Wife can’t be denied right to carry a gun because of her husband, appeals court rules

The Massachusetts Appeals Court has ruled that a wife’s right to carry a gun was wrongly denied because of her spouse’s behavior. Below is an except from Guinane v. Chief of Police of Manchester-by-the-Sea, a unanimous decision by the Appeals Court on January 9:

In October 2022, Barbara Guinane applied to the chief of police of Manchester-by-the-Sea (chief) for a license to carry firearms (LTC) …. The chief found Guinane unsuitable and denied the application. The chief did so based on recent incidents in which Guinane’s husband had acted aggressively and violently during disputes with neighbors, resulting in multiple police responses to the Guinanes’ home, criminal charges, two G. L. c. 258E harassment prevention orders against the husband, and the suspension of his LTC….

[At a court hearing,] the chief testified that he found Guinane unsuitable based on the conduct of her husband. In May 2022, a neighbor had called 911 to report that, in connection with a property line dispute, the husband “came to [that neighbor’s] property yelling about trash cans and was carrying a baseball bat and then smashed a light pole in a fit of rage.” When police responded, they found the Guinanes sitting on their front porch, where the husband told them, “I know I smashed a light.” He explained that he believed someone had broken into his shed and that he had lost his temper. The husband was criminally charged with vandalizing property, a charge that remained pending at the time of the hearing, and the neighbors obtained a G. L. c. 258E harassment prevention order against him, effective until June 2023. The chief suspended the husband’s LTC, finding him both unsuitable, based on his “volatile behavior,” and to be a prohibited person, based on the G. L. c. 258E order.

Subsequently, the husband and a second neighbor had a “verbal altercation,” leading to the husband’s being charged with threatening to commit a crime (“to wit kill”) and with “assault [with intent] to intimidate based on the victim’s race, religion, color and/or disability.” Those charges, too, remained pending at the time of the hearing, and the second neighbor also obtained a G. L. c. 258E order against the husband.

When Guinane applied for her own LTC, the chief found her unsuitable. The chief acknowledged that, unlike the typical unsuitability determination focusing on “behaviors or incidents involving the applicant him or herself,” here he denied Guinane’s application because of his concern that her husband, who was an unsuitable and prohibited person, lived with her and thus “would have access to the weapons.” The chief acknowledged on cross-examination that Guinane herself had no criminal record and had not been charged in any of the incidents involving the husband. The chief agreed that, if Guinane were not married to her husband, “she would be a suitable person.” The chief nevertheless determined that “it may be a threat to public safety” to issue an LTC to Guinane….

[Guinane] testified that she was a licensed manicurist who operated a nail salon out of their house; customers sometimes paid her in cash. Also, she provided care to and was “directly responsible” for her elderly mother and a niece who lived in the home with her and her husband….

The appeals court ruled that the criminal charges against her husband were insufficient reason to deny Ms. Guinane’s application to carry a gun:

The chief pointed to no behavior by Guinane suggesting that her licensure might create a safety risk. There is no evidence that she engaged in violent or aggressive behavior, or that she assisted or contributed to her husband’s past violent and aggressive behavior, or that she engaged in behavior suggesting that she might be negligent in securing her firearms as required by law.

Nor was there reliable evidence that she intended to or might be forced to make firearms available to her husband or any other prohibited or unsuitable person. Although the District Court judge suggested that the timing of Guinane’s application, shortly after her husband’s LTC was suspended, “lends credence to the Chief’s belief that her application was a pretense to allow her husband to maintain access to firearms,” the chief himself never stated that he held such a belief. Nor did counsel for the chief, at the evidentiary hearing, elicit any evidence from Guinane, or ask her, about the possibility that she would give her husband unlawful access to firearms….

The chief’s natural concern that the husband might somehow obtain access was certainly deserving of consideration. But ultimately it lacked the evidentiary basis statutorily required to support a determination of unsuitability….

An application for an LTC shortly after a family member’s LTC was suspended (or application was denied) might be considered some evidence that the applicant had “exhibited or engaged in behavior that suggests that, if issued a license, the applicant or licensee may create” a safety risk by making firearms available to the unlicensed family member. But here it did not amount to the requisite “reliable, articulable and credible information” suggesting any appreciable risk that Guinane might do so and was therefore unsuitable.

Iranians Burn Down Mosques

By Hudson Crozier

Iranian demonstrators set mosques ablaze during heated protests against the country’s Islamic government, according to local video and reports this weekend.

Protesters in Iran have set numerous fires since the riots broke out Dec. 28, with Tehran’s fire department claiming as many as 34 mosques were burned, according to multiple outlets. One video verified by NBC News showed a crowd cheering Friday night while a Tehran mosque became engulfed in flames. (RELATED: ‘Death To America’ Radical Complains She Got Detained By Customs After Iran Trip)

The mass uprising reportedly began in response to economic woes but follows months of instances of women shedding their mandatory headwear in a statement against the country’s forced Islamic norms. Another video posted by Reuters showed a mob vandalizing the Abuzar Mosque in Tehran on Thursday, scattering furniture and laying incendiary devices.

The Iranian regime has massacred hundreds while clamping down on the disorder, the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists in Iran reports, according to The New York Post.

President Donald Trump on Jan. 2 hinted at possible military action if Iran kills protesters, leading to a social media duel with Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei over the following days that involved the ayatollah posting an image of Trump in a coffin. Trump previously bombed multiple Iranian nuclear facilities amid conflict with Israel, marking the most overt U.S. military operation against the regime in years.

Harvard removes dean who bashed ‘whiteness’ and the police

Harvard has removed a dean who bashed “whiteness”, defended looting and rioting, and called all cops “evil” and “racist.” The university may have feared that the dean’s anti-white rhetoric would be used as circumstantial evidence against Harvard, in any federal Title VI investigation of Harvard for racial discrimination in hiring or admissions.

The College Fix reports that a “Harvard University residence hall dean who” denounced “whiteness” and “called police racist was removed from his role” on January 5. “Gregory Davis, the former resident dean of Dunster House, ‘is no longer serving’ in the role.'”

“We are writing to confirm that Gregory Davis is no longer serving as the Allston Burr Resident Dean of Dunster House, effective today,” Faculty Deans Shirley and Taeku Lee wrote in a January 5 email. “We thank Gregory for serving in this role and wish him and his family the best in their future endeavors.”

The College Fix adds,

In October, Davis faced calls for his termination after Yard Report, a relatively new right-leaning blog about Harvard, exposed a series of social media posts where he….called for hating the police, and denounced “whiteness“…

In another post in 2019, he wrote: “Whiteness is a self-destructive ideology that annihilates everyone around it.” In 2020, he defended looting and rioting as a part of democracy akin to “voting and marching.” He also posted that cops are “racist and evil,” according to screenshots from the Yard Report….

“These comments, and many others, made by Davis disqualify him from serving in his role at Harvard,” the Yard Report argued. “They reveal an ideology unbefitting of American society, let alone its most elite institution of higher education. The university must fire him immediately.”

Last year, Harvard appointed the drag queen LaWhore Vagistan to its faculty.

Last October, Harvard was forced to postpone a transgender health class because it contained an illegal, sex-discriminatory fee waiver that violated Title IX and the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act.

In 2024, Harvard’s president was forced to resign after her pervasive plagiarism came to light.

Jerome Powell Says Trump’s DOJ Probe Is Retaliation For Interest Rates

By Harold Hutchison

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on Sunday accused President Donald Trump of trying to “manipulate” the Federal Reserve through a criminal perjury investigation.

Republican Florida Rep. Anna Paulina Luna referred Powell to the Justice Department in July, alleging he lied to the Senate Banking Committee about renovations to the Federal Reserve’s Washington headquarters in June. Powell confirmed the probe in a blistering video statement released Sunday night. (RELATED: DOJ Opens Probe Into Fed Chair)

“I have deep respect for the rule of law and for accountability in our democracy. No one—certainly not the chair of the Federal Reserve—is above the law. But this unprecedented action should be seen in the broader context of the administration’s threats and ongoing pressure,” Powell claimed. “This new threat is not about my testimony last June or about the renovation of the Federal Reserve buildings. It is not about Congress’s oversight role; the Fed, through testimony and other public disclosures, made every effort to keep Congress informed about the renovation project. Those are pretexts.”

“The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the president,” Powell continued. “This is about whether the Fed will be able to continue to set interest rates based on evidence and economic conditions—or whether instead monetary policy will be directed by political pressure or intimidation.”

Trump and Powell have clashed over the Fed’s resistance to lowering interest rates at a pace desired by the president. Powell also came under fire for his handling of inflation during the Biden administration, initially predicting inflation would be transitory during an August 2021 speech at Jackson Hole, Wyoming, before later admitting inflation ended up being more persistent than he “expected.”

Trump questioned Powell over the renovations during a July 24 tour of the Federal Reserve headquarters project site with Republican South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, presenting Powell with documents supposedly showing the cost for the project had ballooned to $3.1 billion, a cost overrun of roughly 25%. (RELATED: Hard-Hat Clad Jerome Powell Visibly Shakes His Head At Trump During Fed Building Tour)

“So, we are taking a look, it looks it gets about 3.1 billion, it went up a little bit, or a lot. The 2.7 is now 3.1. It just came out,” Trump said as he pulled out a sheet of paper appearing to list the cost overruns.

“I’m not aware of that, I have not heard that from anybody,” an apparently stunned Powell, after putting on glasses to read the document, responded. He went on to note the $3.1 billion included “the Martin renovation,” completed in 2021, which he described as “a third building” making up the Federal Reserve’s headquarters.

Powell’s term as Fed chair concludes May 2026; he may remain a Fed governor through January 2028.

Supreme Court Case Will Set Major Precedent For American Energy

By Audrey Streb

The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Monday in a case determining whether companies acting under federal orders can shift state lawsuits to federal court — with many concerned parties arguing that American energy is at stake.

The case addresses whether Chevron and other energy companies can move a Louisiana state lawsuit to federal court under the federal-officer removal statute, based on actions taken on behalf of the federal government during World War II. Roughly 40 lawsuits have been filed since 2013 over oil and gas companies’ alleged role in Louisiana’s coastal erosion, and the Supreme Court’s upcoming review of Chevron U.S.A. v. Plaquemines Parish  decides whether those cases can be moved from state to federal court.

“At the end of the day, this is about federal supremacy… that means that those doing the work of the federal government can’t be hauled into some state or local court to face judgment for the work they’re doing for the federal government,” Mike Fragoso a partner at Torridon Law PLLC, said in a statement. (RELATED: Trump DOJ Joins Fight As Major Players Sound Alarm Over ‘Climate Lawfare’ That Could ‘Cripple’ American Energy)

Several parties filed amicus briefs in September — including the Department of Justice (DOJ), Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and Republican Alaska Attorney General Stephen Cox — arguing the lawsuits should be heard in federal court because some of the alleged conduct occurred during World War II when companies operated under federal contracts.

Chevron and other energy companies are urging the Supreme Court to overturn a Fifth Circuit ruling that found the oil companies failed to establish federal jurisdiction. Former U.S. Attorneys General Bill Barr and Michael Mukasey, along with numerous state attorneys general, support Chevron’s position. They argue the parishes are seeking to impose retroactive liability for conduct that the federal government previously authorized.

“The FDR administration ordered the oil companies to drill as much oil as they can in Louisiana and then refine it into aviation gasoline. … In an emergency situation like wartime, you can’t just go around suing people 80 years later for what the government told them to do,” John Shu, a constitutional law expert and legal commentator who served in the George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush administrations, told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “If you can sue somebody 80 years later for what the government told you to do to win a war, then no one’s going to do it.”

Others like Alliance For Consumers Executive Director O.H. Skinner argue the lawsuits could harm consumers as he links them to “woke lawfare,” or in other words, lawsuits pushed by climate activists that seek to wield the courts to enact their agenda.

Skinner told the DCNF previously that “woke lawfare is one of the key fronts being pressed by left-wing activists, where they hope to obtain the policy victories in court that have been rejected at the ballot box and in the halls of Congress. … This Louisiana lawsuit is a chief example of the climate lawfare that is being pushed by these activists and trial lawyers. It would mark a major turning point for the Supreme Court to rule against the plaintiffs and provide its first decision disrupting that campaign.”

Many major climate lawsuits brought by Democrat cities and states against energy companies have been dismissed recently, though some analysts argue that if even one surviving case succeeds, it could set a precedent with far-reaching impacts for the energy sector and consumers.

The Louisiana oil and gas industry is massive, generating over $54 billion for the state in 2021, according to an analysis from the Louisiana Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association (LMOGA) and the American Petroleum Institute (API). The Gulf Coast accounts for 55% of American refining capacity, with Louisiana’s Gulf Coast alone accounting for a significant portion, according to data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA).

Legal experts, including Carrie Severino, president of the Judicial Crisis Network, have pointed out alleged close ties and aligned interests between Louisiana’s governor and a trial lawyer leading many of these cases.

Fragoso also argued that “Louisiana is probably the worst place in the country for getting hometowned. Their judges are elected… with the support of plaintiffs’ lawyers… Plaquemines Parish [has] like 23,000 people in it. So do the math of $745 million divided by 23,000 people, and you’re seeing the financial incentive for any individual resident who’s on the jury is tremendous.”

Republican Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry moved to intervene in the local government lawsuits against the oil and gas companies and said they had “differing and competing interests” that affected Louisiana’s coastal restoration and economy in 2016, according to NOLA.com, a local New Orleans publication. Landry has since voiced support for the lawsuits.

The Baton Rouge law firm Talbot, Carmouche and Marcello, represented the local government’s lawsuit against Chevron for wetlands damages. It also donated $300,000 to the Protect Louisiana’s Children PAC, which supported Landry’s gubernatorial run in 2023, according to the Louisiana Illuminator.

Vaccine developed for deadly bat-borne disease

“A vaccine for Nipah virus, a highly deadly bat-borne disease with no existing treatments, has entered phase 2 clinical trials for the first time,” notes The Doomslayer.

The Telegraph reports:

An Oxford-designed vaccine for Nipah virus has launched phase two trials, in a ‘major milestone’ for efforts to curb the deadly pathogen…

The disease – which inspired the Hollywood blockbuster Contagion – is rare but extremely deadly, with a fatality rate as high as 75 per cent. The World Health Organization considers it a priority pathogen for research, as no vaccines or treatments currently exist to tackle it.

This month a jab [vaccine] developed by the University of Oxford…became the first Nipah vaccine candidate to enter phase two clinical trials to assess safety and the immune response.

It is also the first vaccine to be trialled in a region directly affected by the virus. Bangladesh has sporadic outbreaks every year, with Nipah mostly spreading from fruit bats to people via contaminated raw date palm sap – although some human-to-human transmission through bodily fluids is also possible.

The disease was first detected in Malaysia in 1998, when it triggered a major outbreak among pig farmers. Since then, 754 known cases have been diagnosed, including 435 deaths – including 241 in Bangladesh, the worst hit country, where the fatality rate is 71 per cent.

Scientists have also developed a rabies vaccine for vampire bats that spreads through grooming: “The vaccine is delivered via a gel applied to one bat’s fur. When others groom it, they ingest the gel and gain immunity. Laboratory studies show this method could effectively protect entire colonies.”

22 nations have eliminated measles and rubella by vaccinating their populations at rates of over 90%. “Measles vaccination has saved 94 million lives globally since 1974. Of those, 92 million were children”, says Our World in Data.

A vaccine to save koalas from chlamydia was recently approved. That disease has killed tens of thousands of koalas.

Denmark is close to wiping out leading cancer-causing HPV strains through vaccination.

Europe and South America reach massive freer-trade deal

“After 25 years of negotiations, EU member states have approved a trade agreement with the South American Mercosur bloc (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay) that will lower tariffs on over 90 percent of goods traded between the two markets,” notes The Doomslayer.

It will result in freer trade between the two trading blocs, but not totally free trade.

Politico reports:

A qualified majority of EU member countries on Friday approved the bloc’s long-awaited trade deal with the South American Mercosur bloc.

France, Poland, Austria, Ireland and Hungary expressed their opposition while Belgium abstained. Italy voted in favor, after forcing a delay last month….

“Our message to the world is this: Partnership creates prosperity and openness drives progress,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said. She hinted at signing the treaty in Paraguay “soon” but did not reveal whether that would be as early as Monday….

Additional farm market safeguards that would kick in if there is a surge in imports from Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay also won the approval of EU countries. “We have heard the concerns of our farmers and our agricultural sector and we have acted on them. This agreement contains robust safeguards to protect their livelihoods,” von der Leyen said….

The EU-Mercosur deal is set to create the world’s largest free trade area, covering some 700 million people. From Brussels’ perspective, the agreement is a major geopolitical win in light of China’s rising share in trade and influence in Latin America.

Reuters adds:

Mercosur will remove duties on 91% of EU exports, including for cars from a current 35% over a period of 15 years. The EU will progressively remove duties on 92% of Mercosur exports over a period of up to 10 years.

Mercosur will also remove duties on EU agriculture-based products, such as the 17% on wines and 20-35% on spirits.

For more sensitive farm products, the EU will offer increased quotas, including 99,000 metric tons more beef, while Mercosur will give the EU a duty-free 30,000-ton quota for cheeses.

There are also EU quotas for poultry, pork, sugar, ethanol, rice, honey, maize and sweet corn and for Mercosur on milk powders and infant formula.

Further, the deal recognizes 350 geographic indications to prevent imitation of certain traditional EU foodstuffs such as Parmigiano Reggiano cheese.

Countries like Germany and Spain argue that the deal provides a route away from dependence on China, especially on critical minerals. They also say it helps blunt the economic impact of tariffs imposed by the Trump administration.

This agreement is the largest reduction in tariffs charged on products from the European Union, eliminating about $5 billion per year in duties charged on European Union exports.

“The EU says that given Mercosur’s modest collection of trade agreements, the EU would have an early-mover advantage and notes that EU companies will be able to bid for public contracts in Mercosur on the same terms as local suppliers – something Mercosur has not previously offered in trade agreements.”

The EU views Mercosur as less likely to use control over critical minerals as a weapon than China, which currently processes most of the critical mineral needed for batteries — lithium. The agreement forbids export taxes on most such minerals.

Some left-wing environmental groups oppose the freer-trade deal. Friends of the Earth denounced it as “climate-wrecking.” Friends of the Earth fears the trade deal will lead to increased deforestation as South American nations sell more farm produce and raw materials, sometimes from the Amazon, the world’s largest tropical rainforest.

“Deforestation in the Amazon is slowing down. Around 5,800 square kilometers of the forest were cleared this year, down from 6,500 in 2024 and over 20,000 in 1988,” reported The Doomslayer.

This is happening even as the South American economy is much bigger than it was in 1988. Brazil and Peru had shrinking economies in 1988. In 2025, their economies grew.

U.S. Strikes ISIS Targets In Syria

By Anthony Iafrate

The Defense Department carried out airstrikes against ISIS targets in Syria, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) announced Saturday afternoon.

CENTCOM wrote in a statement posted to X it conducted “large-scale strikes against multiple ISIS targets across Syria” at about 12:30 p.m. EST “alongside partner forces.”

“The strikes today targeted ISIS throughout Syria as part of our ongoing commitment to root out Islamic terrorism against our warfighters, prevent future attacks, and protect American and partner forces in the region. U.S. and coalition forces remain resolute in pursuing terrorists who seek to harm the United States,” CENTCOM wrote. (RELATED: ‘Peace In The Middle East’: Trump Defends Having Troops In Syria After Deadly Attack)

“Our message remains strong: if you harm our warfighters, we will find you and kill you anywhere in the world, no matter how hard you try to evade justice,” CENTCOM added.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth replied to CENTCOM’s statement on X, simply writing, “We will never forget, and never relent.”

The Saturday operation marked the second time in weeks the U.S. launched strikes against the radical Islamic terror group in Syria.

At President Donald Trump’s direction, CENTCOM launched strikes Dec. 19 against over 70 ISIS targets across central Syria, marking the beginning of Operation Hawkeye Strike. The operation was a direct response to a Dec. 13 ISIS attack in Syria which killed two U.S. service members and one U.S. civilian.

The terror group killed two Iowa National Guardsmen — Sgt. Edgar Brian Torres Tovar, 25, and Sgt. William Nathaniel Howard, 29 — and a civilian interpreter in the Middle Eastern country.

“This was an ISIS attack against the U.S., and Syria, in a very dangerous part of Syria, that is not fully controlled by them,” Trump wrote on Truth Social, adding that Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa was “extremely angry and disturbed by this attack.”

“There will be very serious retaliation,” the president added.

Portland Police Chief Begins To Cry As He Reluctantly Confirms Two People Shot By CBP Were Connected To Tren De Aragua

By Timothy Sekerak

Portland Police Chief Bob Day started crying during a press conference Friday after admitting two people shot by federal agents were linked to Tren de Aragua.

“They do have some nexus to involvement with TdA, we can confirm that … and what I can say is that there is an association with the two folks from yesterday and TdA,” Day said during the press conference.

“I hesitated to even share this information initially because I’m very aware of the historic injustice of victim blaming often times portrayed by law enforcement, including this very agency that I’ve represented so proudly for so many years, and historically we have not been quick to disclose the potential criminal history of others,” he continued.

He then went on to say, “I want to speak for just a moment specifically to my Latino community,” while appearing to become emotional and pausing for a moment. “It saddens me that we even have to qualify these remarks because I understand, or at least have attempted to understand, through your voices, your concern, your fear, your anger.”

He then proceeded to wipe the tears from his eyes while saying, “This information in no way is meant to disparage or to condone or support or agree with any of the actions that occurred yesterday.”

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said that “two criminal illegal aliens who attacked Border Patrol in Portland are a gang member and his prostitute, NOT an innocent ‘married couple,” in a post to X on Friday. This was in response to ABC 17 News after they shared a CNN article to X with a caption saying federal agents “left a married couple wounded in Portland.” (RELATED: Feds Say Two Shot By Border Patrol In Portland Were Gang Member And His Prostitute)

Border Protection agents  shot Luis David Nico Moncada Thursday, a Venezuelan national and suspected member of Tren de Aragua, which the State Department has designated a Foreign Terrorist Organization, according to the DHS. Moncada entered the U.S. in 2022 and was released into the country during the Biden administration, according to the agency. He has since been arrested for a DUI and unauthorized use of a vehicle and has a final order of removal.

Yorlenys Betzabeth Zambrano-Contreras was also shot and is allegedly associated with Tren de Aragua as well. She entered the U.S. in 2023 and was also released during the Biden administration. She “played an active role in the Tren de Aragua prostitution ring,” DHS said. She has also been involved in a previous shooting in Portland.

The two individuals are in stable condition in the hospital as of Friday evening, according to an ABC News report.

A Quick Bible Study Vol. 302: What the Bible Says About Pain

Every week, I rely on the Lord to reveal our study topic. As usual, out of nowhere, “pain” popped into my head. That means there is a reason for this topic, and I have come to know that someone reading this will be comforted by these passages. Moreover, I am always thrilled to receive emails saying this study was “what they needed” or similar. So I say, “If through His Word, God uses me to help others, I am blessed.”

From the beginning of humankind, pain has been part of the human experience, making it a central theme in the Bible. The first mention of pain appears in Genesis 3, a consequence of the Fall of Man. (See Vol. 110.) After Adam and Eve disobeyed God, pain has plagued us all. God’s punishment was severe:

“To the woman He said, ‘I will surely multiply your pain in childbearing; in pain you shall bring forth children’” (Genesis 3:16).

God told Adam that working to produce food from the ground would be painful:

“And to Adam He said, ‘Because you have listened to the voice of your wife and have eaten of the tree of which I commanded you, ‘You shall not eat of it,’ cursed is the ground because of you; in pain you shall eat of it all the days of your life” (Gen.3:17-19).

Pain was not part of God’s original design. However, because Adam and Eve engaged in prideful behavior, pain disrupted the harmony God had intended for His creation. Therefore, pain is not only physical but also present in all broken relationships between humans and God and among humans against one another throughout the world.

In the following passage, God speaks of human conflict and the conflict between God and evil, represented by the snake (the “he”) who tempted Eve:

“I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; He shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise His heel” (Genesis 3:15).

The pain that Adam and Eve were going to suffer stemmed from their behavior. But in the future, pain can afflict those who love and obey God and play by the rules. A prime example of suffering by someone blameless was Job:

“He feared God and shunned evil,” and “He was the greatest man among all the people of the east” (Job 1:1-3).

The boundaries of Job’s suffering and pain were arranged and defined after this eye-opening conversation between the Lord and Satan. Afterward, Job lost everything one can lose in life, in addition to his physical trauma:

“The night racks my bones, and the pain that gnaws me takes no rest” (Job 30:17).

Like all understanding, our understanding of pain is limited compared with God’s all-knowing wisdom. In Job’s case, he remained faithful and, in the end, was made whole. But when people suffer physical or mental anguish, especially those who “don’t deserve it,” all we can do is pray and be there to comfort them. St. Paul wrote:

“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God” (2 Corinthians 1:3-4).

James offers a “how to help” action plan for those who are sick:

“Is anyone among you sick? Let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord. And the prayer of faith will save the one who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up. And if he has committed sins, he will be forgiven. Therefore, confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working” (James 5:14-16).

Paul wrote much about pain because of his extensive suffering, which Jesus revealed that Saul/Paul would experience after his Road to Damascus conversion.

“For I will show him how much he must suffer for the sake of my name” (Acts 9:16). Read more here.

Paul’s passages on pain are viewed through the lens of Christ, because at the center of Christianity is a suffering Savior who died for our sins:

“We rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us “ (Romans 5:3-5).

Let’s be honest, for the average person of faith, reconciling pain by comparing it to Christ’s suffering is a stretch. Paul takes the most optimistic view in these two verses:

“For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us” (Romans 8:18).

“For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison” (2 Corinthians 4:17).

Next, Paul writes about his chronic painful ailment and unique way of dealing with it:

“Therefore, in order to keep me from becoming conceited, I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But He [Jesus] said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore, I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. That is why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong” (2 Corinthians 12:7-10). (See Vol. 71 for more discussion.)

Peter mirrors Paul’s theme about sharing your pain and suffering with Christ:

“Rejoice insofar as you share Christ’s sufferings, that you may also rejoice and be glad when His glory is revealed” (1 Peter 4:12-19).

Giving or sharing your pain with Jesus and focusing on the glory that is to come sounds like a plan, but it is for those with the strongest faith. My faith is strong, but is it strong enough for the verses we have read? I can tell you that when I faced severe medical issues, I prayed often, and I know those who love me lifted me up as well. Is your faith strong enough to rejoice in your suffering?

Finally, we all look forward to the following verse, the promise that earthly pain is temporary and that God’s ultimate plan is perfection.

“He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away” (Revelation 21:4). Amen!

Myra Kahn Adams is a conservative political and religious writer. Her book “Bible Study For Those Who Don’t Read The Bible“ reprints the first 56 volumes of this popular study. “Part 2,” reprints Vols. 57 –113. Order it here.

Myra is also the Executive Director of the National Shroud of Turin Exhibit. You can help support our new exhibit in Orlando, Florida. Contact: Myraadams01@gmail.com

This article was originally posted at Townhall.com.

Ethiopia begins work on Africa’s biggest airport, despite having less tourism than many other African nations

Ethiopian Airlines on Saturday officially began the construction of a $12.5 billion airport, which will be Africa’s biggest when it is completed in 2030. The state-owned airline will build the four-runway airport in the town of Bishoftu, 28 miles from Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa.

Ethiopia has strikingly beautiful landscapes. But it does not have that much tourism yet, because of ongoing civil wars in various parts of the country, and bad roads that make it hard to travel from one place to another. South Africa, Kenya, and Tanzania all have bigger tourism industries than Ethiopia.

But many people are expected to stop in Ethiopia before taking connecting flights to other countries in Africa, the Middle East, or Europe. People who fly from China to Rome sometimes stop in Ethiopia’s capital before traveling on to Rome.

Despite being state-owned, Ethiopian Airlines has been competently run for decades. That was true even under the former communist government of Ethiopia, which slaughtered hundreds of thousands of its own citizens in the 1970s and 1980s.

“Bishoftu International Airport will be the largest aviation infrastructure project in Africa’s history,” said Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed. The airport will have space to park 270 planes and the ability to carry 110 million passengers a year.

That is more than four times the capacity of Ethiopia’s current main airport, which will reach its limits on existing traffic in the next three years.

The airline’s Director of Infrastructure Development, Abraham Tesfaye, said the airline would fund 30% of the cost of building the airport, while lenders would finance the rest. Ethiopian Airways has already earmarked $610 million for earthworks, which are due to be completed in one year. The main contractors are slated to begin construction next August. The African Development Bank said it would loan $500 million and solicit $8.7 billion from other lenders.

“Lenders from Middle East, Europe, China and USA have shown strong interest” in the project, Ethiopian Airlines said.

“Ethiopian Airlines is Africa’s biggest carrier. It added six extra routes in 2024/25, while revenues are also expanding,” notes Reuters.

The U.S. State Department warns people not to travel to Ethiopia outside its capital area, even though Ethiopia has strikingly beautiful mountains:

Reconsider travel to Ethiopia due to sporadic violent conflict, civil unrest, crime, communications disruptions, terrorism and kidnapping in border areas.

Do Not Travel To:

  • Tigray Region and border with Eritrea due to sporadic violent conflict, civil unrest, and crime.
  • Afar-Tigray border areas due to sporadic violent conflict, civil unrest, and crime.
  • Amhara Region due to sporadic violent conflict and civil unrest.
  • Gambella and Benishangul Gumuz Regions due to crime, kidnapping, ethnically motivated violence, and sporadic violent conflict
  • Oromia Region – Specific areas due to sporadic violent conflict, civil unrest, and ethnically motivated violence.
  • Southern Nations and National People (SNNP) Region due to sporadic violent conflict, civil unrest, and ethnically motivated violence.
  • Border area with Somalia due to terrorism, kidnapping, and landmines.
  • Border areas with Sudan, and South Sudan due to crime, kidnapping, civil unrest, and sporadic violent conflict.
  • Border areas with Kenya due to the potential for terrorism and ethnically motivated violence.

The security situation in Addis Ababa is stable. However, there is sporadic violent conflict and civil unrest in other areas of Ethiopia, and the security situation may deteriorate without warning. The U.S. Embassy is unlikely to be able to assist with departure from the country if the security situation deteriorates. Due to sporadic violent conflict and civil unrest throughout parts of Ethiopia, travel by U.S. government personnel is routinely assessed for additional restrictions.

A cure for whipworm infections, which afflict 300 million people

A new cure for whipworm infections, moxidectin-albendazole. In a phase 3 trial of around 270 children in Tanzania, a single combination of moxidectin and albendazole cured 69% of whipworm infections, meaning they no longer had detectable worm eggs in their stool, compared to 16% with albendazole alone,” reports The Doomslayer.

The Lancet explains:

Infection with the soil-transmitted helminth Trichuris trichiura affects up to 300 million people globally, with children in rural areas in less economically developed countries being most at risk. If untreated, infection compromises physical and cognitive development and leads to long-lasting morbidity. We assessed whether moxidectin co-administered with albendazole is superior to the recommended albendazole monotherapy in treating trichuriasis in school-aged children….
This…phase 3 trial took place between May 14 and Aug 5, 2024, in the Piki administrative district primary school in the Wete district, Pemba Island, Tanzania. Children aged between 6 and 11 years were screened for the presence of T trichiura eggs in their stool via quadruplicate Kato–Katz thick smears….For the 213 participants…we observed a cure rate of 69%…in the moxidectin–albendazole group, which was significantly higher than the cure rate of 16%…in the albendazole group…The cure rate in the placebo group was 12%…The most common treatment-emergent adverse events were abdominal pain [4% with moxidectin–albendazole, 3% with albendazole, and 3% with placebo]…all mild and transient.

Parasites can take years for countries to eradicate. It took nearly 40 years for the world to largely eradicate Guinea worms, nasty parasites that caused tens of millions of people to scream with unbearable pain. But by 2023, Guinea worms had been eradicated in at least 17 countries, and “no guinea worm was reported” in 2024.

Guinea worms used to inflict burning pain on millions of people in Africa and South Asia every year. They would grow up to 3 feet long while living inside a person’s body, then burst out of their foot or other sensitive areas of their anatomy, such as their eyeball or their penis.

With a guinea worm infection, you get a gross open wound from which the worm emerges over a period of weeks to months with extreme painfulness. There were millions of cases in the 80s, and now there are none. Incredible human progress.”

“It’s possible that the worm is evolutionarily adapted to cause prolonged pain and suffering. Since this will increase the chance that the host will put their foot in the water to soothe the pain, and that can help the worm get to the next stage in its life cycle,” notes a scientist.

“When The Carter Center began leading the international campaign to eradicate Guinea worm disease in 1986, there were an estimated 3.5 million cases in at least 21 countries in Africa and Asia. Today, that number has been reduced by more than 99.99%.”

Things we take for granted: We are so fortunate

“If you fell unconscious in 1950, no one around you would know how to perform CPR: it wouldn’t be invented for another 10 years. Or take type 1 diabetes, where survival would involve injecting yourself every day with a thick glass syringe of insulin that was extracted from animal pancreases (with tens of thousands of animals required to produce each pound of insulin). And hundreds of thousands of kids worldwide would catch polio each year, leaving them paralyzed, often needing an iron lung to help them breathe,” notes Saloni Dattani:

Fast forward another thirty years to 1980, and polio would be eliminated in many rich countries through vaccination. Smallpox would be eradicated worldwide. Insulin could now be manufactured by yeast in bulk in bioreactors, and emergency care would look completely different: with implantable pacemakers, AEDs, and coronary bypass surgery.

But you could still die from cancers caused by stomach ulcers, which we now know are typically caused by H. pylori infection and treatable with antibiotics. Or take hepatitis C – a deadly infection that causes liver fibrosis and cancer – which is now curable with antivirals in around 98% of patients.

Some of the most fatal conditions we’ve known, like HIV/AIDS and cystic fibrosis2, are also now highly treatable; taking early treatment for them returns people to near-normal life expectancies. Insulin treatment has advanced to the point that small wearable devices can monitor sugar levels in the blood and release insulin to stabilize them in real time.

People in the poorest countries have benefited even more, in terms of rising life expectancy. Life expectancy in Africa has risen dramatically, from around 46 years in 2000 to over 64 years by 2025, aided by reduced child mortality, improved sanitation, and vaccinations.

Malaria vaccines are saving thousands of lives in Africa.

Last year, a treatment was discovered for sleeping sickness, a disease that kills 50,000 to 500,000 people in Africa each year. Sleeping sickness is an awful disease that begins with fever and aches. Then things get worse. The parasite that causes the disease will disrupt sleeping patterns and cause aggressiveness and psychosis. The death rate from sleeping sickness is close to 100%, if it is untreated.

The customary treatment for sleeping sickness was also quite awful: a drug that is toxic to the kidneys, followed by an arsenic-based drug that’s toxic to the brain. The treatment kills up to a tenth of all patients. But thanks to a recent discovery, people can take the drug fexinidazole to treat the disease instead.

For many years, therapy would begin with a lumbar puncture to see if the parasite has invaded the central nervous system, followed by injections of a drug that damages your kidneys, followed by an arsenic-based drug that harms your brain. But scientists have discovered that fexinadazole can be used to treat sleeping sickness, first the chronic variety, and more recently for acute sleeping sickness as well.

British Police Force Allowed Black Serial Rapist To Join Because They Wanted Less White Officers

By Natalie Sandoval

Even an allegation of child rape can be overlooked if you’re “diverse” enough, it seems.

Cliff Mitchell applied to join the the United Kingdom’s Metropolitan Police Service in 2020, but was denied after “the vetting process flagged up a previous allegation of raping a child in 2017,” reports the LBC, a UK-based news program. (RELATED: ‘Treated As A Slave’: Horrifying Details Emerge About Massive UK Rape Scandal) 

“However, a vetting panel, made up partly of senior officers, overturned the decision because the force wanted to improve the number of officers from ethnic minorities.”

As an officer, Mitchell would allegedly go on to “carry out a ‘campaign of rape’ against two victims, including a child under the age of 13,” according to the LBC. He raped those victims for over a decade, according to the Crown Prosecution Service, and was convicted of 13 counts of rape. He was reportedly sentenced to life imprisonment in May 2024 with a minimum term of 14 years.

This is what a “less white people at any cost” quota gets you.

Mitchell “subjected one victim to a frightening and horrific ordeal” in September 2023, when he “attended her address, in breach of a court order, and violently raped her. This included placing a knife to her throat and threatening her family if she tried to get help. Prior to leaving the property, he blindfolded her and tied her wrists with cable ties before forcing her into his car at knifepoint,” says the Crown Prosecution Service.

“Mitchell had used his position as a police officer to intimidate the victim. He told her that no one would believe her if she reported him to the police because of his position.”

I’m reminded of testimony from some Rotherham women who were sexually abused as children by adult men. Five told the BBC in 2025 that they were also abused by police officers, one claiming an officer “would threaten to hand her back to the gang if she did not comply.”

Mitchell is among the 131 officers and staff at the Metropolitan Police who were “not properly vetted and went on to commit criminal offences and misconduct,” the LBC claims. The review of vetting processes reportedly looked at the decade between 2013 and 2023. (RELATED: UK Jury Convicts Seven Men Of Years-Long Sexual Abuse Of Two Girls) 

“In publishing this report today, we are being open and transparent about past vetting and recruitment practices that led, in some cases, to unsuitable people joining the Met,” said Assistant Commissioner Rachel Williams, according to the LBC.

How about an apology before patting yourself on the back? “Unsuitable” doesn’t really suffice to describe a man who allegedly used his position to rape a child.

California Serial Rapist Sentenced To 900 Years In Prison May See Light Of Day With New Laws

By Mark Tanos

A serial rapist sentenced to nearly 900 years in prison in 2020 could walk free in about 14 years thanks to new California laws after his resentencing.

Judge James Arguelles reduced the sentence of Roy Waller, 65, known as the “NorCal Rapist,” from 897 years to life to 858 years to life at a Sacramento County Courthouse hearing Wednesday, KCRA3 reported. One of his charges went from kidnapping to false imprisonment on appeal, triggering the resentencing.

In 2020, a jury convicted Waller of sexually assaulting nine women inside their residences across six Northern California counties from 1991 to 2006, NC Bay Area previously reported. DNA evidence finally connected him to the crimes. He was convicted on 46 counts. (RELATED: Somali Who Got Probation For Rapes Now Facing Federal Charges)

The Berkeley man now also qualifies for California’s elder parole program due to new state laws enacted after he was convicted and sentenced, according to KCRA3. Inmates 50 and older can seek release after serving 20 years of their sentence.

Assistant Chief District Attorney for Sacramento County Chris Orr addressed the matter. “But the legislature has an act on something called elder parole, which makes people eligible for release as young as in their 50s,” he said.

California Penal Code No. 3055 details the requirements, according to the California Legislature’s website. “The Elderly Parole Program is hereby established, to be administered by the Board of Parole Hearings, for the purposes of reviewing the parole suitability of any inmate who is 50 years of age or older and has served a minimum of 20 years of continuous incarceration on the inmate’s current sentence, serving either a determinate or indeterminate sentence,” it reads in part.

“There’s some irony in the fact that if you’re a victim of elder abuse, you have to be age 65,” said Orr. “But if you’re somebody who commits nine different rapes over 15 years, you only have to be age 50 to be considered elderly.”

Nicole Ernest-Payte, thought to be Waller’s first victim, returned to court for the hearing. “I fought for 27 years until he was arrested after he committed his crimes against me, 29 years to make sure that he served the punishment that he deserved for what he had done to all of these people,” she said.

The woman recalled the moment of the attack. “Woke up at night, after it was dark and there was a masked man in my house with his arm around my neck and a gun to my head,” she recounted.

“This man was caught at 58 years old. When he was arrested, he had a backpack full of equipment ready to go to rape someone else at 58. So how elderly was he?” Ernest-Payte asked.

Arguelles, who handled both the original trial and resentencing, criticized state lawmakers while in court. “They seem to be more worried about defendants’ rights than victims’ rights,” he said.

The lawyer defending Waller refused to comment while departing the court, KCRA3 reported.

Iran’s Capital In Flames As Leader Blames Trump For Fiery Protests

By Melissa O’Rourke

Iran’s capital descended into chaos as anti-government protests set parts of Tehran ablaze, with the country’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blaming President Donald Trump for what he described as a foreign-driven uprising.

Authorities blacked out internet and phone services in much of Iran on Friday when videos spread showing buildings and vehicles burning in the streets of Tehran and other cities, multiple outlets report. In a televised address, Khamenei denounced the throngs of protesters as “vandals” and accused them of acting on behalf of Trump. He warned that the Islamic Republic would not retreat in the face of what he described as U.S.-inspired chaos, according to Reuters.

“The Islamic Republic came to power through the blood of hundreds of thousands of honourable people. It will not back down in the face of vandals,” Khamenei said.

President Trump, meanwhile, wrote on Truth Social that Iran’s second-largest city was “under protesters’ control,” sharing a video of the demonstrations. (RELATED: Trump Calls Off Planned Second Wave Of Attacks On Venezuela)

“America stands with the Iranian people in their quest for basic dignity and freedom,” UN Ambassador Mike Waltz echoed on X Friday, adding, “We are watching.”

The protests began in December in response to Iran’s collapsing economy, worsened by U.S. sanctions and the country’s 12-day war with Israel in June. Merchants and shopkeepers were among the first to protest as inflation surged past 40% in December and the currency lost about half its value against the dollar, according to Reuters.

Tensions exploded Thursday night after exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi called on Iranians to take to the streets. Pahlavi is the eldest son of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last Shah of Iran, toppled during the 1979 revolution.

The unrest continued overnight and into the morning, with protesters chanting “Death to the Dictator” and marching through the streets in huge numbers, as seen in social media footage verified by CNN.

Trump, who ordered the bombing of Iranian nuclear enrichment sites in June, warned earlier this month that if Iran “violently kills peaceful protesters,” the U.S. would “come to their rescue.”

Trump also warned Iran on Dec. 29, following a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, that the U.S. could carry out further military strikes if the country attempts to reestablish its nuclear program.

“We are locked and loaded and ready to go,” Trump wrote in a Jan. 2 Truth Social post.

“The US President has said that if the Iranian govt. does such-and-such, I’ll take the side of the rioters. The rioters have put their hopes in him. If he’s so capable, he should manage his own country,” Khamenei wrote on X Friday.

Building on his Thursday calls for protests, Pahlavi on Friday appealed for Trump’s “attention, support, and action.”

“Last night you saw the millions of brave Iranians in the streets facing down live bullets. Today, they are facing not just bullets but a total communications blackout,” Pahlavi wrote on X.

“Ali Khamenei, fearing the end of his criminal regime at the hands of the people and with the help of your powerful promise to support the protesters, has threatened the people on the streets with a brutal crack down,” wrote Pahlavi, saying that Khamenei “wants to use this blackout to murder these young heroes.”

“You have proven and I know you are a man of peace and a man of your word,” Pahlavi wrote of Trump. “Please be prepared to intervene to help the people of Iran.”

Pahlavi urged Iranians to protest again on Friday night, saying they should “make the crowd even larger so that the regime’s repressive power becomes even weaker.”

Human rights groups report a growing death toll, with more than 40 people dead and more than 2,000 detained by security forces, according to CBS News. Judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei warned that punishment for rioters would be “decisive, maximal, and without any legal leniency,” ABC News reported.

$500 billion defense spending increase could bankrupt America

America’s federal budget deficit was a massive $1.809 trillion in 2025. That’s bigger than the budget deficit of any other nation on Earth.  Yet President Trump wants to increase Pentagon spending by $500 billion next year, which would push the deficit well over $2 trillion in future years. That would result in the national debt — which is already 24% bigger than our economy — growing steadily faster than the economy, year after year. That steady growth in the national debt would eventually bankrupt America.

Countries are supposed to run balanced budgets except during recessions — the opposite of what America is doing now, with its big budget deficits. Many economists say countries should run surpluses during periods of economic growth like today. Those surpluses are needed to offset the deficits countries run up during bad times. “Keynesian economics theory suggests that entities should run a surplus during times of prosperity and a deficit during a downcycle or depression. This allows the company or government to save money when it is well off and to spend money on economic stimulus when the economy is less well off.”

Yet, Trump wants to radically increase America’s defense spending, which is already much bigger than the defense spending of any other nation on Earth. America spends more on defense than China and Russia combined — more than twice as much as they do together:

President Donald Trump on Wednesday declared he would ask Congress for a $1.5 trillion defense budget in 2027, a massive $500 billion increase from this year’s Pentagon budget.

The huge boost likely reflects how expensive some of Trump’s military ambitions are, from the Golden Dome air defense effort to his call for a new battleship design. Neither of those programs could be fully funded under current spending levels.

The president provided few details in his post on Truth Social, other than to say the money would pay for his “Dream Military.” Trump did suggest that tariff revenues could cover the increase, but even if he managed to circumvent Congress’ constitutionally mandated power over spending, existing tariff collections would still be several hundred billion short of what the president plans to ask for.

While finding half-a-trillion dollars in new spending would prove difficult, Trump and some congressional Republicans appeared confident they could do so. The budget reached $1 trillion this year thanks to $150 billion in new money Congress voted to pour into Pentagon coffers via a reconciliation bill, although much of that will be spread out over the next five years on various long-term projects.

Lawmakers have yet to complete a defense spending bill for this fiscal year, although a final agreement is expected to increase Trump’s budget request by several billion dollars.

The Pentagon already wastes enormous amounts of money. The Pentagon loses track of many valuable assets, and has failed audit after audit: it failed to track $2.1 trillion in assets in 2022 — 61% of military assets!

The Pentagon can make do with less: the Cato Institute identified $17-20 billion in readily-achievable savings to the 2013 military budget.

As Fareed Zakaria noted in 2011 in the Washington Post, a huge amount of wasteful spending could be cut from the defense budget, but hasn’t:

The Bowles-Simpson commission’s plan proposed $750 billion in defense cuts over 10 years. Lawrence Korb, who worked at the Pentagon for Ronald Reagan, believes that a $1 trillion cut over 10 to 12 years is feasible without compromising national security.

Serious conservatives should examine the defense budget … [which includes] a cradle-to-grave system of housing, subsidies, cost-plus procurement, early retirement and lifetime pension and health-care guarantees. There is so much overlap among the military services, so much duplication and so much waste that no one bothers to defend it anymore. Today, the U.S. defense establishment is the world’s largest socialist economy.

Zakaria quoted former defense secretary Robert Gates observing that there were “more members of military marching bands than make up the entire U.S. foreign service.”

People get arrested for voting in America, even though they are American nationals

A few American Samoans are being arrested in Alaska for voting in local elections, even though they are American nationals, and permanently reside in Alaska in the very place where they are voting. A news account describes what happened to an American Samoan in Whittier, Alaska, where a significant share of residents are American Samoans. Tupe Smith voted in local elections and was elected to the local school board after years of volunteering at her kids’ school. Then she was arrested because she is an American Samoan:

Unbeknownst to Smith at the time, she had no right to vote in Whittier elections, much less run for office. Though she was born in a U.S. territory, and has a U.S. passport and Social Security number, she is not a U.S. citizen.

American Samoa is the only U.S. state or territory where people are born without automatic citizenship, and without the right to vote in state, federal, and most local elections anywhere outside of American Samoa.

Unlike people born in the other U.S. territories of Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoans are classified simply as “U.S. nationals”—a sort of limbo state that acknowledges they are American by birth, but still denied the full rights and privileges of citizenship.

Even though they pay taxes, owe “allegiance” by law to the United States, and can join or be drafted into the military—American Samoans have long served in and died for the U.S. military at exceptionally high rates—non-citizen American Samoan nationals cannot register to vote, run for office, serve on juries, or hold any job requiring citizenship. Unless they can claim citizenship through a parent or grandparent, American Samoan nationals must apply for citizenship as though they were immigrants. That process can be costly, confusing, and long.

As non-citizen nationals, they exist in a formal underclass of democracy that precludes them from, for one, running for a local school board.

An Alaska state trooper told Smith that “There’s an arrest warrant out for you,” even though he conceded it was not as if she had “murdered someone or anything like that.”

Smith told him she had no idea she’d done anything wrong. The limits on American Samoans’ rights are “not well understood by most people—including many American Samoans themselves, and even most Alaska officials.” “I know that I cannot vote for the president,” Smith said when arrested. “I didn’t know that I can’t vote for anything else.”

In addition to Smith being arrested, her husband and nine of his relatives received court summonses accusing them of felony illegal voting, because they are American nationals, not American citizens.

If American Samoans move to the mainland United States, they should be able to vote in local elections in the place they permanently reside in, just the way Puerto Ricans can vote in the cities and towns in the mainland United States that they move to from Puerto Rico.

Post Office Admits It Has Little Clue How To Deal With Hundreds Of Vacant Buildings

By Harold Hutchison

The United States Postal Service (USPS) admitted it has 285 buildings across the country that are partially or completely unused, but said that legislative solutions were required to address the inventory, according to a Thursday letter.

Republican Sen. Joni Ernst demanded that the United States Postal Service (USPS) account for its building usage in a letter sent Dec. 19, citing a Nov. 24 report by the agency’s inspector general. In the letter, the USPS director of government liaison, Michael J. Gordon, explained why the agency struggled to address the extra buildings. (RELATED: EXCLUSIVE: Joni Ernst Delivers Demand For USPS To Explain Why They Can’t Account For Space In 21,000 Buildings)

“I understand your concerns about unnecessary government properties and would note that federal law makes closing or consolidating inefficient or unneeded facilities very difficult,” Gordon wrote. “Additionally, we routinely receive inordinate congressional pressure—including from some of your colleagues in Iowa’s delegation—opposing even minor changes that would increase efficiency (such as shifting limited mail processing operations from one facility to another, even when the first facility would remain open and operational).”

“Similarly, we recently heard very loud congressional opposition to terminating contracts with third-party facilities (such as grocery and convenience stores) that provide postal services, a move that would save us money and have no real effect on service,” Gordon continued. “Congressional insistence to maintain the status quo, even when doing so is expensive, inefficient, and outdated, makes modest modernization and financial sustainability efforts extraordinarily difficult and sometimes impossible.”

The USPS has lost more than $18 billion over the last two fiscal years, according to a Nov. 14 release by the agency. Ernst told the Daily Caller News Foundation that the inventory of excess buildings helped explain the USPS’ poor financial state.

“If you’re wondering why USPS loses billions of dollars, look no further than the fact it is paying for nearly 300 buildings it does not need,” said Ernst. “No business could operate like this, but unfortunately this problem is far too common throughout our government. Which is exactly why Congress needs to pass my DISPOSAL Act to streamline the sale of underutilized and unnecessary buildings to save taxpayers billions of dollars. The American people deserve better.”

The USPS owns or leases over 34,000 buildings across the country, of which more than 95% have not been reviewed at all or since 2020, according to the IG report released in November.

“The Postal Service did not effectively manage excess and underutilized space as it does not have reliable data, does not know the amount of this space throughout its network, and does not have a comprehensive strategy for reducing this space. The Postal Service also did not comply with a key [Federal Property Management Reform Act (FPMRA)] reporting requirement on excess and underutilized space,” the report stated. (RELATED: EXCLUSIVE: GOP Senator Sounds Alarm About Uncle Sam Making Rent On Massive Gov’t Building Portfolio During Shutdown)

Ernst introduced S. 3901, the Disposing of Inactive Structures and Properties by Offering for Sale And Lease (DISPOSAL) Act, on Oct. 30, which seeks to sell off six major federal government-owned buildings in Washington, D.C., while also streamlining the process to sell other buildings.

In a 60-page report released on Dec. 5, 2024, that covered findings from her investigations into telework issues, Ernst noted that largely vacant office buildings resulting from the liberal remote work policies established during the COVID-19 pandemic had detrimental effects on the environmental quality in the workplaces.

Virginia bill would raise state income tax rate to 10% for households making over $1 million

Delegate Kelly Convirs-Fowler (D-Virginia Beach) has introduced a bill to increase state income taxes in Virginia, HB 188. Under her bill, the marginal tax rate would rise from 5.75% to 10% on people making over $1 million.

Virginia already has higher state income taxes than most of its neighbors. Kentucky has a maximum tax rate of 3.5%, North Carolina has a maximum tax rate of 3.99%, West Virginia has a maximum tax rate of 4.82%, while Virginia has a maximum tax rate of 5.75%. Tennessee has no state income tax. As a result, Virginia is now one of the higher-tax states both in terms of dollars paid, and tax burdens compared to other states.

That’s a big change from the recent past. In 2015, Virginia had lower state income tax rates than West Virginia, North Carolina, and Kentucky. Back then, the top marginal tax rate was 6.5% in West Virginia, 6% in Kentucky, and 5.8% in North Carolina, compared to 5.75% in Virginia. And the lowest tax rate (for low-income households) was 5.8% in North Carolina, 3% in West Virginia, and 2% in Kentucky, compared to 2% in Virginia (most taxpayers pay the top marginal tax rate in each state). But since then, Virginia’s neighbors have cut tax rates a lot, unlike Virginia.

Due to high taxes and high living costs in Virginia, people are moving from Virginia to West Virginia and states south of Virginia like North Carolina, Tennessee, and Florida. As James Bacon, the former publisher of Virginia Business, noted in 2024, “people moving to Virginia in 2021 came mainly from the northeast — New Jersey is at the top of the list — and they’re moving mainly to southern states.” States in the northeast often have even higher taxes than Virginia (such as New Jersey, New York, and Connecticut), while southern states have lower taxes (Florida, Texas, and Tennessee have no state income tax).

People are even moving from high-tax Virginia to southern states whose populations and economies are stagnant, such as West Virginia and Mississippi. As Bacon noted, “Perhaps most remarkable is the net migration of Virginians to Alabama, Mississippi, and West Virginia — states not on many peoples’ list of lands of economic opportunity.”

Raising marginal tax rates in Virginia to 10% could stifle the migration of people from Maryland into Virginia. Right now, more people move from Maryland to Virginia than from Virginia to Maryland, resulting a net migration of 2,550 people from Maryland to Virginia in 2021.

But a top marginal rate of 10% would leave rich people slightly worse off in Virginia than in Maryland. (In Maryland, the top marginal tax rate is 6.5% at the state level, plus up to 3.2% at the county level in those counties with the highest county income rates — resulting in a maximum marginal rate rate of 9.7% in the highest-tax Maryland counties).

So rich people would stop moving to Virginia, making Virginia poorer and cutting its income tax revenue.

Some people move to Virginia from Maryland because taxes are lower for them in Virginia. I grew up in Maryland, but moved to Virginia back when taxes were clearly lower for me in Virginia. I had a neighbor who also came from Maryland. He appreciated that taxes were lower in Virginia than Maryland’s Montgomery County, but expressed ambivalence about leaving Maryland behind, saying that people were “friendlier” in Maryland, that Montgomery County had “more character” and better landscapes than northern Virginia, and that much of northern Virginia was a “wasteland” of endless sprawl.

If the tax rates rise in Virginia, many people will leave for southern states like North Carolina and Tennessee, or West Virginia. And some like my former neighbor will move to Maryland or stay in Maryland rather than moving to Virginia.

When Maryland raised taxes on millionaires, many moved out of state, resulting in Maryland raising less revenue as a result. The Tax Foundation described the results:

The Comptroller of Maryland has reported that the number of “millionaire” returns tumbled sharply between 2007 and 2008, a 30% drop in filers and 22% drop in declared income. Rather than income taxes from this group rising by $106 million, they fell by $257 million….One-in-eight millionaires who filed a Maryland tax return in 2007 filed no return in 2008. Some died, but the others presumably changed their state of residence….A Bank of America Merrill Lynch analysis of federal tax return data on people who migrated from one state to another found that Maryland lost $1 billion of its net tax base in 2008 by residents moving to other states.

2025 had the lowest death rate from extreme weather ever

2025 saw the “lowest death rate from extreme weather in history.” Roger Pielke “notes that this good news is not a fluke,” but “part of a much longer-term trend” in “a world that has grown much wealthier and thus far better equipped to protect people when, inevitably, extreme events do occur.'” The death rate from extreme weather events is 99.8% lower than it was in 1960.

In 2025, there were only “about 4,500 deaths related to extreme weather events,” despite the “large loss of life related to flooding in South and Southeast Asia, associated with Cyclones Senyar and Ditwah.”

Pielke adds:

the death rate from extreme weather events is the lowest ever at less than 0.8 deaths per 1,000,000 people….Only 2018 and 2015 are close.

To put the death rate into perspective, consider that:

  • in 1960 it was >320 per 1,000,000;
  • in 1970, >80;
  • in 1980, ~3;
  • in 1990, ~1.3;

Since 2000, six years have occurred with <1.0 deaths per 1,000,000 people, all since 2014….This is an incredible story of human ingenuity and progress.

To be sure, there is some luck involved as large losses of life are still possible — For instance, 2008 saw almost 150,000 deaths and a death rate of ~21 per 1,000,000.

Most of the world’s forests are expanding. Reforestation is offsetting the effects of global warming in parts of the U.S.

The amount of vegetation on the Earth has increased for each of the last 30 years.

China’s forests have grown by about 234,000 square miles over the last 30 years, an area the size of Ukraine. The European Union has added an area the size of Cambodia to its woodlands.

Reforestation has recently accelerated in England.

New treatment for hemophilia cuts bleeding by a lot

“A new long-acting treatment (‘Qfitlia’ or fitusiran) for hemophilia was approved. Patients tend to rely on regular infusions of clotting products or similar products to prevent excessive bleeding. This new treatment..is given by injection roughly once per two months. In phase 3 trials, it reduced bleeding episodes by around 70% more than standard treatment,” reports The Doomslayer.

The FDA explains why it approved the new treatment:

Qfitlia is administered under the skin (subcutaneously) starting once every two months. The dose and frequency of injections are adjusted using the FDA-cleared INNOVANCE Antithrombin companion diagnostic test. This companion diagnostic is intended to monitor and—by informing dosing and frequency of injections—achieve antithrombin activity in the target range to reduce the risk of bleeding and to reduce the risk of excessive blood clotting. The FDA granted clearance of the INNOVANCE Antithrombin test to Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics GmbH.

Qfitlia’s efficacy and safety were assessed in two multicenter, randomized clinical trials which enrolled a total of 177 adult and pediatric male patients with either hemophilia A or hemophilia B. In one study, participants had inhibitory antibodies to FVIII or FIX and previously received on-demand treatment with medicines known as “bypassing agents” for bleeding. In the second study, participants did not have inhibitory antibodies to FVIII or FIX and previously received on-demand treatment with clotting factor concentrates. In the two randomized trials, participants received either a fixed dose of Qfitlia monthly or their usual on-demand treatment (bypassing agents or clotting factor concentrates) as needed for nine months. The fixed dose of Qfitlia is not approved because it led to excessive clotting in some patients.

In other news, the first non-opioid painkiller in decades was developed for surgical treatment. It has fewer side effects than other painkillers and doesn’t seem to be addictive.

Malaria vaccines are saving thousands of lives in Africa.

Last year, a treatment was discovered for sleeping sickness, a disease that kills 50,000 to 500,000 people per year. Sleeping sickness is an awful disease that begins with fever and aches. Then things get worse. The parasite that causes the disease will disrupt sleeping patterns and cause aggressiveness and psychosis. The death rate from sleeping sickness is close to 100%, if it is untreated.

The customary treatment for sleeping sickness was also quite awful: a drug that is toxic to the kidneys, followed by an arsenic-based drug that’s toxic to the brain. The treatment kills up to a tenth of all patients. But thanks to a recent discovery, people can take the drug fexinidazole to treat the disease instead.

For many years, therapy would begin with a lumbar puncture to see if the parasite has invaded the central nervous system, followed by injections of a drug that damages your kidneys, followed by an arsenic-based drug that harms your brain. But scientists have discovered that fexinadazole can be used to treat sleeping sickness, first the chronic variety, and more recently for acute sleeping sickness as well. European regulators approved the drug based on results from a clinical trial showing that a 10-day course of pills cures acute sleeping sickness in 97% of patients. That will lead to approval of the drug by countries outside of the EU, many of which more or less automatically approve drugs approved by the European Medicines Agency.

‘Get The F*ck Out!’: Mayor Demands ICE Leave Following Fatal Minneapolis Shooting

By Harold Hutchison

Democratic Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis demanded Wednesday that the federal government cease immigration enforcement operations in the city after a deadly shooting involving a federal agent.

A United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent fatally shot a 37-year-old woman during an operation. Frey accused the Trump administration of “sowing chaos” in the city before demanding ICE’s departure. (RELATED: Crowd Surrounds ICE Agents During Enforcement Operation In Minneapolis)

“We’ve dreaded this moment since the early stages of this ICE presence in Minneapolis,” Frey raged during a press conference. “Not only is this a concern that we had internally, we’ve been talking about it.”

“They are not here to cause safety in this city. What they are doing is not to provide safety in America. What they are doing is causing chaos and distrust,” Frey continued. “They are ripping families apart, they are sowing chaos on our streets and in this case, quite literally killing people. So, they are already trying to spin this as an action of self-defense. Having seen the video for myself, I want to tell everybody directly: that is bullshit. This was an agent recklessly using power that resulted in somebody dying, getting killed.”

Multiple law enforcement agencies converged on the scene after the shots were fired, Fox 9 News, a Minneapolis TV station, reported. Frey delivered a demand to ICE during the press conference.

“ICE officers in Minneapolis were conducting targeted operations when rioters began blocking  ICE officers and one of these violent rioters weaponized her vehicle, attempting to run over our law enforcement officers in an attempt to kill them—an act of domestic terrorism,” Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin alleged on X. “An ICE officer, fearing for his life, the lives of his fellow law enforcement and the safety of the public, fired defensive shots.  He used his training and saved his own life and that of his fellow officers.  The alleged perpetrator was hit and is deceased. The ICE officers who were hurt are expected to make full recoveries.”

Shocking Video Captures Fatal ICE Shooting During Minneapolis Protests

By Harold Hutchison & Hudson Crozier

An Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer fired multiple shots at a driver while standing in front of her car during protests in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Wednesday, video footage shows.

At least three federal agents were seen approaching the now-deceased driver’s SUV and ordering her to step out just before the altercation occurred in a video posted on X by Minnesota Reformer journalist Max Nesterak and by Insider Wire. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) blamed the driver for the incident in a statement, claiming she attempted to run an officer over just before he fired. . (RELATED: Transgender Anti-ICE Rioter Already Out Of Jail After Butcher Knife Episode)

“Get out of the car. Get out of the fucking car,” one agent was heard saying in the video as the group approached the vehicle on a snowy road in a suburban neighborhood. The agent then grabbed the car’s door handle, and a bystander is heard yelling “No!” as the driver begins to move the car backward.

Another agent was seen circling the car just as it was moving, eventually standing in front of it just before it lunged forward. He fired at least two shots at the driver as the car came towards him before moving out of the way as it continued moving forward, the footage shows. The car then veered off the side of the road and crashed into another vehicle.

“You’re fucking criminals!” a bystander is heard yelling at law enforcement after the shots.

“Today, ICE officers in Minneapolis were conducting targeted operations when rioters began blocking ICE officers and one of these violent rioters weaponized her vehicle, attempting to run over our law enforcement officers in an attempt to kill them — an act of domestic terrorism,” a DHS spokesperson claimed. “An ICE officer, fearing for his life, the lives of his fellow law enforcement and the safety of the public, fired defensive shots. He used his training and saved his own life and that of his fellow officers.”

The Minneapolis City Council identified the woman killed by a federal agent as 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good.

Good was fatally shot by a United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent Wednesday, prompting angry reactions from Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Democratic Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey. Minneapolis officials told CBS News Minnesota that Good was a legal observer monitoring federal law enforcement. (RELATED: ‘Get The F*ck Out!’: Minneapolis Mayor Demands ICE Leave Following Fatal Shooting)

“This morning an ICE agent shot and killed Renee Nicole Good, a member of our community. Renee was a resident of our city who was out caring for her neighbors this morning and her life was taken today at the hands of the federal government,” the city council said in a statement obtained by Fox 9. “Anyone who kills someone in our city deserves to be arrested, investigated, and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

“To Minnesotans, know that our administration will stop at nothing to seek accountability and justice. The state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension are working on the investigation,” Walz said during a Wednesday afternoon press conference.

ICE surged into the Minneapolis area following revelations into welfare fraud in Minnesota that federal officials say totals at least $9 billion after Trump announced he would end “Temporary Protected Status” for Somalis in Minneapolis in response to the allegations.

A Dec. 15 ICE operation in Minneapolis was surrounded by protesters, leading to a standoff where agents used paintball guns to try to control the crowd before Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office deputies arrived.

Progressive judge releases man even though he held woman captive, tortured her for days

A Minnesota “judge’s sentence spared a St. Paul man any further time locked up after being accused of holding a woman captive in his home, then torturing and sex-trafficking her,” reports the Minnesota Star-Tribune:

Jabari Quentin Junior, 23, was sentenced on Jan. 5 to time served in jail since his arrest after pleading guilty to first-degree assault in connection with charges that he terrorized a 19-year-old woman nearly a year ago in a West Side Flats apartment on Wabasha Street across the Mississippi River from downtown.

Ramsey County District Judge Thomas Gilligan set aside a term of roughly 8½ years and opted to put Junior on probation for five years. He also must be registered with the state for the next 10 years as a predatory offender….

The County Attorney’s Office sought a sentence within the state guidelines range of roughly 6¼ to 8½ years for Junior….According to the criminal complaint: “Police were called on Jan. 29, 2025, to Regions Hospital, where the woman was being treated for severe burns to her face, arms and torso from boiling water. She also had stab wounds to one shin and an arm.”

Republican gubernatorial candidate Lisa Demuth denounced the incredibly lenient sentence, noting that “Sentencing guidelines called for a prison term of 6-8 years. Instead a Democrat-appointed judge lets him walk free. I will appoint judges who will enforce laws & prison sentences, & work with the legislature to crack down on pro-criminal plea deals that put Minnesotans at risk.”

As was pointed out earlier,

Criminals are sometimes quickly released by progressive prosecutors and judges who worry about “mass incarceration” if offenders have to do serious time. Most prison inmates in America are doing time for violent crimes, and the typical state prison inmate is a repeat offender with 5 convictions.

Releasing them quickly to reduce incarceration rates is risky: Most inmates commit more crimes after being released, even when they have already served over ten years in prison. Nationally, 81.9% of all state prisoners released in 2008 were subsequently arrested within a decade, including 74.5% of those 40 or older at the time of their release. (See Bureau of Justice Statistics, Recidivism of Prisoners in 24 States Released in 2008: A 10-Year Follow-Up Period (2008-2018)pg. 4, Table 4)).

Greenland is a costly white elephant. Why does Trump want it?

If Greenland, the world’s largest island, were a state in the United States, it would send two Democrats to the U.S. Senate, given how left-leaning it is. Because it is poorer than the United States, absorbing Greenland would be costly. The poorest U.S. states receive more money from the federal government than their citizens pay in taxes. Greenland has high rates of alcohol abuse and domestic violence. It’s a cold, barren wasteland.

Yet the New York Times notes that President Trump “seems increasingly fixated on the idea that the United States should take over” Greenland, a “gigantic icebound island, with one official saying the president wants to buy it and another suggesting that the United States could simply take it. Just a few days ago, Mr. Trump said: ‘We need Greenland from the standpoint of national security.'”

But why do we need to take it from our Danish allies? Right now, Greenland is a self-governing territory that is technically part of Denmark. Denmark is America’s NATO ally, and 43 Danish soldiers died fighting on America’s side in Afghanistan.

As the New York Times notes,

Under a little-known Cold War agreement, the United States already enjoys sweeping military access in Greenland. Right now, the United States has one base in a very remote corner of the island. But the agreement allows it to “construct, install, maintain, and operate” military bases across Greenland, “house personnel” and “control landings, takeoffs, anchorages, moorings, movements, and operation of ships, aircraft, and waterborne craft.”

It was signed in 1951 by the United States and Denmark, which colonized Greenland more than 300 years ago and still controls some of its affairs.

“The U.S. has such a free hand in Greenland that it can pretty much do what it wants,” said Mikkel Runge Olesen, a researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies in Copenhagen.

“I have a very hard time seeing that the U.S. couldn’t get pretty much everything it wanted,” he said, adding, “if it just asked nicely.”

Similarly, Dan Gardner says, “what does the US need or want that Denmark denies? The US had DOZENS of bases on Greenland; it chose to reduce them to one. If the US asked for more bases, or whatever, Denmark would say yes, as it always has.”

Conservative Danish parliamentarian Rasmus Jarlov says, “The USA already has a defence agreement with Denmark that gives them exclusive and full military access to Greenland. But they are not using it. They have downgraded their presence by 99%.”

Greenland does have minerals, but only a small fraction of them are economically viable to mine. Greenland is too cold and icy a place to mine most of those minerals when mining is easier in more temperate climates. Moreover, “analysts say, the United States doesn’t need to take over the island to get” its minerals. “Greenlanders have said they are open to doing business — with just about anyone.” Australians, Canadians, and other foreigners are already involved in mining in Greenland.

As a hedge fund investor notes, Greeland’s minerals are mostly inaccessible:

People are hallucinating on Greenland’s mineral wealth. Exploring and mining in the Arctic is a literal hellscape. The constraints are insane and the costs to overcome ’em are way past imagination.

Geologically, permafrost is a nightmare. Ground’s frozen solid—normal drilling hits a wall. Building stable foundations for gear is a massive money pit. Operations are cooked too.

Constant darkness for months in winter. Working 24/7 under floodlights craters efficiency and spikes accident risk. At -40°C to -50°C, metal gets brittle and just snaps.

You need custom alloy gear, and keeping fuel/lube from freezing is a constant battle. The diesel/power burn just to keep lights on and engines warm is eye-watering. Immediate Opex blow-up. Logistics? Absolute disaster. It’s not about digging it out; it’s about moving it.

Zero roads or rails. Everything moves by heli, light plane, or ship. Moving ore to a port costs multiples of what normal mines pay. Plus, zero local smelters.

You gotta ship it across oceans, burning time and cash. Shipping windows are tiny. Some coasts are only accessible a few months a year. You either pay for icebreakers or pray the 1-year supply/export window doesn’t get wrecked by bad weather. If the ship misses the slot, the whole year is a wash. Look at the Citronen Fjord Zn project at 83°N. It’s one of the world’s biggest undeveloped Zn-Pb deposits, but it’s 2,100km north of Nuuk. Total isolation. They get a 3-month window to move a year’s worth of cargo.

One bad storm and the project is bricked for the season. Ironbark Zinc tried for ages, but it just got flipped to Dubai-based Almeera Ventures. That’s a clear signal on how brutal the Capex and funding hurdles are.

The core issue: does the margin even justify the risk? Building a mine w/ zero infra is a Capex black hole. Think global warming helps? Think again. Thawing permafrost is actually trashing existing infra and roads. Extreme weather just jacks up Opex even more. We’re talking 10-15 years from discovery to first ore. If commodity prices crater in between, you’re left holding a stranded asset. This is the reality of mining. Arctic development is 10x harder than you think. Please, stop living in a dream world. There’s a reason Denmark wasn’t aggressive on development.

You really think they held back just to protect the Inuit? Give me a break. Money always trumps ESG in the end, no matter the optics. You can spam ‘self-sufficiency’ and ‘strategy’ all you want, but you can’t meme your way past physics and economics. Wake up.

Running Greenland costs money. Denmark recently helped finance three new airports in Greenland costing $800 million. It has spent billions and billions of dollars on Greenland, for little in return.

Greenland is mostly covered by ice and has fewer than 57,000 people. Most of Greenland is uninhabitable because it is covered by a massive ice sheet. Obviously, Denmark is not going to build thousands of miles of roads to serve a tiny number of people, when it is faster to travel by airplane across the vast ice sheet. Instead, Denmark has spent generously on ports and airports Greenlanders can use.

Greenlanders are coddled by Denmark’s progressive government, which subsidizes their lifestyle. It is Danish money that props up Greenlanders’ middle-class standard of living. Without Danish aid, Greenland would be much poorer due to its remote location and hostile and unforgiving climate, which make it almost impossible to farm or operate many kinds of industry.

The uncle of a Liberty Unyielding blogger, who took an interest in Greenland, made the mistake of going there on a trip, and discovered how little Greenland had to offer, and what drunken welfare recipients many of them are:

Jackie and I went to Greenland on the eastern part of the island. Most of the people live on the western part of the island. The part that we visited was really harsh and inhospitable.  Everybody in the two towns we visited depended upon the welfare checks they got each month from the government … They would then get drunk and the kids would not go to school. My guess is that a good amount of their income also came from tourism. There had been a US Air Force radar site on the hills inland from the village where we stayed. We were only there for three days. Not much to do there, except hike in the local areas and look at the sled dogs. The dogs were not friendly. The dogs spent all their time outside in the cold.

Trump’s fixation with Greenland could cost the U.S. billions of dollars in export sales, because Denmark’s government may buy fewer high-tech weapons from the U.S. due to Denmark’s deteriorating relations with America as a result of Trump’s designs on Greenland.

“We must avoid American weapons if at all possible,” said the chairman of Denmark’s parliamentary defense committee last year. He said he regrets choosing America’s F-35 fighter aircraft for his country, citing the possibility that the U.S. may cut off support for the fighter in order to seize Greenland. “As one of the decision-makers behind Denmark’s purchase of F-35s, I regret it,” said Rasmus Jarlov, a member of parliament for Denmark’s Conservative People’s Party.

Jarlov was responding to rumors that the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II may have a “kill-switch” that allows the U.S. government to remotely disable F-35s bought by U.S. allies. On March 18, the Pentagon denied that the stealth fighter has such a kill-switch.

But the Danish official was not convinced. “We obviously cannot take your word for it,” Jarlov said:

He added that the US could scupper Copenhagen’s use of the F-35 just by stopping the supply of spare parts — a similar dilemma that Ukraine faced when Washington temporarily paused military aid.

“I can easily imagine a situation where the USA will demand Greenland from Denmark and will threaten to deactivate our weapons and let Russia attack us when we refuse,” wrote Jarlov, who is also his party’s spokesperson for his stance on Greenland’s affairs….”Therefore, buying American weapons is a security risk that we cannot run. We will make enormous investments in air defense, fighter jets, artillery, and other weapons in the coming years, and we must avoid American weapons if at all possible,” he said.

“I encourage our friends and allies to do the same,” Jarlov added.

Denmark announced in 2016 that it was spending about $3 billion on 27 F-35s to replace its aging fleet of F-16 Fighting Falcons. Jarlov was serving as Denmark’s defense committee chairman at the time.

85% of Greenlanders oppose becoming part of the United States.

Trump Says Venezuela Turning Over Huge Stockpile Of Oil To US

By Mariane Angela

President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that interim authorities in Venezuela will transfer tens of millions of barrels of oil to the United States.

Trump said on Truth Social early Saturday that U.S. forces seized Nicolás Maduro and ousted him during a large-scale strike in Venezuela. Trump announced on a Truth Social post that Venezuela will turn over between 30 million and 50 million barrels of high-quality, sanctioned oil to the United States.

“Interim Authorities in Venezuela will be turning over between 30 and 50 MILLION Barrels of High Quality, Sanctioned Oil, to the United States of America,” Trump wrote. “This Oil will be sold at its Market Price, and that money will be controlled by me, as President of the United States of America, to ensure it is used to benefit the people of Venezuela and the United States!”

The president directed Energy Secretary Chris Wright to carry out the plan immediately.

“I have asked Energy Secretary Chris Wright to execute this plan, immediately. It will be taken by storage ships, and brought directly to unloading docks in the United States,” Trump added.

After Trump removed Maduro, the United States positioned itself to dominate the Western Hemisphere and exploit Venezuela’s vast energy resources, energy experts told the Daily Caller News Foundation. Experts said American firms once built and led Venezuela’s oil industry until Hugo Chávez nationalized it. Trump’s move now opens the door for renewed U.S. influence. With Chevron currently the only major American operator in the country, analysts argued that Washington can use its leverage over Venezuela to gain a geopolitical edge over China, Russia, and even Canada in the years ahead.

Venezuela holds the largest proven crude reserves on the planet, yet roughly 50% of its citizens live in poverty. The administration and economists such as The Heritage Foundation’s Chief Economist E.J. Antoni said that restoring Venezuela’s oil sector through cooperation with the United States could produce clear benefits for both countries. (RELATED: Trump Says US ‘Going To Run’ Venezuela After Nabbing Maduro)

China and Russia spent years deepening their influence in Venezuela, with a Russian state-owned energy company emerging as a major partner in oil production after U.S. sanctions shut out many other buyers. In recent years, most Venezuelan oil exports went to China, cementing Beijing’s dominant role in the country’s energy trade.

 

 

 

 

University to pay $500,000 for firing professor over Charlie Kirk posts

Violating free-speech rights can be costly for a public employer. “Darren Michael, associate professor at Austin Peay State University, has reportedly been reinstated and given $500,000 after being fired over posts about assassinated conservative activist Charlie Kirk,” reports Mediaite:

Tennessee’s WKRN News 2 obtained a copy of a settlement agreement between Michael and the university, showing the school will dish out $500,000 and reimburse “therapeutic counseling services.”

“APSU agrees to issue a statement acknowledging regret for not following the tenure termination process in connection with the Dispute,” the settlement reportedly reads. “The statement will be distributed via email through APSU’s reasonable communication channels to faculty, staff, and students.”

The university confirmed to WZTV in Nashville that Michael returned to his faculty position at the end of December.

Michael was fired on Sept. 12 (two days after the assassination of Kirk) after social media posts about Kirk spread far and wide on social media….

“Charlie Kirk says gun deaths are ‘unfortunately’ worth it to keep 2nd Amendment,” read the headline of an article Michael shared. He did not add any additional comment on it.

The school originally said Michael was fired over “insensitive comments” made on social media.

There is no “insensitive comments” exception to the First Amendment. School administrators in public-facing roles can sometimes be removed from their positions for insensitive comments that anger many members of the public, but college faculty usually cannot be punished for such speechFor example, courts ruled that a professor had the right to include a parody of land acknowledgments in his syllabus, even though it offended some Native American students (see Reges v. Cauce (2025)), and that a professor had the First Amendment right to publish writings about crime and other subjects that denigrated black people (see Levin v. Harleston (1992); see also Jorjani v. New Jersey Institute of Technology (2025))).

The Supreme Court said that even inappropriate speech by a public employee can be protected, in a 1987 ruling. In that case, the Supreme Court voted 5-to-4 to find that the First Amendment was violated when a public employee was fired for hoping that a future assassination attempt on President Reagan would be successful, because that inappropriate speech did not offend the public employee’s immediate co-workers all that much, or otherwise cause a disruption. (See Rankin v. McPherson (1987)).

Cartoon of the Day: What’s For Dinner?

Mandani Collective Warmth

A.F. Branco Cartoon – New York Mayor Mamdani says, “We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism.” Scary stuff.

BRANCO TOON STORE – 2026 Cartoon Calendar

This Line From Zohran Mamdani’s Inauguration Speech Should Terrify Freedom Loving Americans (VIDEO)

By Mike LaChance – Jan 1, 2026

Zohran Mamdani had a second swearing in ceremony in New York City today, in which he gave a speech that contained a shocking line.
The new mayor of New York City actually said these words out loud:
“We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism.”
Here is the line in full context, via Real Clear Politics:

NEW YORK CITY MAYOR ZOHRAN MAMDANI: I welcome the change. For too long, those fluent in the good grammar of civility have deployed decorum to mask agendas of cruelty. Many of these people have been betrayed but in our administration their needs will be met. Their hopes and dreams and interests will be reflected transparently in government… READ MORE

DONATE to A.F. Branco Cartoons – Tips appreciated – $5.00, $10.00, $20.00 – It all helps to fund this website and keep the cartoons coming. Also, Venmo @AFBranco – THANK YOU!

A.F. Branco has taken his two greatest passions (art and politics) and translated them into cartoons that have been popular all over the country in various news outlets, including NewsMax, Fox News, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, and “The Washington Post.” He has been recognized by such personalities as Rep. Devin Nunes, Dinesh D’Souza, James Woods, Chris Salcedo, Sarah Palin, Larry Elder, Lars Larson, Rush Limbaugh, Elon Musk, and President Trump.

After years of savagely beating women and getting released, a criminal kills a cop in Austin

Criminals commit crimes again and again, only to be released from jail to commit yet more crimes, such as killing children or cops.

This belies the myth of mass incarceration.

Austin Justice tells of a man who savagely beat women over and over again, with few consequences, and then went on to kill a deputy constable:

The man arrested for executing a deputy in an Austin bar spent years beating women. He dragged a woman out of a bar and repeatedly punched her in the face until her eyes turned black. He stomped on a woman’s face while ripping a child from her arms. He broke into strangers’ homes coked up and naked wielding knives. A jury never once heard from his victims because prosecutors kept giving him plea deals and probations. Now a deputy is dead.

Thomas Vences, arrested last night for murder of a deputy constable, has a long history of beating women, breaking into homes, and terrorizing families. Sunday’s shooting at Club Rodeo wasn’t even his first violent crime at a North Lamar bar.

2017 — Beats up his girlfriend at La Preferida Bar on North Lamar:

Vences approached his ex-girlfriend at the bar and demanded she leave with him. When she refused, he dragged her out by her arms. Once outside, he pushed her to the ground, then threw her into the backseat of a borrowed car. While she lay on her back, he punched her in the face with closed fists, multiple times. Witnesses saw him drag her out. Police documented blackened eyes and finger-shaped bruises on her arms. This was enhanced to a felony because he had a prior family violence conviction from Williamson County in 2013.

Result: Probation.

2019 — Stomps on woman’s face and takes child: Vences was arguing with the mother of his child. He announced he was taking their daughter and leaving. When she grabbed the child and retreated to the bedroom, he followed. He pried the child from her arms. He pinned her arm to the bed. He pressed his foot down on her face. When she tried to follow him out, he grabbed her by the hair and threw her to the ground. The day before, he had choked her. Then he took her phone so she couldn’t call police. She told deputies he “frequently uses the child as a mechanism of control” — disappearing for days, blocking her calls. At the time of this arrest, he was already in pretrial for forcing his way into her sister’s home and assaulting her there.

Result: Probation.

2019 — Breaks into stranger’s apartment: Vences showed up intoxicated at an apartment looking for his daughter. A woman named Mariana — who babysat for his child’s mother — answered the door thinking it was her boyfriend. Vences forced his way in and went room to room searching. When she tried to push him out, he shoved her into a wall. Bruises on her arm were still visible 10 days later. He fled, leaving behind a ripped shirt and his cell phone. Police traced him through CPS records. Result: Probation. Naked, coked up, breaks into two homes with knife Police were called at 4a.m. for a prowler. They found Vences naked in a parking lot, covered in deep cuts, acting irrational.

What happened: He broke a window and entered the first apartment while a family slept. A mother, her adult son, and her brother locked themselves in separate rooms “fearing for their lives.” They could hear him banging on bedroom doors. When he left, the apartment was covered in blood. He stole a kitchen knife. Then he went next door. He did a “full dive” through the window, landing on the living room floor, knife in hand. The woman of the house jumped on top of him and grabbed his wrists to control the blade. Her husband helped. Together they disarmed him and threw him outside. At the hospital, Vences admitted to police he had ingested 20 grams of cocaine. He said someone was chasing him. He asked, “How much is the window?” and offered: “I’ll buy them both windows.”

Result: Released on bond.

Skipped court in June. Became a wanted fugitive on four felony warrants.

Seven months later, Deputy Aaron Armstrong is dead.

Criminals are sometimes quickly released by progressive prosecutors and judges who worry about “mass incarceration” if offenders have to do serious time. Most prison inmates in America are doing time for violent crimes, and the typical state prison inmate is a repeat offender with 5 convictions.

Releasing them quickly to reduce incarceration rates is risky: Most inmates commit more crimes after being released, even when they have already served over ten years in prison. Nationally, 81.9% of all state prisoners released in 2008 were subsequently arrested within a decade, including 74.5% of those 40 or older at the time of their release. (See Bureau of Justice Statistics, Recidivism of Prisoners in 24 States Released in 2008: A 10-Year Follow-Up Period (2008-2018)pg. 4, Table 4)).

Swiss bar where fire killed 40 people was not inspected for 6 years

“Local authorities failed to carry out yearly safety inspections between 2020 and 2025 at the bar in the Swiss Alps that suffered a deadly fire last week,” reports The New York Times, fueling mounting accusations that lax oversight had set the stage for the disaster.”

“We bitterly regret this,” says the mayor of Crans-Montana, the ski resort town where the fire killed 40 people, disproportionately teenagers, and badly injured over 100 others during a New Year’s celebration. Mayor Féraud adds that “the justice system will determine the extent to which this failure influenced the chain of events leading to the tragedy.” Local fire regulations require yearly inspections in buildings that are open to the public or have heightened risks.

The New York Times reports that

The owners, a French couple named Jacques and Jessica Moretti, are under criminal investigation over suspicions that negligence played a role in the fire — a sudden burst of flames that engulfed the bar’s basement.

The Morettis have not responded to multiple requests for comment. In brief interviews with the Swiss media, they have denied wrongdoing and said they were cooperating with investigators.

The local authorities have also come under pressure over their enforcement of fire safety regulations.

Pictures on social media of extensive renovations when the bar opened in 2015, as well as witness accounts of its operations, suggest that hazards blamed for turning the bar into a death trap were long present.

Those include a basement ceiling covered in flammable foam, the indoor use of firework sparklers and a lack of accessible emergency exits that turned a narrow staircase into a choke point.

An exit door opened inward, not outward, which may have resulted in people being crushed against the closed door while trying to escape.

Good news for people who risk agonizing pain after surgery

Science delivers advances in reducing pain.

Saloni Dattani notes that “Suzetrigine (‘Journavx’) became the first non-opioid painkiller for surgical treatment in decades. In a phase 3 trial of 2,000 patients, it reduced pain as effectively as hydrocodone and paracetamol, but had fewer side effects and doesn’t appear to be addictive. Michelle Ma has written a great article about the history of pain medication leading up to it.”

The National Library of Medicine notes that “Opioids are effective for treating acute pain but have safety, tolerability, and addiction concerns while nonopioid analgesics have limited efficacy. Suzetrigine, an oral, nonopioid small molecule, selectively inhibits the voltage-gated sodium channel 1.8 (NaV1.8) and has potential to provide efficacious and safe relief for acute pain without addiction concerns….suzetrigine reduced moderate-to-severe acute pain over 48 h after abdominoplasty or bunionectomy. Pain reduction with suzetrigine was similar to that with hydrocodone bitartrate/acetaminophen.”

Michelle Ma explains:

In the nineteenth century, the invention of anesthesia was considered a gift from God. But post-operative pain relief has continued to rely on opioids, derivatives of opium, the addictive substance employed since ancient times. Although no other drug has managed to match the rapid, potent, and broadly effective relief delivered by opioids, their side effects have led to decades of addiction and overdose, leaving researchers keen to find a better solution.

This all changed in January 2025, when the FDA approved Vertex Pharmaceuticals’s Journavx (suzetrigine): the first non-opioid pain reliever suitable for treating post-surgery pain. Clinical trials found no signs of the problematic side effects associated with opioids: no drug abuse, tolerance, or withdrawal. But this was not an easy win: Vertex and other pharma companies spent decades searching for drugs like this to no avail.

Opioids are used primarily to treat nociceptive pain, pain caused by tissue damage from injury or disease. This damage activates nearby nociceptors: sensory neurons that signal physical or chemical harm. These nociceptors send signals up to the central nervous system – the brain and spinal cord – and the brain then creates a localized sensation of pain, drawing your attention to the threat.

Trump Kept Venezuela Under Maduro Loyalists After CIA Flagged Opposition Risks: REPORT

By Melissa O’Rourke

A classified U.S. intelligence assessment concluded that top figures within Nicolás Maduro’s regime would be best positioned to maintain short-term stability in Venezuela in the immediate aftermath of the dictator’s removal, according to The Wall Street Journal (WSJ).

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) analysis, which was briefed to President Donald Trump and shared with a small circle of senior administration officials, reportedly shaped Trump’s decision to back Maduro’s vice president, Delcy Rodríguez, rather than opposition leader María Corina Machado as an interim leader, WSJ reported.

“I think it would be very tough for her to be the leader if she doesn’t have the support within, or the respect within the country,” Trump said during a Saturday press conference after U.S. forces captured Maduro to face federal narco-terrorism charges in New York. “She’s a very nice woman, but she doesn’t have the respect.” (RELATED: Venezuelan Oil Could Make America ‘Master Of The Hemisphere’ If Trump’s Domination Continues)

Trump concluded that Venezuela’s short-term stability would depend on whether the next leader retained the loyalty of the country’s military and ruling elites, according to people familiar with the intelligence review cited by the outlet.

Senior administration officials commissioned the CIA to analyze day-after scenarios amid internal debates over how Venezuela might be governed if Maduro were removed. While the report did not recommend regime change or speculate on how Maduro might lose power, it evaluated who could maintain order if that outcome occurred, WSJ reported.

The CIA assessment reportedly identified Rodríguez and two other senior regime figures as potential interim leaders capable of preventing a rapid collapse of the government.

Former U.S. and Venezuelan officials told the outlet that Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino are considered the regime’s most influential power brokers. However, both Cabello and Padrino face U.S. criminal charges similar to those filed against Maduro and are widely viewed as hostile to Washington.

By contrast, the intelligence assessment reportedly found that Machado and Edmundo González — who is widely regarded as the true winner of Venezuela’s 2024 election — would struggle to govern in the face of resistance from pro-regime security forces, drug-trafficking networks and political rivals, according to the outlet. The New York Times also reported on the CIA analysis.

Despite Trump’s apparent snub, Machado repeatedly praised the president during a Monday interview with Fox News, even offering Trump the Nobel Peace Prize she was awarded in October.

“Because this is the prize of the Venezuelan people, certainly we want to give it to him and share it with him,” she said.

Machado added, however, that she plans to return to her country “as soon as possible,” and sharply criticized Rodríguez, who was sworn in as interim president early Monday.

“Delcy Rodriguez, as you know, is one of the main architects of torture, persecution, corruption, narco trafficking,” Machado said. “She’s the main ally and liaison with Russia, China, Iran, certainly not an individual that could be trusted by international investors. And she’s really rejected, repudiated by the Venezuelan people.”

Trump, meanwhile, has argued that holding elections in the next month would be unrealistic.

“We have to fix the country first. You can’t have an election. There’s no way the people could even vote,” Trump told NBC News on Monday. “No, it’s going to take a period of time. We have — we have to nurse the country back to health.”

New polling on the arrest shows support for the operation in Venezuela is very high, but tempered by concerns about long-term involvement, and there was relief from some on the right that the move did not take out the entire government in favor of the opposition.

Maduro appeared in federal court in New York City on Monday and pleaded not guilty to charges including narco-terrorism.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Department of War Secretary Pete Hegseth briefed a bipartisan group of lawmakers on Monday. Rubio has suggested the U.S. could pressure Rodríguez by intercepting sanctioned oil shipments, while Trump publicly declared that the U.S. would “run” Venezuela and needs “total access” to the country’s oil reserves.

“As everyone knows the oil business in Venezuela has been a bust, a total bust for a long period of time. They were pumping almost nothing by comparison to what they could have been pumping and what could have taken place,” Trump said Saturday. “We’re going to have our very large United States oil companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money for the country.”

“President Trump is routinely briefed on domestic political dynamics all over the world,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement to the Daily Caller News Foundation. “The President and his national security team are making realistic decisions to finally ensure Venezuela aligns with the interests of the United States, and becomes a better country for the Venezuelan people.”

The CIA did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s requests for comment.

‘US Has the Most Progressive Tax System in the Developed World’

The United States “has the most progressive tax system in the developed world,” says economist Adam Michel:

The United States places an unusually heavy share of the tax burden on higher earners. You wouldn’t know this from hearing some politicians claim that the rich escape next to tax-free or deserve to be taxed at higher rates. In reality, the data show the opposite. The most recent example is a study by the Fraser Institute, which shows the US ranks first out of 33 developed countries as having the most progressive tax system.

Progressive tax systems, where tax rates and tax shares increase with income, are often idealized by big-government redistributionists, but they come with trade-offs. As tax systems become more progressive, they make each additional hour of work or investment less rewarding, weakening incentives to work longer hours, take entrepreneurial risks, start new ventures, or invest in continuing education. Over time, these effects compound, slowing economic progress and material well-being for everyone. Highly progressive tax systems are also more volatile revenue sources, unfairly treat similar citizens in vastly different ways, encourage avoidance and evasion, and increase administrative complexity.

The Fraser Institute authors construct an index of five measures of a tax system’s progressivity, capturing differences between the top and bottom income tax rates, the top bracket threshold and personal exemptions as a share of the average wage, the income tax share of total revenue, and the consumption tax share of total revenue. The final index, summarized in Figure 1, ranks countries from 0 to 10, with 10 being the most progressive tax system.

More at this link: https://www.cato.org/blog/united-states-has-most-progressive-tax-system-developed-world

In other news, the low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) drives cost inflation in “affordable” housing projects, while costing taxpayers $14 billion per year, explains a news article in the Washington Post. This echoes what economists have been saying for years.

As Cato Institute economist Adam Michel explains, the low-income housing tax credit “inflates construction costs, crowds out market-based development, and funnels most of its benefits to investors and developers instead of renters….Complexity. The LIHTC has spawned a compliance industry of lawyers, accountants, and consultants. The statute, IRS regulations, and compliance guides span more than 2,000 pages, entailing huge bureaucratic overhead….Fraud and corruption. With minimal oversight, the program is ripe for abuse. Because state and local officials have discretion in awarding credits, it has been associated with numerous scandals involving public officials and politically connected developers. Doesn’t help renters. Statistical studies suggest that as much as two-thirds of LIHTC benefits are captured by investors and developers…Crowd out. Rather than expanding the overall housing supply, LIHTC projects often displace or delay private construction that would have happened anyway, adding costs without adding new housing units.”

HHS Says Somalia’s UN Ambassador Tied To Company Accused Of Medicaid Fraud

By Mariane Angela

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said Monday that Somalia’s top diplomat to the United Nations has ties to a U.S.-based health care company previously targeted by federal authorities over Medicaid fraud.

In December, Deputy HHS Secretary Jim O’Neill announced a nationwide fraud crackdown, warning that Minnesota routed millions in taxpayer funds to fraudulent daycares and saying HHS moved to tighten federal payments. Writing on X, O’Neill said he could confirm public reports that Abukar Dahir Osman, Somalia’s permanent representative to the U.N. and current president of the Security Council, is associated with Progressive Health Care Services, a home health agency operating in Cincinnati.

“I can confirm public speculation that Ambassador Abukar Dahir Osman, Permanent Representative of Somalia to the UN and President of the Security Council, is in fact associated with Progressive Health Care Services, a home health agency in Cincinnati,” O’Neill wrote. “HHS has previously taken action against Progressive in response to a conviction for Medicaid fraud.”

The investigation followed after YouTuber Nick Shirley published a video showing multiple purported Somali-run daycare centers in Minnesota that appeared empty during his visits, despite reportedly receiving state funds. His 43-minute video documents repeated stops at subsidized centers with no children on site, while KSTP-TV reported that the Quality “Lerning” Center accumulated 95 violations cited by a state agency between 2019 and 2023.

Several state employees accused Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz of retaliating against whistleblowers who raised alarms as federal prosecutors pursued multiple cases. (RELATED: Trump Expands Child Care Funding Freeze Beyond Minnesota)

“Tim Walz is 100% responsible for massive fraud in Minnesota,” they wrote. “We let Tim Walz know of fraud early on, hoping for a partnership in stopping fraud but no, we got the opposite response.”

Walz later said on “Meet the Press” on NBC News on Nov. 30 that Minnesota “attracts criminals.”

Here’s Everything Tim Walz Got Away With As Minnesota Governor

By Ashley Brasfield

Democratic Minnesota Gov. and failed vice presidential candidate Tim Walz’s two terms have been marked by blunders and fiascos.

Walz announced Monday that he will not seek a third term, concluding a tenure defined by COVID-era policies, “gender-affirming” legislation, questions about his past record, and failures to prevent widespread fraud and abuse of government programs. (RELATED: Tim Walz Drops Out Of Governor’s Race After Somali Fraud Scandal, Blames Trump)

Among Walz’s earliest and most contentious actions were his COVID-era restrictions, which ranked among the strictest in the nation.

In March 2020, Walz issued an executive order temporarily closing all K-12 public schools. Although initially intended to be short-term, the closures were repeatedly extended through the end of the 2019-2020 school year, according to Ballotpedia. For the following school year, Walz gave districts some flexibility, but his guidance generally favored remote or hybrid learning. Minnesota schools remained in limited in-person instruction significantly longer than many Republican-led states.

In July 2020, Walz implemented a statewide mask mandate in another executive order, requiring face coverings in most indoor public spaces. The mandate, issued under his March 2020 declaration of a peacetime emergency, remained in effect for roughly ten months before being lifted in May 2021.

In August 2020, the Upper Midwest Law Center filed suit on behalf of 16 Minnesota residents, small businesses and churches, challenging Walz’s mask mandate as an overreach of his emergency powers. The lawsuit alleged conflicts with state law, constitutional violations, and unworkable enforcement burdens on businesses.

Tim Walz made Minnesota poorer relative to other states, raised wasteful spending, cut student achievement and increased crime and energy costs — and got the worst fiscal rating of any governor, according to a non-partisan think-tank.

In 2020, Walz issued Executive Orders 20-94 and 20-95, granting schools additional time to prepare for distance and hybrid learning, discouraging teachers from juggling in-person and remote instruction simultaneously, and extending remote learning options further into the school year.

The legal battle over Walz’s emergency powers dragged on for years. Lower courts initially dismissed the lawsuit or deemed it moot after the mandate expired, but in 2023, the Minnesota Supreme Court partially reversed the mootness ruling and remanded the case for review on whether the Emergency Management Act permitted peacetime emergencies for public health crises. The Court of Appeals ruled in July that Walz had acted lawfully, a decision the Minnesota Supreme Court affirmed in 2024 — upholding the state’s broad emergency powers while rendering challenges to the expired mandate moot.

Walz then turned his attention to gender policy. In March 2023, he signed Executive Order 23-03 to safeguard access to “gender-affirming” health care in Minnesota. The following month, he signed HF 146, positioning Minnesota as a “sanctuary” or “refuge” state for transgender individuals, including those fleeing states where such care faces restrictions or bans. (RELATED: ‘It’s All Bullsh*t’: Tim Walz Goes On Anti-Second Amendment Rant)

In May 2023, Walz signed HF 44 into law, requiring public and charter schools to provide free menstrual products to all “menstruating students” in grades 4-12. The gender-neutral statute mandates availability “in restrooms regularly used by students,” accommodating biologically female students regardless of which bathroom they use.

On the 2024 campaign trail, after being selected as former Vice President Kamala Harris’s running mate, Walz’s past statements about his military service, teaching career, and time in China resurfaced under renewed scrutiny.

Vice President JD Vance and other Republican critics accused Walz of “stolen valor,” claiming he exaggerated his service by implying combat experience and noting that he retired before his unit deployed to Iraq.

The Harris campaign had shared a video in which Walz, supporting a weapons ban after the 2018 Parkland shooting, said he wanted to ban the weapons he “carried in war.” Vance argued the statement overstated Walz’s combat role and alleged that Walz left the National Guard ahead of his unit’s Iraq deployment, implying he abandoned his fellow soldiers, NPR and PBS reported.

Walz, a former teacher and football coach, also appeared to suggest he was in Hong Kong during the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre — but records show he did not arrive until August 1989, months after the protests. He later acknowledged in the vice presidential debate that he had “misspoke” about the timing.

Most recently, Walz has been embroiled in a massive fraud scandal. Feeding Our Future, a Minnesota nonprofit that claimed to provide meals to children, instead submitted fake attendance records to collect hundreds of millions in federal child nutrition funds. (RELATED: ‘I Ended Tim Walz’: YouTuber Who Exposed Somali Fraud Takes Victory Lap After Governor Ends Reelection Bid)

Federal prosecutors have charged dozens and secured numerous convictions, while critics argue state oversight under Walz was slow and insufficient to stop the scheme early. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer has launched an investigation into what he describes as “widespread fraud” under Walz’s watch, questioning whether the state ignored early warnings.

Other fraud cases have surfaced as well, including schemes in Minnesota’s Housing Stabilization Services and Medicaid-funded autism therapy programs, where providers allegedly billed for services never delivered, diverting millions in state and federal funds.

Some Republican lawmakers in Minnesota have called for Walz to resign, arguing that his administration’s sluggish response allowed the fraud to metastasize before stronger audits and enforcement measures were implemented, according to The Washington Examiner.