange Republicans tout weather-control conspiracies, when right in Washington DC, they never noticed in 2018 when Democrat city councilman Trayon White warning during a snowfall of the “climate control” of the Rothschilds (Jewish bankers). If PBS had an actual conservative pundit, they could point out Democrat disinformation, or rebut Warzel. But you have two pundits who just want to bash Trump and MTG the Weather Girl all day and into the weekend.  BENNETT: Is there any way back from this, when we have this ecosystem that exists where people actually believe that the federal government can control the weather, something as nonsensical as that, seriously?  I mean, it's an indictment of our time. DAVID BROOKS: Well, each party has to police their own side, and Republicans have failed at that big time since 2015. I think the larger question for me is, the rise of Donald Trump shows it's an advantage to have no conscience, that you can rise and succeed in America, both in his business career and in now in his political career,if you actually have no conception of right or wrong, you only have a conception of yourself. And that's sort of a disturbing lesson for a generation to come. PBS sounds like MSNBC. But we pay for it. 
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
43 w

What I learned from having 3 kids under 3
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What I learned from having 3 kids under 3

Implausibly, October is here. My eldest turned four yesterday. Dare I say that disbelief at the pace of the passing of time — whether the unbearably long days or the unfathomably short years — is a universal maternal experience? Oh, the melancholia of motherhood ... the slippery seconds, the diamonds raining from the sky, the inability to catch them in your hands for longer than a moment. Because our social lives as moms have been so hollowed out by technology and the changing participation of women in the workplace, all of these little things in their little ways now require courage, consistency, and creativity. Now that I no longer have three three and under, I thought I’d share my lessons learned from the experience, because people often ask how I manage. I don’t know if I’ll ever feel fully qualified to proffer parental wisdom. The proof of the pudding is in the eating, and my kids are underbaked. But in terms of keeping one’s sanity and smoothing day-to-day operations, I think I have some helpful tips to share. My advice boils down to three virtues: courage, consistency, and creativity. Courage Victim mentality is the antithesis of courage. It is pervasive, and it is practically, spiritually corrosive. Reject it. One of the defining spirits of the modern age — unfortunately for everyone — is that which defines the self as a perpetual victim of circumstance and makes appeals to others, for pity or provision, on those terms. This is the heart of identity politics, and of leftism generally, and so plays a major role in formal political discourse domestically and internationally. But the political right is not a stranger to this pattern of thought. In fact, self-identified right-wing people often indulge it while they denigrate it in others. Take for example the ascendant “ meninist” movement, which in many cases has retained the icon of victimhood but simply switched its subjects from women to men. As a Catholic, I cringe to see the same tendency in reactionary traditionalist movements that seem to relish their status as perpetually persecuted. Social media enables it by structurally prioritizing talk over action. Victim mentality is dangerous, especially at scale. I would argue that it paves the way for totalitarianism. This mindset arrests the individual’s capacity to self-govern and achieve real things in the real world by redistributing responsibility through externalizing locus of control. It relieves persons and groups of the culpability and consequences of their actions. To a mind colonized by a victim narrative, free will is alien, and the triumph of the will over challenges big and small is regarded as impossible. If someone succeeds, it must have been either a matter of luck or corrupt scheming. But rarely does victim mentality result in true openness to the circumstances of life; instead, it encourages what Nietzsche called slave morality: cowardice, passive aggression, pathological consumption, and parasitical claims on the goods and services of others to compensate for one’s own impotence and discomfort. Modern mothers are no exceptions to the zeitgeist. We are all subject to mainstream media and cultural narratives encouraging us to indulge our own sense of victimhood when things get hard. The nature of modern technology encourages passivity. And if we aren’t careful, we can wallow. Life is unfair. No one is helping me. My husband doesn’t do enough for me. Society doesn’t do enough for me. My kids don’t do enough for me. There’s no sense in trying; things will never get better. This is too hard. It’s easy to indulge because it’s plausible and because selfishness is wired into humanity’s genetic code. Raising children under the current socioeconomic conditions can be a real challenge. Sometimes our kids scream through the grocery store from entry to exit without ceasing, responding neither to discipline nor to desperate pleas for cooperation. Sometimes our husbands disappoint us. Sometimes our efforts seem futile, and the “payoff” for maternal investment remains unclear for a very long time, by definition. But it has been so unspeakably important, in my experience, to resist the temptation to indulge these kinds of thoughts because they lead directly to passivity, despair, and consumerism. We can confront and negotiate the problems in our lives, and even the selfishness of other people, without allowing ourselves to self-identify, explicitly or implicitly, as victims. In order to resist, we must put ourselves in the driver’s seat. Stop complaining. This is the one-way street to victim mentality. Realize that however much we may be disappointed by others, we disappoint them too. If we must negotiate our problem, orient speech toward action. Evaluate circumstances objectively, and wonder at, first and foremost, possibilities for action. Seek, and ye shall find. If you seek reasons to despair, you will find them. If you seek reasons to push, to reach higher, to go deeper, to forebear, to love, and to have courage, you will find them. This is a fundamental mindset shift toward positivity and production rather than negativity and consumption. Find the courage to fail. Believe in the possibility of action and results, and make goals — but choose action despite the possibility of failure. Objectively observe your own role in the order-to-chaos ratio of your life. How can you improve for the sake of improvement regardless of how you might be immediately gratified? Consistency An object in motion stays in motion. Take this literally and figuratively. One of my earlier essays covers how retraining my brain to operate like an athlete’s made me a better mom. In terms of mindset, this dovetails perfectly with what I’ve just written about victim mentality and goes farther to emphasize the importance of literal physical activity. I cannot overstate the degree to which prioritizing my physical health, mostly by lifting heavy almost every day, has given my days structure and magnified my energy in every other area of my life. This principle works just as well for intellectual goals as for bodily goals. Whenever I feel depressed or anxious, exercise is the silver bullet. But how do you find the time? Simple: Choose it, and stop making excuses. Establish routine and structure, buoyed by the resolute determination to get out of the house every single day. Holding myself to this simple principle by continuously making the choice to embrace the annoying transition from the house to the car to the stroller and back again has done wonders for my mental and physical health. If you can simply make consistent movement a habit, it compounds. Over time, it becomes pleasurable. Creativity Find your community, no matter how unconventional the means. The final helpful lifestyle shift that I believe is foundational to a good motherhood experience is twofold: creativity and community. These things go together. Creativity fosters community, and community fosters creativity. When you find what you love to create, it attracts like-minded people. When you find people you love, you will be energized to create on their behalf. To make community work in the modern world, one must be willing to be creative in pursuit of it. A combination of the previous mindset shifts (“I have agency over my circumstances, and I can move freely in the world to achieve my goals”) must be present as well as a willingness to try new things in order to meet people and maintain friendships. Loneliness is one of the primary factors in poor mental health for modern moms. Isolation feels baked into the cake of American society, but this isn’t inevitable! No one ever said fellowship would be easy. The victim mentality would have lonely people believe that they are lonely because no one is reaching out to them. The couch potato mentality would have lonely people believe that because getting out of the house to commune with friends is difficult that there is only one way of doing this and that it is unworthy of doing. Here’s where all the principles dovetail together. The COURAGE mentality encourages lonely people to find friendship in the world despite potential rejection. The CONSISTENCY mentality fosters a willingness to fail or to be rejected, and once friends are found, keeps them close through a sense of mutual duty and sacrifice. And CREATIVITY helps on the front end to find your people, and all throughout, to keep in touch with them. Start the group chat. Start the playgroup. Ask someone to work out together. Attend birthday parties. Bake the cookies. Deliver the postpartum meals. Volunteer. Throw the cocktail parties. Buy outdoor art supplies for the kids and invite moms over for tea. These actions seem mundane, perhaps antiquated. Because our social lives as moms have been so hollowed out by technology and the changing participation of women in the workplace, all of these little things in their little ways now require courage, consistency, and creativity. Despite whatever difficulties I endured moving from zero to one, they are what have made my life as a young mom of three boisterous little children not only bearable but deeply enjoyable. Hope these were helpful. I’d love to hear your perspective in the comments section: What helps you persist in motherhood?
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
43 w

Foreign owner runs Dodge, Ram, and Jeep into the ground
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Foreign owner runs Dodge, Ram, and Jeep into the ground

The world's fourth-largest automaker is in trouble.Stellantis, the Netherlands-based conglomerate that now owns iconic American brands Chrysler, Ram Trucks, Dodge, and Jeep, anticipates disastrous third-quarter sales figures. Dodge's reputation for performance has also been squandered. In what world does it make sense to get rid of the Charger and the Challenger? On Wednesday, the company reported sales 20% lower than the third quarter of 2023, a decline that puts them down 17% for the year. Investors are heading for the exits. Worse than COVIDAlthough the company will not post global Q3 sales until the end of the month, there's little reason to expect an upswing. Bloomberg reports that its production in Italy has cratered, dropping 41% so far this year to about 238,000 vehicles. That's fewer than the amount of vehicles it made in 2020, when the COVID pandemic shut down its plants.More dire numbers: The stock price dropped 12% this week and is down 40% so far this year. At the beginning of the year, the company’s market cap was $70 billion. Now it’s $36 billion, a $34 billion drop in value in only 10 months.A bad year for TavaresThis is a drastic change in fortunes. Last year, Stellantis was one of the most profitable full-line manufacturers, with double-digit margins, and Carlos Tavares was hailed as one of the best CEOs in the business. But this year, he’s managed to turn everyone against him: his dealers, his unions, his employees, and even the Italian government. The board is also actively looking for a new CEO when his contract expires in 2026. And it’s possible he won’t even last that long. The board of directors may have to buy him out, if only to prove it’s upholding its fiduciary duty.I could've had a V8!Consider one of the company's most glaring missteps: removing the Hemi V8 from its two most valuable brands, Jeep and Ram, while pouring more money into electric vehicles people just aren't buying. Dodge's reputation for performance has also been squandered. In what world does it make sense to get rid of the Charger and the Challenger? Dodge could have sold the Challenger, on that platform, for another 10 years with competitive volume against the Mustang — especially with no more competition from the Camaro. The Challenger and the Charger were moneymakers; the profit per car when you have the same platform for 20 years is unbeatable. Sadly, a combination of restrictive government regulations and an inability or unwillingness to understand the American market did them in — and Dodge may soon follow. Stellantis clearly needs a Lee Iacocca.It's done no better with its Italian sports car brands, removing both Fiat and Alfa Romeo performance models from the U.S. market. Maserati may also not be too long for this world in the Stellantis portfolio.To help cope with this downturn, Stellantis is planning a 25% reduction in logistics expenses for the second part of this year. Union woesDrastic cuts in labor costs are also in the works, which will no doubt worsen the company's already tense relations with the union. The UAW put immense pressure on Stellantis during the last strike. After reaching a settlement, the company ended up moving some production to Mexico to save money. Last week, Stellantis filed nine lawsuits against the UAW seeking to block any attempt to strike over commitments made in the 2023 contract. Brain drainThere's also been a concerning departure of executive leadership under Tavares. Key U.S. personnel like Jim Morrison, Tim Kuniskis, and a few other top talents have left the company, taking decades of experience with them.That Tavares has allowed this to happen suggests incompetence, indifference, or arrogance. We've certainly seen the latter before from DaimlerChrysler, when German executives overestimated their understanding of the U.S. brands under their control. If only Stellantis could learn from the past.This week, Stellantis employees — a few of whom I know personally — were offered early buyouts, which means more quality, long-term talent will leave the company. Changing his tuneWhat's most disappointing about the current state of Stellantis is that Tavares had a promising enough start.He often said the truth about EVs and warned EU politicians about the idiocy of EU 7 emission regulations. He was pretty good at walking the line between being "green” and seeking a profit.In the past few months, however, he seems to have changed his tune — at least if you take his public statements about readiness to "transition" the industry to new sustainability standards. Stellantis is betting it all on EV, while other companies are moving to a mix of hybrid, plug-in hybrids, and EVs. People are talking behind the scenes, and it’s clearly going badly after July and the summer sales numbers, which were horrible.Stellantis is hoping new model launches — a total of 20 across the company's vast array of brands — will help the automaker in the second half of 2024. The question is, will it find the leadership it needs to handle these correctly? We will keep our eyes on things and keep you posted.
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
43 w

Sen. John Cornyn Shares Headline About Consumer Confidence Declining Unexpectedly
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Sen. John Cornyn Shares Headline About Consumer Confidence Declining Unexpectedly

Sen. John Cornyn Shares Headline About Consumer Confidence Declining Unexpectedly
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Twitchy Feed
43 w

'DO YOU HEAR YOURSELF?' Watch J.D. Vance Absolutely SCHOOL Martha Raddatz on Venezuelan Gangs in Colorado
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'DO YOU HEAR YOURSELF?' Watch J.D. Vance Absolutely SCHOOL Martha Raddatz on Venezuelan Gangs in Colorado

'DO YOU HEAR YOURSELF?' Watch J.D. Vance Absolutely SCHOOL Martha Raddatz on Venezuelan Gangs in Colorado
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RedState Feed
43 w

Second Hezbollah Drone Strike on Israel in 2 Days Leaves About 40 Wounded, 3 Critically
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Second Hezbollah Drone Strike on Israel in 2 Days Leaves About 40 Wounded, 3 Critically

Second Hezbollah Drone Strike on Israel in 2 Days Leaves About 40 Wounded, 3 Critically
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RedState Feed
43 w

Pro-Hamas Group at Columbia U. Pulls Back Apology for Suspended Antisemitic Student Amid Clash With Admin
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Pro-Hamas Group at Columbia U. Pulls Back Apology for Suspended Antisemitic Student Amid Clash With Admin

Pro-Hamas Group at Columbia U. Pulls Back Apology for Suspended Antisemitic Student Amid Clash With Admin
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