Wednesday, September 17, 2025

THE SUN IS WAKING UP? ..... I DIDN'T KNOW IT WAS ASLEEP

Solar storms set to batter Earth sparking blackouts and Northern Lights as NASA warns the sun is 'waking up'

 

By Chris Melore 

 

Daily Mail

Sep 17, 2025

 

 

More solar activity could cause intensified storms that disrupt power grids on Earth (Stock Image)  

More solar activity could cause intensified storms that disrupt power grids on Earth (Stock Image) 

 

Our sun has unexpectedly begun to ramp up its activity, which could lead to more severe solar storms that cause blackouts and disrupt global communications.

NASA revealed that our solar system's home star had been getting quieter and weaker for about 20 years, but that surprisingly changed in 2008 and scientists are still trying to figure out why.

Scientists found that since 2008, the sun's solar wind, which are streams of charged particles, has grown stronger, with increases in speed, density, temperature, and magnetic field strength.

This increased solar activity could lead to more powerful solar storms, which regularly hit Earth and cause disruptions.

Geomagnetic storms have the potential to damage power grids, leading to blackouts, interfere with satellites, and disrupt communication systems like GPS.

Stronger storms could also make the Northern Lights visible in more places further south of the north pole, but the risk to technology and infrastructure will require careful monitoring.

The exact timing and strength of these storms are hard to predict, but they could become more frequent as the sun's current 11-year cycle peaks between 2025 and 2026.

Lead study author Jamie Jasinski of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California said: 'All signs were pointing to the sun going into a prolonged phase of low activity. So it was a surprise to see that trend reversed. The sun is slowly waking up.'

 

A new study has discovered a massive shift in solar activity which scientists weren't expecting

A new study has discovered a massive shift in solar activity which scientists weren't expecting

 

More activity means more sunspots, solar flares, and potentially hazardous ejections of material from the sun.

This could make the sun’s outer atmosphere, called the heliosphere, expand as the pressure from the solar wind increases.

On Earth, this could shrink our magnetosphere, the protective magnetic bubble around our planet, exposing us to more solar particles.

The increased solar particle exposure can pose a risk for astronauts, who could face higher radiation levels during space missions, potentially leading to health issues.

It could also damage satellites and spacecraft, disrupting communications and navigation systems critical for daily life.

Elon Musk's Starlink satellite internet service suffered widespread issues during the peak of a strong geomagnetic storm late Sunday night.

The problems started just before midnight, with more than 50,000 reports from Starlink users as a fresh barrage of solar storms hit Earth.

Additionally, solar particles could interfere with Earth's upper atmosphere, potentially affecting ozone levels and increasing ultraviolet radiation reaching people outdoors. 

 

Solar storms striking Earth are often caused by coronal mass ejections sent out by the sun days before they affect our planet (Stock Image)

Solar storms striking Earth are often caused by coronal mass ejections sent out by the sun days before they affect our planet (Stock Image)

A severe solar storm could have the potential to cause power grid problems that lead to blackouts or satellite communication issues

A severe solar storm could have the potential to cause power grid problems that lead to blackouts or satellite communication issues

 

The NASA team explained that the sun goes through an 11-year cycle of activity, marked by changes in sunspots.

After a weak cycle (number 24) from 2008 to 2019, the current cycle (number 25) is showing noticeably more activity.

The study, published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, suggested this increase in solar activity might be part of a longer 22-year cycle, and the sun is now making up for its mysterious two-decade decline rather than entering an anticipated quiet period.

Since 2008, the solar wind's speed has increased by six percent, its density rose by 26 percent, its temperature soared by 29 percent, and pressure skyrocketed by 45 percent.

This more dynamic solar environment results in increased solar storms and enhanced interactions with Earth's magnetic field.

This isn't the first time in history that the sun has seen a mysterious quiet period before ramping back up, but the cause of these declines have baffled scientists, who also don't know when they're coming.

Records show one of the quietest solar periods in recent history was a four-decade window from 1790 to 1830.

'We don't really know why the sun went through a 40-year minimum starting in 1790,' Jasinski said in a NASA statement. 'The longer-term trends are a lot less predictable and are something we don't completely understand yet.'

CANDACE OWENS, WHO IS BEING SUED FOR SAYING WIFE OF FRENCH PRESIDENT MACRON IS A MAN, SPOUTS SCOND-HAND ANTI-ISRAEL INFORMATION ABOUT BLLACKMAIL OF CHARLIE KIRK BY JEWISH BILLIONAIRE

Billionaire explodes at Charlie Kirk 'Israel blackmail' claim after Hamptons meeting weeks before his assassination

 

By Victoria Churchill 

 

Daily Mail

Sep 17, 2025

 

 

 

Long-standing antisemite Candace Owens claimed Jewish billionaire Bill Ackman threatened Charlie Kirk, information she admitted getting second-hand
 

Billionaire Bill Ackman has been accused by right-wing provocateur Candace Owens of staging an 'intervention' with Charlie Kirk over his views on Israel during a private meeting weeks before the late Turning Point chief's assassination.

Speaking on her popular YouTube show, Owens alleged that Ackman was angered by Kirk's souring views on Israel and that 'threats were made' — a story Owens admits she heard secondhand and welcomed Ackman to publicly dispute. 

Owens, who was once an employee of Turning Point USA, described Ackman as 'very upset' by Kirk's 'rational thoughts about Israel'.

Ackman – who is Jewish and a vocal Israel supporter – has dismissed the claims, calling them 'totally false' in a post on X. 

'At no time have I ever threatened Charlie Kirk, Turning Point, or anyone associated with him,' the billionaire wrote. 'I have never blackmailed anyone, let alone Charlie Kirk. I have never offered Charlie or Turning Point any money in an attempt to influence Charlie's opinion on anything.'

In response to a request for comment, Owens told the Daily Mail via a spokesman: 'I don't need to comment because left and right, people are awake now. This smear campaign will be ineffectual.'

Prior to Kirk hiring Owens as his director of urban engagement in 2017, she was a little-known blogger. Kirk gave Owens her first megaphone and brought her into relevance in the conservative mainstream. 

Kirk’s organization regularly included Jewish individuals and promoted strong ties between the US and Israel. 

 

Bill Ackman (with wife Neri Oxman) has blasted claims he confronted Charlie Kirk over Israel

Bill Ackman (with wife Neri Oxman) has blasted claims he confronted Charlie Kirk over Israel 

Kirk (with wife Erika) was a longtime Israel supporter but his views on the current government had reportedly soured

Kirk (with wife Erika) was a longtime Israel supporter but his views on the current government had reportedly soured

 

THREE OF THE BRAVEST DEAD, TWO IN CRITICAL CONDITION AFTER BEING SHOT WHILE SERVING A WARRANT IN PENNSYLVANIA

3 officers fatally shot, 2 wounded in Pennsylvania

The two surviving officers are in critical but stable condition, authorities said.
 
 
NBC News
Sep 17, 2025 

 

 An officer is loaded into a helicopter 

An officer is loaded into a helicopter after a shooting in York County, Pa., on Wednesday.

  

Three law enforcement officers were killed and two others were wounded in a shooting in Pennsylvania on Wednesday afternoon, and the suspect is also dead, the state police commissioner said.

Police were apparently serving a warrant in York County when they were fired upon, three sources familiar with the matter told NBC News.

The officers were in Codorus Township following up on a domestic investigation that began Tuesday, said the state police commissioner, Col. Christopher Paris.

“There are simply no words I can offer to assuage the grief that this community has experienced,” he said.

The two surviving officers were in critical but stable condition at WellSpan York Hospital, he said.

Police shot the suspect, who is dead, Paris said. The suspect was not immediately identified Wednesday.

The first 911 call came in from North Codorus Township at 2:10 p.m., said Ted Czech of the York County Office of Emergency Management.

Dave Miller told NBC affiliate WGAL of Lancaster that he was driving home and had pulled over to clear the way for police and heard the gunfire.

“I looked over to the right, of course, and I saw the police in the barn, looked like they were looking for someone,” he told the station. “And then I heard the gunshots ring, and I saw people on the ground.”

Miller said the person on the ground appeared to be a police officer. He said he heard around 30 shots.

“It was just continuous,” he said. “Lots of shots, more than what I could count.”

 

Three men at a press conference; the center man in a navy suit speaks at a podium with Pennsylvania emblem, flanked by a man in a light gray suit and a police officer in uniform holding a folder.

Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro speaking during a briefing on the shooting of the officers called it "a tragic and devastating day" for York County and the state.

 

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro asked for prayers for the officers’ families. He called it "a tragic and devastating day" for York County and the state.

Shapiro said that he spent time with the families Wednesday and that even though they were grieving, they took time to say "how proud they are of their loved ones who put on a uniform to keep us safe."

"This kind of violence isn't OK," Shapiro said. "We need to do better as a society. We need to help the people who think that picking up a gun, picking up a weapon is the answer to resolving disputes.

The officers were not immediately identified Wednesday. Paris did not name their department, citing the investigation.

Paris did not release details about how the shooting occurred. He called the crime scene large and active but said there is no further threat to the community.

Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement that the FBI and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives was assisting, and she said, "Violence against law enforcement is a scourge on our society and never acceptable."

Bondi reached out to Shapiro and said the state has the full support of the federal government, Shapiro said.

Shapiro ordered flags lowered to half-staff Wednesday in honor of the slain officers.

The deadly shooting comes almost seven months after another police officer in York County, West York Patrolman Andrew W. Duarte, was killed as he was responding to a hospital siege in which a gunman took hostages.

ANTISEMITISM HAS NO PLACE IN CANADA ..... BE CAREFUL AND DON'T LET THE SHIT FROM FLYING PIGS HIT YOU IN THE FACE

Canadian journalist placed on leave after claiming US politics, Hollywood ‘run by Jews’ on live radio

THE EUROPEANS MUST HAVE HITLER AND HIMMLER LAUGHING IN HELL

EU sanctions on Israel get green light, trade agreement in jeopardy

The bloc's commission asks member state's representative council to strip Israeli goods of preferential access to European markets, subjecting them to standard third-country tariffs. The move affects €42.6 billion in annual bilateral trade, with the EU serving as Israel's largest trading partner. The measures also blacklist Israeli ministers.

 

by Erez Linn  

 

Israel Hayom

Sep 17, 2025 


 Group image of the College of Commissioners (2019-2024)

The European Commission led by its president Ursula von der Leyen (front center)

 

The European Commission announced Wednesday it will ask member states to suspend key trade provisions of the EU-Israel Association Agreement and impose sanctions on Israeli government ministers – right-wing lawmakers Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich – as well as violent settlers, citing breaches of human rights commitments. 

The proposed measures would strip Israeli goods of preferential access to European markets, subjecting them to standard third-country tariffs. The move affects €42.6 billion in annual bilateral trade, with the EU serving as Israel's largest trading partner, importing some 6 billion euro worth of goods annual.

Commission President Ursula von der Leyen asked the commission to adopt the measure and according the press release, the action responds to the "rapidly deteriorating humanitarian situation in Gaza and Israeli settlement expansion in the West Bank's E1 area that further undermines the two-state solution."

 

  

The settlement of Ma'ale Efrayim in Samaria 

 

"The horrific events taking place in Gaza on a daily basis must stop," von der Leyen stated. "There needs to be an immediate ceasefire, unrestrained access for all humanitarian aid, and the release of all hostages held by Hamas."

The Commission based its decision on a review concluding Israel violated Article 2 of the 2000 Association Agreement, which requires respect for human rights and democratic principles. The review specifically cited Israel's military operations in Gaza, restrictions on humanitarian aid access, and settlement expansion decisions.

Financial and trade implications

Under the suspension, Israeli exports worth €15.9 billion annually – including machinery, chemicals and manufactured goods – would lose duty-free status in EU markets. The Commission will also freeze €6 million in yearly bilateral support and €14 million in cooperation projects, though funding for Israeli civil society and Yad Vashem will continue.

The proposals require different approval thresholds in the Council of the European Union. Trade suspension needs qualified majority support and would take effect 30 days after notification to the EU-Israel Association Council. Sanctions on individuals require unanimous Council approval.

Sanctions package details

The sanctions target ministers under the EU's Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime, as well as 10 Hamas politburo members. The measures include asset freezes and travel bans.

 

Otzma Yehudit Party chairman Itamar Ben-Gvir (left) and Religious Zionism Party leader Bezalel Smotrich at a campaign event in Sderot, Oct. 26, 2022. Credit: Flash90.

Israeli ministers Itamar Ben-Gvir (left) and Bezalel Smotrich 
 

Since December 2020, the EU has sanctioned nine individuals and five entities linked to West Bank violence and humanitarian aid obstruction under its human rights sanctions framework.

Next steps

EU member states must now vote on the Commission's proposals through the Council. The trade suspension could be implemented within weeks if approved, while sanctions require unanimous consent from all 27 member countries.

The move represents the most significant EU action against Israel since the October 7 Hamas attacks and subsequent military response in Gaza. Israel remains the EU's 31st largest trading partner, with machinery and transport equipment dominating bilateral trade flows.

WE SHOULD BE EXTREMELY WARY OF ENGAGING IN A CULTURE WAR IN WHICH THE GOAL IS TO SILENCE, SHAME AND EVEN HOUND OUT OF THE PUBLIC SQUARE PEOPLE WITH WHOM WE DISAGREE

The problem is the normalization of hate, not cancel culture

Firing those who dissent is troubling. But progressive hate cheering for Hamas and the murder of Charlie Kirk, along with right-wing conspiracy theories, shouldn’t be platformed. 

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin 

 

JNS

Sep 16, 2025 


 

 Karen Attiah sits behind a microphone.

The Washington Post fired Karen Attiah, its last full-time Black opinion columnist, who says it was because they didn’t like what she posted after Charlie Kirk’s shooting.

 

For many readers of The Washington Post who care about the normalization of antisemitism, it was a case of good riddance. Karen Attiah was named the newspaper’s first Global Opinions editor in 2016 and has been a columnist since 2021. This week, she claimed that she was fired over what the newspaper said was a series of posts about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, which the paper said were “unacceptable,” and constituted “gross misconduct” and “endangering the physical safety of colleagues.”

Are her posts about Kirk’s murder reason enough to lose her job?

Corrupted institutions

Her publishers’ excuses and disingenuous “safety” language notwithstanding, the real issue with Attiah or any other similar situation isn’t really about cancel culture.

It’s what it says about the Post, The New York Times and other corporate media institutions that employ many people like her. That they thought placing radical hate-mongers like Attiah in charge of influential platforms was a good idea in the first place is the problem.

We should be extremely wary of engaging in a culture war in which the goal is to silence, shame and even hound out of the public square people with whom we disagree. The question we should be asking in the wake of this latest example of political violence is not about how best to punish those who use their social-media accounts to say terrible things. It’s why we have allowed institutions that should be the bulwark of democracy, like journalism, to be so corrupted as to normalize the sort of public discourse from people like Attiah, whose goal is to tear down the foundations of the American republic and Western civilization.

Attiah has every right to say what she likes. And the same goes for anyone else who unfairly and insensitively defamed Kirk after his death. The same applies to those extremists on the far right who sought to exploit the assassination to promote their own brand of conspiracy theories, whether it was the libelous claim that Israel was responsible or other antisemitic insinuations about the crime.

No one should interfere with the ability of those who behave in this fashion to post on social media (so long as they are not directly advocating violence), stand on street corners or march in the streets while spouting their lies, whether about Kirk, other conservatives, or Israel and the Jews. Still, that doesn’t entitle them to a job at the top newspapers in the country, a tenured professorship at an Ivy League university or a position at a private company whose owners want no part of such madness. And it ought not to grant immunity from criticism or legal action when they violate the law or help fund radical groups like Antifa or Students for Justice in Palestine, both of which promote violence and hate.

What we want is not a nation that chills speech. We crave a culture of political discourse that doesn’t normalize hate and toxic extremist ideas—that doesn’t exacerbate racial divisions and promote antisemitism. Just as important, we should be actively discouraging a belief that political violence—whether against conservative activists, insurance company executives or politicians disliked by fashionable opinion on the left—is acceptable discourse.

Marginalizing hate-mongers

Our challenge isn’t how best to silence or punish ideologues who ran to TikTok to cheer for Kirk’s murderer or to mock those who mourned him. It’s recreating a political culture where such people are relegated to the fever swamps of the far left and right, where they belong, rather than featuring them in the mainstream media or allowing them to dominate our educational system.

Attiah was one among many being held up for opprobrium, even sometimes losing their jobs for their insensitive reactions to an act of political violence. But for those who have followed her career, her broadsides aimed at Kirk following his death were typical of her brand of journalism. She claimed that she was fired for “speaking out against political violence, racial double standards and America’s apathy toward guns.” The truth is that she is a typical of those self-styled progressives who have no problem with political violence so long as it is directed against people and groups that she thinks have no rights worthy of respect—for example, Israelis and Jews.

The columnist has written explicitly of her belief that the State of Israel had no right to exist. She falsely labels it a European-style colonial project, rather than an expression of Jewish self-determination in their ancient homeland. Even before the Oct. 7 Hamas-led Palestinian attacks on Israeli communities, she was cheerleading for the effort to defend the genocidal terrorists in Gaza from the consequences of their crimes, and delegitimizing Israel and its right of self-defense.

Her work illustrated how toxic left-wing myths like critical race theory, intersectionality and settler-colonialism are a method to normalize antisemitism. Indeed, as an alumnus of one of those institutions that have been a bastion of such terrible ideas—Attiah graduated from Columbia University’s School of International Affairs—there is no better example of the way the academy manufactures and then spreads Jew-hatred.

Many on the political left, like Attiah, thought the aftermath of Kirk’s murder was a license to not only vent their anger at his views, but to post misleading, if not downright false, information about the late activist. They now say that retribution for this is no different from something that the right has long decried: cancel culture.

That’s not a charge that can be dismissed out of hand. And it’s one that is also related to the assertions that President Donald Trump’s efforts to roll back the tide of woke antisemitism at colleges and universities are an infringement on free speech, academic freedom and a form of cancel culture.

Is the backlash against those who mocked Kirk’s death different from the moral panic about race that swept across the United States during the Black Lives Matter summer of 2020? That moment of peak progressive conquest of America’s media and culture led to cancellations of those who were deemed insufficiently sympathetic to BLM or otherwise denounced as “racists.” Most educational institutions, arts organizations, celebrities and even many corporations quavered in the face of this Jacobin-like attempt to purge conservatives or even moderates who wouldn’t bend their knees to BLM lies about race from the public square.

A failure to engage

Left-wingers who were happy to join the cancel culture mobs in 2020 or to cheer on the efforts of pro-Hamas activists to target Jews since Oct. 7 have suddenly discovered that being ostracized in this way isn’t a good thing. They assert that those who disagreed with Kirk—like Attiah and the countless others who have been attacking the victim of an assassination as someone who got what he deserved—are being unfairly punished.

As we saw in 2020, the impulse to persecute those who contradict the conventional wisdom of the moment and to seek to deprive them of their livelihoods is antithetical to how a free republic operates.

The real sickness afflicting American democracy is not primarily the fault of extreme speech that breeds angry arguments, but the unwillingness of so many people to engage with views differing from their own. The bifurcated political culture, in which much of the country reads, listens and watches two entirely different sets of media outlets, has created an almost unbridgeable gap between left and right. That has made many people uncomfortable with opinions or even facts that contradict their assumptions and prejudices. It also encourages them to engage in radical speech that demonizes their political foes.

Thus, it wasn’t enough for many people to state their disagreements with Kirk’s views about Trump, abortion, immigration, gun rights, gender ideology and even Israel (he was a strong and vocal supporter of the Jewish state). They also felt compelled to damn him as a racist, hate-monger, fascist or Nazi, and to double down on the same smears of Trump and his supporters.

That’s bad enough under normal circumstances. But those who did so after the object of their intemperate invective was murdered for exercising his right to free speech are understandably being criticized for what is, at best, insensitive behavior and, at worst, exactly the sort of hate speech that encourages more political violence.

Moving the Overton Window

So, what should our response be to this sort of speech? Should those who do so be held up to public outrage by being “ratioed” with a flood of critical comments on their social-media feeds—the 21st-century-version of the Medieval punishment of being put in the stocks in the public square for passersby to jeer at? Should they lose their livelihoods and be run out of town?

The answer to that question most often depends on whether the offending poster is situated on your side of the political aisle. We tend to be more forgiving of allies who misbehave online and demand the scalps of those whose opinions contradict our own.

Regardless of where you stand on the political spectrum, some basic truths need to be acknowledged. If you’re going to express opinions that are nasty, insensitive or extreme, then you don’t have standing to play the victim if other people who are offended respond in the same way. That doesn’t excuse foul language or threats, which platform providers have every right to moderate.

Yet we need to draw some distinctions here. Espousing opinions on a wide range of political issues, about which those who believe in democracy are compelled to agree to disagree, is not something that should be treated as a reason for shunning.

Supporting political violence, however, is not the same as backing a particular political candidate on the right or the left. Nor should we treat open racism—whether in the form of white nationalism or fashionable left-wing “anti-racism,” or antisemitism in all of its forms—as the same thing as just having a position on the best way to achieve racial harmony or how to bring about peace in the Middle East. What we’ve seen on the left is the growth of what can only be termed “assassination culture,” as some people laud those who murder their political foes or the terrorists of Hamas. Those who are part of this trend shouldn’t complain if their fellow citizens or their employers want nothing to do with them.

The problem is that the Overton window of acceptable discourse was deliberately shifted by progressives so as to treat their own extremist views about race, gender, American history, the Jews and Israel as normal, and to brand those who defended traditional values on religion, liberty and Jewish rights as hateful. Attiah is someone who despises the America to which her African parents immigrated, and who backs genocidal positions that deny Jewish history and rights. A political culture in which someone like her is treated as a respected voice rather than a marginal extremist is sick and in need of reform.

The same applies to someone like Tucker Carlson, who may have been a much-needed tribune of conservative resistance to BLM and the far left in 2020, but has since descended into an antisemitic extremist rabbit hole since being fired from his prominent position at Fox News. Those on the right who may disagree with him but are still treating his views as worthy of platforming—unfortunately, that included Charlie Kirk—are wrong.

What happened at The Washington Post and Fox News was not the cancellation of independent voices. They were necessary corrections by companies that don’t wish to be identified with extremism, and to that end, they cleaned house.

The Post’s billionaire owner, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, may be a hypocrite who shows no sign of having much in the way of principles. And he has belatedly concluded that his money-losing sinkhole of a publication is better off with its editorials and columnists defending free markets and personal liberty, as opposed to partisan progressive extremism. He is trying to align himself with most Americans and actually doing something to defend the democracy that its banner warns will “die in darkness.”

Fox News owner Rupert Murdoch likely also feels himself well rid of Carlson’s particular brand of isolationism and hate for Israel, mixed in with kowtowing to tyrants in Russia and Qatar.

Attiah and Carlson may well prosper on Substack or podcasts on X, though they shouldn’t be silenced or interfered with by the government. Still, they have no place in mainstream media or discourse. Marginalizing them and other radicals aren’t examples of cancel culture to be decried. It’s just common sense. It’s also a sign: We need not despair that we are doomed to helplessly watch the polarization they represent send the American republic tumbling into a civil war between the left and the right.

QATAR, THE WEALTHY PATRON OF OF THE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD AND HAMAS'S SPONSOR, DARES TO CRY FOUL AFTER BANKROLLING THE VERY TERROR THAT CAUED THIS WAR

Israel chooses survival over surrender

Peace will come when Hamas is defeated. If Europe insists on saving Hamas, Europe will pay the price

 

By Fiamma Nirenstein
 
JNS
Sep 17, 2025 


IDF troops expand ground operations in Gaza City as part of Operation Gideon’s Chariots II, Sept. 16, 2025.

 

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar put it bluntly: “Israel will not let the armed jihadists of Hamas be 1 mile from our children’s beds.” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, “We are Athens and Sparta. But we’re going to be Athens and super-Sparta.”

The message could not be clearer. Hamas must surrender. The hostages must come home. Israel will not apologize for defending itself.

Yet the international media would have you believe otherwise. Their headlines shout accusations of cruelty, conquest and expansion. But the humanitarian pose conceals a refusal to answer the real question: Why this war? Are Jews simply presumed guilty for wanting to live?

The truth is far from the caricature. Two IDF divisions, advancing with caution, launched a partial entry into Gaza City after months of preparation and years of debate with Washington. The purpose is not conquest, but to separate civilians from terrorists, force Hamas into submission and rescue the captives.

In Jerusalem, Sen. Marco Rubio endorsed Israel’s goals before flying to Doha to explore a possible deal. But in the global arena, the very idea of defeating Hamas is absent. Instead, Israel faces condemnation. Another United Nations resolution—authored by Navi Pillay, a professional practitioner of anti-Israel bias—accuses the Jewish state of genocide.

Meanwhile, from Eurovision threats to European votes for Palestinian statehood, from Qatari lectures about sovereignty to Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez demanding Israel’s exclusion, the spectacle is the same: the world rushes to shield Hamas while excoriating Israel.

Even Qatar, the wealthy patron of the Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas’s sponsor, dares to cry foul after bankrolling the very terror that caused this war.

But Israel knows better. After the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre and more than 1,000 thwarted terror attacks in a single year, Israelis understand that Hamas is not a “resistance” movement but a religious army sworn to holy war. It is armed and financed by Iran, Qatar and Egypt. Its charter calls for Israel’s annihilation. Its tunnels are not for civilians, but for combat. Its shields are not armor, but women and children.

This is not genocide. Israel warns civilians before every strike. Israel opens humanitarian corridors. Israel delivers aid. But Hamas chooses death—for Israelis and for its own people.

The Middle East is watching. Syria signals interest in compromise. Egypt signs energy contracts. Arab states quietly wait for Hamas to disappear. They know that only Israel has the resolve to finish the job.

Peace will come when Hamas is defeated. If Europe insists on saving Hamas, Europe will pay the price.

Israel has already learned the hard lessons—the failure of Oslo, the slaughter of Oct. 7. Better to be disapproved of than to be dead.

THE MENENDEZ BROTHERS ARE SHIT OUT OF LUCK

By Bob Walsh

 

Lyle and Erik Menendez are seen as young men with their mugshots overlayed.


A judge ruled on Tuesday that the Menendez brothers are NOT entitled to a new trial.  Apparently the troglodyte believe that whatever minor new evidence that was presented did NOT overcome the fact that they shotgunned both of their parents in cold blood and then started spending money like drunk sailors on a three-days pass.

But they shouldn't worry.  Gavin will probably grant them clemency if they get their family to kick down some ducats to his Presidential campaign.  Gavin in friendly like that.  Kind of like Biden.
 
EDITOR'S NOTE: Bob, your conjecture about Newsom is just one example of your dislike, if not hatred, of your governor that you have shown in many of your posts. In this instance, you have all but accused him of accepting bribes in behalf of the Menendez brothers. I believe that our readers will find you more credible if you'll cut out the Newsom crap in the future. 

EIGHT BROWARD COUNTY DEPUTIES FIRED, 11 DISCIPLINED AFTER SCREWING THE POOCH BIG TIME

By Bob Walsh

 

 Broward Sheriff’s Office to honor employees at Annual Awards Ceremony 

Dr. Gregory Tony, Broward County Sheriff

 

In February of this year a triple murder occurred in Broward County.  The Broward County, Florida, Sheriff's Department has just concluded their internal investigation of the incident in which Nathan Gingles is believed to have shot and killed his estranged wife, Mary, her dad, David Ponzer and a neighbor, Andrew Ferrin back in February.

The Sheriff's Office was concerned with two major issues, the immediate response to the shots fired incident and the investigation into the incident after-the-fact.

Essentially the officers and a sergeant got together at a rally point but did not bother to actually respond to the incident until it was all over.  The new sheriff, Dr. Gregory Tony, got his gig after the old sheriff was handed his ass after the Parkland School shooting debacle.  

In addition to the actions listed Friday the sheriff had previously demoted, then fired, Jeremiah Cooper, the Captain of the Tamarac district and an unnamed probationary employee.

None of the deputies that responded to the call turned on their body cams.    

Two additional deputies, Joseph Sasso and Michael Paparelia, were investigated but no action was taken against them.

While the deputies were hanging out at the rally point the shooter was busy pursuing his wife into a neighbors house where she was attempting to hide.  The husband shot and killed his wife and the neighbor who was trying to help her.

Several other deputies were disciplined for doing a crappy job on the investigation.

OFF-DUTY COP BACKSHOT BY STORE EMPLOYEE

By Bob Walsh

 

l-r: david jewell and eduardo machado
Edgewater, Florida police officer David Jewell and his murderer, Eduardo Machado
 

Edgewater Florida PD officer David Jewell was shot in the back and killed by an employee of the Circle K Store where he stopped for a hot dog on Monday afternoon.

The officer was waiting in line to buy a hot dog at the store when an employee of the store exited the back, retrieved a firearm and shot Officer Jewell in the back several times, killing him.  There is reasonably good quality surveillance footage of the murder.  The killer's weapon seemed to jam and the killer cleared the jam and continued to shoot Jewel as he lay on the floor.  Jewell and the shooter knew each other.  Jewell was a frequent customer in the store.  

Before becoming a cop Jewell had worked in the communication section at the Volusia County Sheriff's Office.

The shooter was arrested at the scene.  There is no known motive in the shooting. The shooter, Eduardo Machado, 24, is a legal resident alien and is believed to have some mental health issues.  He has admitted to the shooting.

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

BEST TRIBUTE YET TO CHARLIE KIRK


Image 1 from gallery
Israeli soldier photographed carrying tank shell inscribed “In Memory of Charlie Kirk” to be fired at Hamas

THE END OF DEMOCRACY?

Arnold Schwarzenegger makes apocalyptic prediction about future of US in wake of Charlie Kirk assassination

 

By Natasha Anderson 

 

Daily Mail

Sep 16, 2025

 

Arnold Schwarzenegger reveals he had pacemaker fitted: 'I am now a machine'

Arnold Schwarzenegger predicts that the assassination of Charlie Kirk will result in the end of democracy

 

Arnold Schwarzenegger has made a grisly prediction about the state of the nation in the wake of the political assassination of Charlie Kirk.

Schwarzenegger, 78, has warned America could soon become a place where there is 'no democracy' as the divide between Democrats and Republicans deepens.

'We have to be very careful that we don't get closer to the cliff. Because when you fall down that cliff, down there, there is no democracy,' he argued, speaking Monday night at the University of Southern California.

'We have to be very, very careful. I think it is very important that we turn this around and that we show people power. Because the people can turn this around, the people have the ultimate power.'

The Hollywood-actor-turned-politician 'very strongly' urged that every American 'can make a difference' by exercising their right to vote.

Schwarzenegger, who served as California's governor from 2003 to 2011, is a longtime critic of Donald Trump and has argued the parties need to move away from the extremes to break the Washington gridlock. 

Following Kirk's assassination last week, Trump and his allies have ramped up their criticism of the so-called 'far-left', which the president last week blamed for political violence in America and described as 'vicious and horrible and politically savvy'.

There has been a furious response from MAGA supporters after Kirk's alleged killer was revealed to be 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, who the FBI says held a 'leftist ideology' and may have been radicalized online

 

Arnold Schwarzenegger, 78, (pictured at speaking at the University of Southern California on Monday) has warned that America could soon become a place where there is 'no democracy' as the divide between Democrats and the Republicans strengthens

Arnold Schwarzenegger, 78, (pictured at speaking at the University of Southern California on Monday) has warned that America could soon become a place where there is 'no democracy' as the divide between Democrats and the Republicans strengthens

Demonstrators wave flags from atop a wrecked car, standing beside burning Waymo vehicles, as protesters clash with law enforcement in the streets surrounding the federal building during a protest following federal immigration operations in Los Angeles on June 8
Demonstrators wave flags from atop a wrecked car, standing beside burning Waymo vehicles, as protesters clash with law enforcement in the streets surrounding the federal building during a protest following federal immigration operations in Los Angeles on June 8
 

The Utah County Attorney’s Office has charged Robinson with aggravated murder, felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily injury and obstruction of justice.

Prosecutors will seek the death penalty, which could see the accused assassin executed by firing squad

While authorities say Robinson hasn't been cooperating with investigators, they say his family and friends have been talking. 

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said over the weekend that those who know Robinson say his politics shifted left in recent years and that he spent a lot of time in the 'dark corners of the internet'.

FBI Director Kash Patel told Fox News on Monday that when Robinson was asked why he would kill the conservative influencer, he responded: 'Some hatred cannot be negotiated with.'

Trump, responding to the politically-motivated assassination and worsening divide between liberals and conservatives, blamed elements of the left for the state of the union.

'I tell you something that is going to get me in trouble, but I couldn't care less,' he told Fox & Friends on Monday. 'The radicals on the right are radical because they don't want to see crime.

'The radicals on the left are the problem – and they are vicious and horrible and politically savvy. They want men in women's sports, they want transgender for everyone, they want open borders. The worst thing that happened to this country.'

Trump's comments and Schwarzenegger's stark warning also come amid heated debate over federal government control in American cities and the president's crackdown on illegal immigration. 


Charlie Kirk debates students at the University of Tennessee's campus in Knoxville

Schwarzenegger issued the grisly prediction about the state of the nation in wake of the political assassination of Charlie Kirk (pictured in July this year)

A community member arranges a candle at a growing vigil outside Timpanogos Regional Hospital after Charlie Kirk was shot and killed last week in Orem, Utah

A community member arranges a candle at a growing vigil outside Timpanogos Regional Hospital after Charlie Kirk was shot and killed last week in Orem, Utah

 

Over the summer, Trump ordered the National Guard to descend on California after anti-ICE protesters turned the state's streets into scenes reminiscent of an apocalypse film.

Trump took federal control of the Washington DC police force last month and has said he believes the takeover should serve as a 'template' for how he will handle violent crime in other major US cities

He said his next targets are the 'hellholes' of Chicago, Illinois and Baltimore, Maryland.

Trump says he wants Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore – both Democrats – to call and ask for him to send in troops.

But even if they don't, Trump admitted he still plans to carry out his plan to use the National Guard as a police force in liberal US cities.

'We're going in,' the president said earlier this month. 'This isn't a political thing. I have an obligation.' 

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, however, said he would defend his city from Trump's 'authoritarianism' and has been advocating for his fellow Democrats to take a more aggressive posture against Trump.

He further accused the president of wanting to 'occupy our city and break our Constitution'.

 

Utah Department of Public Safety Mug shot images of Tyler Robinson

Prosecutors are seeking a capital murder charge today against suspected Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson (pictured) that could see him executed by firing squad

Federal agents block people protesting an ICE immigration raid at a nearby licensed cannabis farm on July 10, 2025 near Camarillo, California

Federal agents block people protesting an ICE immigration raid at a nearby licensed cannabis farm on July 10, 2025 near Camarillo, California 

 

In an interview with CBS News this week, Trump admitted that violence in America is not one-sided, but doubled down on his criticisms of the left.

'I didn't say it's on one side,' Trump told the broadcaster's Chief White House Correspondent Nancy Cordes, 'but I say the radical left causes tremendous violence and they seem to do it in a bigger way. I really think they hate our country.'

He also announced Monday that he would considered labeling the far-left anti-fascism group Antifa as a domestic terrorism organization if he received support from his cabinet and Justice Department.

'Antifa is terrible. There are other groups,' he said from the Oval Office. 'We have some pretty radical groups, and they got away with murder.'

A Wall Street Journal survey in July found more than 80 percent of Democrats and 80 percent of Republicans hold not only an unfavorable view of the opposing party but a 'very unfavorable' view

In contrast, a similar survey of voters in 2020 found only 50 percent of Republicans and 40 percent of Democrats held 'very negative' views of the other party. 

Schwarzenegger on Monday entered the national battle over US House control, urging voters to reject a California ballot proposal to rejig districts that he said would erode democratic principles and allow politicians to 'take the power away from the people'.

 

A demonstrator holding an American flag is pushed back by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer during a protest outside an ICE facility in Illinois on September 12

A demonstrator holding an American flag is pushed back by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer during a protest outside an ICE facility in Illinois on September 12

Demonstrators are teargassed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers during a protest outside an ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois, on September 12

Demonstrators are teargassed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers during a protest outside an ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois, on September 12

 

'It is insane,' he said of Democratic-backed Proposition 50, an initiative intended to add five Democratic US House seats in California to offset Trump's moves in Texas to gain five Republican districts before the 2026 midterm elections.

'It doesn't make any sense to me that because we have to fight Trump, to become Trump,' Schwarzenegger said. 'Two wrongs don't make a right.'

The proposal championed by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom would temporarily set aside districts crafted by an independent state commission and replace them with dramatically reshaped districts drafted by Democrats and designed to benefit the party's candidates. 

Schwarzenegger repeatedly stressed the proposal would set aside maps drawn in a public process by an independent commission he promoted as governor, and replace it with partisan maps shaped behind closed doors and blessed by 'the politicians'.

He never directly criticized Newsom or the Legislature's Democratic majority, which endorsed the proposal.

THE WHITE HOUSE CRIME FAMILY

Biden family accused of corruption in explosive new FBI documents

 

By Phillip Nieto 

 

Daily Mail

Sep 16, 2025

 

 

 President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden arrive at Fort McNair.

The White House godfather (right) with his underboss

 

Newly released FBI files shed light on the Biden family's shady business dealings in Ukraine.

According to the New York Post, Senator Chuck Grassley's office released declassified FBI files on Tuesday that revealed additional bribery allegations involving the former president Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden.

The files indicate the FBI did not fully investigate all allegations against the Biden family regarding foreign bribery.

FBI sources, who were interviewed in 2017 and 2019, outline how the Biden family was linked to a foreign bribery 'scheme' involving the Ukrainian energy company Burisma Holdings, according to NY Post.

The sources also told the FBI that Biden met with then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko 'to protect the interests' of his son Hunter and Mykola Zlochevsky – the owner of Burisma Holdings.

The documents released by Grassley's office do not offer a specific date for Biden's alleged meeting with Poroshenko.

Republicans have long accused Biden of using his powers while serving as vice president to benefit his family's foreign business deals.

The Republican-led House brought forward an impeachment inquiry in 2023; however, the inquiry never materialized an official impeachment vote.

 

Source told the FBI that Biden met with Poroshenko ¿to protect the interests¿ of his son Hunter and Mykola Zlochevsky ¿ the owner of Burisma Holdings.

Source told the FBI that Biden met with Poroshenko 'to protect the interests' of his son Hunter and Mykola Zlochevsky – the owner of Burisma Holdings.

Republicans have long accused Biden of using his powers while serving as vice president to benefit his family¿s foreign business deals.

Republicans have long accused Biden of using his powers while serving as vice president to benefit his family's foreign business deals.

Senator Chuck Grassley¿s office released declassified FBI files on Tuesday that revealed additional bribery allegations involving the former president

Senator Chuck Grassley's office released declassified FBI files on Tuesday that revealed additional bribery allegations involving the former president

 

The Daily Mail reached out to Biden's office for comment.

According to the NY Post, the FBI informants allege that Zlochevsky tried to offer Poroshenko $100 million in ownership shares in the gas company, as well as 'guaranteed profits from gas sales.'

Zlochevsky wanted to make the offer to Poroshenko in return for him shutting down an 'Interpol investigation' into Burisma.

The sources allege Biden along with his son invested money into Burisma via a Latvian 'shell company.'

During a Tuesday hearing with FBI Director Kash Patel Grassley stated that 'to date, the FBI has never answered Congress whether they investigated the text messages, the audio files, and financial records referenced in that 1023.'

Back in July 2023, Grassley's office released a separate FBI informant file accusing Joe and Hunter Biden of accepting a $5 million bribe from Zlochevsky.

This separate document alleges the money was given to the Bidens in exchange for protecting Burisma from a corruption probe overseen by Ukrainian prosecutor Viktor Shokin.

As vice president in December 2015, Biden publicly pressured Ukrainian officials by promising to withhold $1 billion in US loan guarantees unless they fired Shokin.

 

The documents do not state the specific date for Biden's alleged meeting with Poroshenko.

The documents do not state the specific date for Biden's alleged meeting with Poroshenko.

 

Months later, the Ukrainian prosecutor was ousted by lawmakers in Kyiv's parliament.