Saturday, February 21, 2026

ONE METHOD OF TRYING TO KEEP DRUGS FROM BEING SMUGGLED INTO PRISONS

Texas prison system bans hardback books to prevent drug overdoses

 

No more hardback books for Texas prison inmates.

 

"As a life-long reader, and, yes, a life-long reader of not just screens but actual books, including hardback textbooks, novels, and non-fiction, it truly pains me to think that we are being forced as a Board to put any restrictions on the ability of members of our populations in TDCJ to any type of reading material," Texas Board of Criminal Justice Chairman Eric J.R. Nichols said. "But what pains me even more, and what frankly keeps me up more at night than anything else with the agency that we oversee as a Board, is the fact that there are illegal and dangerous drugs that are being introduced into our TDCJ facilities and that are causing overdoses and, yes, overdose deaths in our facilities."

"We are exploring every avenue to reduce, and ultimately, halt illegal narcotics from entering our facilities," Chief Programs Officer Jason Clark said. "These changes are designed to protect the health and safety of our population and staff, and create an environment where individuals have a real opportunity to focus on treatment, personal growth, and successful re-entry."

How to send books to inmates

What you can do:

Windham School District is now partnering with TDCJ to manage book donations, they included in their Friday announcement. On April 1, donated books should be sent to the Windham School District, which oversees all libraries across the agency and has a process in place to accept and distribute donations. 

For more information about this process, visit the Windham website. Books that are donated by a volunteer organization to a specific individual can still be mailed to the unit, but must be softback and in new condition.

What's next:

Looking forward, the agency is developing an online portal for senders to register and provide basic information about the book or magazine they are sending. Similar to the current visitation system, this portal will allow staff to verify senders, prepare for the incoming publications and streamline processing.

SHIT ROLLS DOWNHILL, OR MAYBE DOWNSTREAM

By Bob Walsh

 

 
There is a boom across the river downstream and a barge with a large back hoe mounted on it.  They are retrieving large chunks of this and that from the river and testing the water frequently to see what nasty stuff is in there that should not be.  There was a major fish kill-off which appears to have been caused by the problem.

This could turn out to have a huge ecological cost.  They still have not officially determined what caused the gross structural failure of the upper end of the penstock.  Since it was actively being upgraded at the time the failure occurred one would think the two items were related.  I hope the contractor had good insurance.  This could become very, very costly for somebody.  Hopefully not the taxpayers of Yuba County.  

Friday, February 20, 2026

SHE WAS ON HER WAY HOME FROM CELEBRATING BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Texas woman in extremely daring outfit crashed her BMW into pole while drunk, cops say

 

By Wilko Martinez-Cachero 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 20, 2026

 

 

The unidentified female driver was wearing a skin-tight leather racing jacket and matching micro shorts with fishnet stockings during her arrest

The unidentified female driver was wearing a skin-tight leather racing jacket and matching micro shorts with fishnet stockings during her arrest

 

A Texas woman who was arrested after crashing her BMW into a fire hydrant while driving drunk was captured in a bizarrely inappropriate outfit before being cuffed.

Deputies with the Harris County Constable Precinct 4 responded to the scene in Atascocita - about 25 miles northeast of Houston - after the BMW X3 SUV smash.

The crash happened near Will Clayton Parkway and Vine Forest Drive, according to police on Friday, though an exact time and date was not released.

The female driver - who has not been publicly identified - was taken into custody for driving while intoxicated.

Photos from the scene published by police showed the unnamed woman wearing an eye-catching ensemble while being arrested.

She donned a skin-tight leather jacket paired with equally form-fitting micro shorts that left little to the imagination around her crotch.

The full-figured woman completed the revealing look with fishnet stockings, black open-toed slippers and no socks.

Law enforcement did not specify whether the woman was held in jail following her arrest.

 

Harris County law enforcement officials said she crashed her car into a fire hydrant near Will Clayton Parkway and Vine Forest Drive in Atascocita, Texas

Harris County law enforcement officials said she crashed her car into a fire hydrant near Will Clayton Parkway and Vine Forest Drive in Atascocita, Texas

 

In one image from the bizarre scene, the alleged drunk driver was seen speaking with a police officer only identified as Deputy Escobar.

He was wearing what looked like a cowboy hat and was jotting down notes of their conversation. 

Photos from the crash also showed a vehicle belonging to the Atascocita Fire Department at the site. 

More details about the incident or its aftermath were not immediately released by the Harris County police.

The woman's car had a partially detached front bumper, and its doors and trunk were left open. 

An airbag seemed to have deployed on the passenger side following the collision with the fire hydrant.

Two police officers could be seen near the woman's vehicle, examining the damage.

 

The Harris County Constable Precinct 4 said the woman was arrested for driving while intoxicated

The Harris County Constable Precinct 4 said the woman was arrested for driving while intoxicated

 

A police vehicle with its red and blue emergency lights flashing was parked beside the wrecked BMW.

Officials reminded the public that a night out 'should never end in flashing lights and handcuffs' and urged drivers to plan ahead for a safe ride home.

However, much of the discussion online focused on the woman's scandalous outfit rather than the department's plea.

'I think she should have also been arrested by the fashion Police!' one Facebook user quipped.

Another social media commenter echoed the sentiment.

‘Hope she got 2 tickets,’ the user said. ‘One for being intoxicated and one for that outfit.’

A separate user poked fun at her choice of footwear during the arrest, jokingly ignoring the rest of her scanty outfit.

'It was the slippers,' he said. 'You can't drive in [those].'

The Daily Mail has reached out to the Harris County Constable Precinct 4 and the Atascocita Fire Department for further comment.

EDITOR'S NOTE: I just couldn't resist posting this picture again. 

 

The unidentified female driver was wearing a skin-tight leather racing jacket and matching micro shorts with fishnet stockings during her arrest 

YOU DIRTY BASTARDS, IS THIS HOW YOU REPAY ME FOR APPOINTING YOU

Trump's sweeping new tariffs for ALL countries will take effect in just days as White House reveals exemptions for certain products... after president's extraordinary attack on Supreme Court

 

By Katelyn Caralle, Nikki Schwab and Sophie Gable 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 20, 2026

 

President Donald Trump sneered as he tore into his 6-3 conservative Supreme Court after it ruled against his tariffs on Friday

President Donald Trump sneered as he tore into his 6-3 conservative Supreme Court after it ruled against his tariffs on Friday

amy coney barrett neil gorsuch 

Supreme Court justices Amy Coney Barett [L] and Neil Gorsuch, both Trump appointees, joined the liberal justices in ruling against the President

 

Donald Trump has found a little-known trade law to reimplement his sweeping tariffs, set to take effect in just days, after he launched a bitter attack against the Supreme Court for ruling his trade policies unconstitutional. 

'It is my Great Honor to have just signed, from the Oval Office, a Global 10% Tariff on all Countries, which will be effective almost immediately. Thank you for your attention to this matter!' Trump wrote on Truth Social on Friday evening. 

Trump previously threatened to impose a 10 percent tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, which grants the president the power to impose temporary tariffs. 

The trade law was implemented to address short-term emergencies and does not enact long-term trade policies. 

The tariffs can remain in effect for only 150 days without congressional approval. Trump's decision marks the first time a president has invoked Section 122. 

The White House shared that the temporary import duty will take effect on February 24 at 12.01am EST. 

The tariff does not apply to a wide range of goods, including energy products, natural resources, fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, some electronics, some vehicles, certain aerospace products, informational materials, and accompanied baggage. 

Food products, including beef and tomatoes, will be exempt to minimize impacts on the average consumer. 

 

Trump called an impromptu press conference on Friday just hours after the Supreme Court ruled in a 603 decision against most of his global tariffs

Trump called an impromptu press conference on Friday just hours after the Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 decision against most of his global tariffs

 

The global tariff also excludes products from Canada and Mexico due to the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

Canada and Mexico have the lowest effective tariff rate globally. The countries will still be taxed on steel, aluminum and non-USMCA compliant goods. 

Certain textiles and apparel are also exempt under the Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement. 

'The Supreme Court’s disappointing decision today will not deter the President’s effort to reshape the long-distorted global trading system that has undermined the economic and national security of our country, and contributed to fundamental international payment problems,' the White House said on the tariffs. 

The president also launched a scathing accusation - that the justices who struck down his signature tariffs are being 'swayed by foreign interests.'

In his seething condemnation, Trump said that some conservative justices are 'not loyal' like those appointed by Democratic presidents and accused them of going against the US Constitution. 

He lamented that the decision is nonsensical, claiming that the Court admitted he can do anything he wants as president other than slap down tariffs.

'I'm allowed to destroy the country, but I can't charge them a little fee,' Trump complained. 'I can do anything I want to do to them, but I can't charge any money.'

Three conservative justices joined all three liberals on the panel to rule against Trump on Friday, handing down a 6-3 decision that rebuked one of the president's biggest economic proposals of his second term. 

 

Pictured: US Solicitor General John Sauer (left) and Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick (right) flanked Trump as he came to speak with the press about his tariffs

Pictured: US Solicitor General John Sauer (left) and Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick (right) flanked Trump as he came to speak with the press about his tariffs

Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Neil Gorsuch (upper left) ruled with the liberal wing of the Court against President Donald Trump. Justice Brett Kavanaugh (second from right), a Trump appointee, wrote the dissent. Chief Justice John Roberts (center, first row) penned the ruling

Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Neil Gorsuch (upper left) ruled with the liberal wing of the Court against President Donald Trump. Justice Brett Kavanaugh (second from right), a Trump appointee, wrote the dissent. Chief Justice John Roberts (center, first row) penned the ruling

 

'The Supreme Court's ruling on tariffs is deeply disappointing and I'm ashamed of certain members of the Court. Absolutely ashamed for not having the courage to do what's right for our country,' the president said in the press briefing room. 

'It's my opinion that the court has been swayed by foreign interests and a political movement that is far smaller than people would ever think,' he added. 

The president also spun the legal defeat into a win, saying that now he has a greater ability to regulate trade.

'While I am sure that they did not mean to do so, the Supreme Court's decision today made a President's ability to both regulate trade and impose tariffs more powerful and more crystal clear rather than less,' Trump said. 'I don't think they meant that.' 

The president was meeting with members of the National Governors Association on Friday when the bombshell ruling came down. 

Despite the Court's rightward lean, two justices that Trump appointed – Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett – joined Chief Justice John Roberts to rule against him. It was a rare moment of consensus among conservative justices to go against the president. 

'I think it's embarrassment to their families,' Trump said specifically of his picks Gorsuch and Barrett ruling against his policy. 

The president continued to tear into the conservative justices on Truth Social, accusing Gorsuch and Barrett of voting against Republicans 'and never against themselves.' 

'At least I didn’t appoint Roberts, who led the effort to allow Foreign Countries that have been ripping us off for years to continue to do so — But we won’t let it happen. The new TARIFFS, totally tested and accepted as Law, are on their way!' Trump continued.

Meanwhile, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, the third Trump Supreme Court appointee, penned the dissent. He was joined by fellow conservative Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas.

As Trump tore into the Court, Wall Street celebrated a stock market spike that resulted from the tariff ruling.

In the majority opinion, penned by Roberts, the court said Trump did not have the authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 to impose tariffs.

Trump had used the law as a legal footing for his widespread tariff policy, which he boasted would enrich the nation. 

 

President Donald Trump holds up his list of reciprocal tariffs imposed on 'Liberation Day' on April 2, 2025

President Donald Trump holds up his list of reciprocal tariffs imposed on 'Liberation Day' on April 2, 2025 

Traders work the floor on Friday as the Supreme Court ruled against President Donald Trump's widespread tariff policy

Traders work the floor on Friday as the Supreme Court ruled against President Donald Trump's widespread tariff policy

 

An estimated $175 billion in tariff revenue is at stake, according to the Penn-Wharton Budget Model, Reuters reported.  

On April 2, he celebrated 'Liberation Day,' announcing reciprocal tariffs on nations around the globe - even on uninhabited islands. 

The president used the justification that there was a national emergency due to trade deficits and national security threats. 

As he entered office last year, he imposed tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China over fentanyl flooding into the U.S. 

Trump also used tariffs to threaten other countries, such as dangling a 25 percent tariff on Indian imports due to the country continuing to buy Russian oil. 

But Roberts, who was appointed by Republican President George W. Bush, wrote in the ruling that if Congress had intended to allow the president the 'distinct and extraordinary power to impose tariffs, it would have done so expressly - as it consistently has in other tariff statutes.' 

The Chief Justice said that the president must 'point to clear congressional authorization' to justify his extraordinary assertion of the power to impose tariffs.' 

'He cannot,' Roberts said.  

For months, Trump has publicly pushed the high court to rule in his favor, even flirting with coming to the Court's chambers to watch oral arguments. 

'If we don't win that case, we will be a weakened, troubled financial mess for many, many years to come,' Trump said in October. 'I don't even know if it is survivable. That's why I think I'm going to the Supreme Court to watch it. I've not done that. And I've had some pretty big cases.' 

Trump ended up not viewing oral arguments, which critics suggested could have raised constitutional questions related to the separation of powers. 

But the president had the benefit of a conservative majority, having appointed three Supreme Court Justices in his first term - Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett. 

'In essence, the Court today concludes that the President checked the wrong statutory box by relying on IEEPA rather than another statute to impose these tariffs,' Kavanaugh wrote in his dissent.

The decision also said Trump could seek Congressional authorization. 

Trump still retains a Republican majority in the House and the Senate, ahead of this year's midterm races. Still, he'd likely need to strike a deal with Senate Democrats to get any tariff legislation across the line. 

While the Court gave the administration those avenues to explore, it did not deal in the decision with how to handle tariff refunds. 

That battle will likely play out in the lower courts.  

REGARDLESS OF WHO TO BELIEVE, HERE IS ANOTHER CASE OF A COP STANDING IN FRONT OF A VEHICLE WHOSE DRIVER IS TRYING TO GET AWAY

American citizen, 23, was shot and killed by ICE agent nearly a year BEFORE Renee Good and Alex Pretti... and it was 'kept quiet' until now

 

By Sophie Gable 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 20, 2026

 

 

Ruben Ray Martinez, 23, pictured above in an undated photo, was fatally shot by an ICE agent on March 15, 2025, according to newly released documents

Ruben Ray Martinez, 23, pictured above in an undated photo, was fatally shot by an ICE agent on March 15, 2025, according to newly released documents 

 

An American citizen was shot and killed by a federal agent last March, nearly a year before two Minneapolis residents died at the hands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers

Ruben Ray Martinez, 23, was fatally shot in South Padre Island, Texas, on March 15, 2025, according to newly released documents by the watchdog organization American Oversight, viewed by the Daily Mail and first reported by Newsweek

The 352-page release was published by American Oversight and included several 'significant incident' reports by ICE never before seen by the public. 

An incident report from last March revealed that an American citizen was shot by an ICE officer after allegedly striking an agent in a Blue Ford 4-door vehicle.

Martinez was allegedly driving the vehicle and came in contact with federal agents conducting immigration enforcement operations while working with the South Padre Island Police Department. 

The Department of Homeland Security said in the report that multiple officers gave commands for the vehicle to stop and surrounded the Blue Ford. 

'The driver accelerated forward, striking a HSI special agent who wound upon on the hood of the vehicle,' the incident report stated. 

One of the agents then discharged 'multiple rounds at the driver through the open driver's side window.' 

 

Renee Good, pictured above in an undated photo, was killed on January 7 by a federal immigration officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota

Renee Good, pictured above in an undated photo, was killed on January 7 by a federal immigration officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota 

Alex Pretti, a registered nurse and American citizen, was fatally shot by an ICE agent in Minneapolis on January 25

Alex Pretti, a registered nurse and American citizen, was fatally shot by an ICE agent in Minneapolis on January 25 

 

Martinez was transported to a hospital in Brownsville and later pronounced dead. The incident report redacted his name but identified him as a US citizen. 

Local media covered the incident at the time as an 'officer-involved shooting.' Newsweek identified Martinez through the coverage at the time. 

South Padre Island City Manager Randy Smith previously told local news outlets that officers were not the ones who fired their weapons.  

DHS confirmed the shooting in a statement, adding the Ford driver 'intentionally ran over a Homeland Security Investigations special agent.' 

'Upon witnessing this, another agent fired defensive shots to protect himself, his fellow agents, and the general public,' the statement added. 

DHS added that the agent who was allegedly run over sustained a knee injury and was taken to the hospital.   

DHS said the Texas Department of Public Safety Ranger Division was investigating the incident. The Daily Mail has reached out to the department for an update. 

The department told Newsweek that the investigation is still active and that no other information is currently available.

 

Rachel Reyes, pictured right, told the New York Times that her son, Ruben Ray Martinez, pictured left, was a hardworking young man and disagreed with DHS's characterization of his death

Rachel Reyes, pictured right, told the New York Times that her son, Ruben Ray Martinez, pictured left, was a hardworking young man and disagreed with DHS's characterization of his death 

 

Martinez's mother, Rachel Reyes, confirmed to the New York Times that her son was the victim of the ICE-involved shooting. 

She disputed DHS's account of events and characterized her son as a hardworking young man with no history of trouble with the law. 

'He was a good kid. He doesn’t have a criminal history. He never got in trouble. He was never violent,' Reyes said in a phone interview. 

Martinez's family maintained that he was complying with instructions from law enforcement officials before he was shot.

Reyes added that she didn't 'appreciate' DHS's characterization of her son and said the incident report made the events 'sound different' than what her family was initially told. 

'What they’re saying is different from what they told the family, so that’s adding insult to injury,' she said. 

Alex Stamm, the family's attorney, told the New York Times that eyewitness accounts of the shooting were inconsistent with ICE's internal report. 

The attorney demanded a 'full and fair investigation' and asked why federal officers were present at the scene of a traffic collision. 

Martinez's family said in a statement to the Times:  'Since Ruben’s death a year ago, all we have wanted is justice for him, and we have struggled with the silence surrounding his killing.

'Now, the country is in crisis and, terribly, heartbreakingly, other families are enduring what we have.'

Reyes told the Associated Press that her son had just celebrated his 23rd birthday and had driven with a friend from San Antonio to South Padre Island to celebrate. 

She said Martinez worked at an Amazon warehouse, and liked playing video games and hanging out with his friends. 

'He was a typical young guy. He never really got a chance to go out and experience things. It was his first time getting to go out of town. He was a nice guy, humble guy. And he wasn’t a violent person at all,' Reyes added. 

SEN. GRAHAM: 'ALL THE SHIPS DIDN'T COME HERE JUST BECAUSE OF THE NICE WEATHER THIS TIME OF YEAR'

US tightens noose around Iran with largest air buildup since 2003

President Donald Trump has yet to decide whether to order a strike on Iran and what its objective would be, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal. American officials said that unlike the limited strike carried out in June against three Iranian nuclear sites, the current deployment would allow the US to wage a sustained air campaign lasting weeks or even months.

 

Israel Hayom

Feb 19, 2026 


 US Military Attack against Iran_SWOT Analysis_SpecialEurasia

What we know about the massive US military buildup in the Middle East

 

The Wall Street Journal reported that in recent days the US has sent a significant number of fighter jets and support aircraft to the Middle East, bringing its aerial presence in the region to its largest scale since the 2003 invasion of Iraq. 

According to the report, Trump has not yet made a final decision on whether to launch an attack on Iran, and if so, whether the goal would be to halt the Islamic Republic's nuclear program, damage its ballistic missile array or even attempt to destabilize the regime in Tehran.

Among the aircraft deployed to the region are advanced F-35 and F-22 fighter jets, alongside command-and-control planes and electronic warfare aircraft. The aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln is already operating in the theater, while a second carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, is en route with its strike group. Advanced air defense systems have also been positioned.

US officials said that unlike the targeted June strike on three Iranian nuclear facilities, the current force posture would enable Washington to conduct a prolonged aerial campaign lasting weeks and possibly months.

At the same time as the military buildup, diplomatic contacts are continuing. US and Iranian representatives met this week in Geneva to discuss uranium enrichment. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said there had been "some progress," but acknowledged that significant gaps remain between the sides. Iran is expected to submit a more detailed proposal in the coming weeks, the report said.

Trump has received several briefings on military options, including a broad campaign aimed at striking Iran's political and military leadership, or alternatively a more focused attack on nuclear facilities and ballistic missile sites. Both options could unfold over an extended period.

The president has signaled that he would prefer a diplomatic deal that would bring Iran's nuclear program to an end. However, officials within the administration and among US allies, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, are pressing to intensify military pressure on Tehran, particularly to stop its production of ballistic missiles.

The US military is seen as holding a significant advantage due to its stealth capabilities and precision strike capacity, especially after Iran's air defense systems were damaged in Israeli strikes last year. Still, Iran retains a substantial missile arsenal and could threaten US bases and allied targets, as well as attempt to disrupt shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

According to the report, the administration has not yet formulated a clear assessment of a post-strike scenario, including the question of who might succeed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei if the regime were destabilized.

American and foreign officials cited in the report expressed doubt that Iran would fully comply with US demands. Trump has repeatedly warned that if negotiations fail, the US will act militarily. "I don't think they want to bear the consequences of not reaching a deal," he said this week.

Meanwhile, US Senator Lindsey Graham, who visited the United Arab Emirates this week, told Sky News Arabia that "a decision has been made" in Washington regarding Iran.

"All these ships didn't come here just because of the nice weather this time of year," Graham said.

DEMOCRATS POUNCE ON REP. FINE FOR HIS RESPONSE TO ISRAEL-HATER NERDEEN KISWANI

When it comes to civil discourse, there’s no choice between dogs and humans

Those who were appalled by Rep. Randy Fine saying he preferred canines to Muslims were right, even if what he was responding to was also appalling.

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin 

 

JNS

Feb 20, 2026

 

 

Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) speaks during a House committee hearing about antisemitism on campus with leaders from Georgetown University, City University of New York and University of California, Berkeley, July 15, 2025. Credit: Courtesy of the House Committee on Education and Workforce.

Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.) speaks during a House committee hearing about antisemitism on campus with leaders from Georgetown University, City University of New York and University of California, Berkeley, July 15, 2025. 
 

In a gentler era of American politics, politicians generally didn’t say awful things and get away with it. But, as most of us may have noticed over the last decade or more, we no longer live in such a time.

And that is the context for the latest kerfuffle in which a social-media post has generated outrage and calls for punishment for the offender. The perpetrator is Rep. Randy Fine (R-Fla.), who is no stranger to controversy. He was responding to a post on X by Nerdeen Kiswani, founder of the Within Our Lifetime anti-Israel group and a prominent ally of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

An open antisemite

Kiswani first came to the public’s attention by giving a commencement speech replete with antisemitism at the graduation ceremony for the City University of New York’s Law School. Her genocidal goal is the destruction of the State of Israel, a position that has led her to share platforms with Mamdani. She frequently proclaims that the objective of eradicating Israel must be achieved “by any means necessary.”

 

Nerdeen Kiswani, a co-founder and leader of Within Our Lifetime (WOL), a Palestinian-led community organization, is now accusing Jacob Berger of "grifting off a genocide.

The rallies that Nerdeen Kiswani has organized have supported the actions of terror groups like Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis, not to mention Iran’s missile attacks on Israel. She frequently proclaims that the objective of eradicating Israel must be achieved “by any means necessary.”

 

Unlike Mamdani, who supports the dismantling of the Jewish state but claims to oppose violence, Kiswani isn’t shy about backing terrorism against Israelis and Jews, including lauding the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. The rallies she has organized have supported the actions of terror groups like Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis, not to mention Iran’s missile attacks on Israel.

She also appears to be an advocate of imposing Sharia, or Muslim religious law, in America, especially with respect to the treatment of dogs. That seemed to be the point of a Feb. 12 post, which she later claimed was satire. In it, she complained about dog owners not picking up after their pets in the aftermath of a large snowfall in New York City: “Finally, NYC is coming to Islam. Dogs definitely have a place in society, just not as indoor pets. Like we’ve said all along, they are unclean.”

At that point, Fine, who is Jewish and, like a lot of prominent people, seems to spend far too much time on social media, responded: “If they force us to choose, the choice between dogs and Muslims is not a difficult one.”

And that is why virtually the entire Democratic Party congressional caucus, backed by many prominent Jews, is calling for Fine to be censured for what they believe is brazen Islamophobia.

The dogs’ champion

Fine is, predictably, unembarrassed by the brouhaha. To the contrary, he has gloried in the attention it has brought him. His X feed is now a nonstop deluge of pictures and caricatures of dogs who are protesting Muslim anti-canine sentiments and intentions. To each post criticizing him, he responds with a cartoon image of a dog over the Revolutionary War slogan of “Don’t Tread on Me..

Cartoon of a happy dog running on grass with text: "DON'T TREAD ON ME." Tweet caption: "SAVE THE DOGS." 

Rep. Fine has responded to his critics by posting modified libertarian Gadsden flags featuring puppies rather than the traditional snake

 

His barb aimed at Kiswani has seemed to make him the hero not only of some dog lovers but also of many others who are angry about the way people like Kiswani have helped normalize antisemitism in American political discourse. More than that, the vast majority of what radical groups like the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) claim is Islamophobia is, in fact, usually an effort to take note of and criticize Muslim antisemitism that has become commonplace, especially since Oct. 7.

In the eyes of his supporters, Fine is merely fighting fire with fire, and if Muslims are offended, so be it.

In part, this is just another chapter in the story of the coarsening of American political discourse. Fault for this is usually attributed to President Donald Trump. He does deserve a good deal of the blame because of many statements, especially on social media, in which he trolls his opponents in a manner that is often as humorous as it is hyperbolic. But they are also sometimes vulgar and misogynistic, or even—as with a recent post in which he depicted former President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, as gorillas—arguably racist.

A zero-sum game

He is far from alone in being an offender in this respect. Where the president has really broken new ground is how he is utterly indifferent to criticism or shame for what would have been widely deprecated as bad behavior. Part of this is because his supporters are delighted, rather than outraged, by his skewering of liberal foes, even when it is unfair or wrongheaded. That’s because they view his barbs as just desserts for arrogant credentialed elites who look down on their fellow citizens and have imposed their own arbitrary standards of behavior that often involve canceling anyone who disagrees with them.

He has also come to understand that he—or anyone who shares his conservative views—will be damned by his critics, no matter what they do or say. And he has concluded that apologizing, even when wrong, merely strengthens one’s opponents. Since he and others on the right believe that liberals are not held to the same standards, there’s no point in ever backing down, even when you are obviously out of line.

So, by doubling down on his supposed championing of dogs at the expense of Muslims, Fine is merely following the same pattern that Trump has established.

Many on the right, most of whom might never themselves speak or post in such an outrageous manner, think this is just fine. That’s because they see political combat, even when it is conducted in this sort of juvenile manner, as part of an existential civilizational conflict in which the stakes are incredibly high.

It’s the same sort of thinking that inspired Michael Anton, an academic who served in the George W. Bush administration, to write the famous essay, “The Flight 93 Election,” in the Claremont Review of Books in 2016 under a Latin pseudonym. In it, he argued that electing someone who might truly overturn norms like Trump was necessary if the nation was to be saved from the left. Anton, who served in both the president’s first and second administrations, was not arguing in favor of social-media posts that were either vulgar or clearly prejudiced against faith or ethnic groups, such as Fine’s anti-Muslim riposte. But the point is, once you see all political arguments or discourse as a zero-sum game, anything goes.

More than that, those who subscribe to this thesis—as the many people who posted their support for Fine’s position—believe that not giving an inch to the other side is not merely defensible but laudable.

This may make sense in an exchange of insults on X. But is it good for the country, or consistent with traditional Western ideas of ethics or Jewish values? Clearly, that is not the case.

It must be pointed out that even in a time in which political discourse has been coarsened, and politics is a zero-sum game, there are still some things decent people simply shouldn’t say. And among them are statements that express direct religious bias.

Fine’s defenders may assert, with some justice, that antisemites like Kiswani don’t have the same scruples about insulting their opponents that the congressman’s critics expect of him. While it may be a double standard, shouldn’t we expect a member of Congress to behave with more manners than the leader of a pro-genocide group whose name states its goal of destroying the Jewish state within the lifetimes of its members?

Animals or humans?

I share the sentiments of those who are disgusted by Kiswani’s prejudice against dogs and deeply offended by her suggestion, whether in jest or not, that Americans adopt Muslim taboos about living with humanity’s best friends.

But Fine’s quip about preferring dogs to Muslims is not consistent with the values of his faith. Fine wears a kippah on the floor of the House, in part, he says, to demonstrate solidarity with Jews who are faced with intimidation and violence by Israel-bashers and Jew-haters like Kiswani. But while Judaism forbids cruelty to animals, it is equally clear that it requires us to prioritize human life over them. As prominent Jewish writer and talk-show host Dennis Prager teaches, the fact that so many contemporary Americans openly admit that they think that the lives of their pets are of equal or greater value to them than those of human beings who are strangers is part of the price we are paying for the decline of religious faith.

People of faith, especially those steeped in the Judeo-Christian tradition, believe that human beings are created, as the Torah teaches, in the image of God. We may love our pets, and they may love us. But their rights are not more important than those of human beings, even those with whom we have profound political, religious and ethical disagreements, such as Muslims who may agree with Kiswani.

So, to state, as Fine has done, that dogs should be chosen over Muslims isn’t just offensive or politically incorrect. It’s profoundly wrong. Seen in that light, it should be considered, along with the many instances of left-wing members of Congress like Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) of antisemitism, worthy of censure.

Instead of taking sides in this scrum, thoughtful Americans, including those who are angry about the stands that Kiswani and her allies, like Mamdani, take about Jews and Israel, need to refuse to go down the rabbit hole of mutual delegitimization.

The point is, in a free country not governed by Sharia law, we don’t have to choose between having dogs and tolerating fellow Americans who are Muslims—some of whom, like Kiswani, believe in and say awful things. Indeed, our faith in the values of Western civilization, of which Judaism helps form the foundation, compels us to value their lives and to protect their rights.

Nor do we have to choose between opposing Kiswani’s brand of Jew-hatred and the sort of civil discourse that is necessary to ensure that the American constitutional republic survives and thrives. Trump has taught conservatives that if they are to defeat the toxic Marxist left, they must be as tough and as unashamed to engage in political combat as their opponents. But that doesn’t excuse comments that are prejudiced.

IT WOULD BE INSANE FOR JEWS NOT TO PROTEST AGAINST THE SYSTEMIC INCITEMENT AND INDIFFERENCE THAT IS TURNING THEM INTO SITTING DUCKS FOR GENOCIDAL FANATICS ROAMING THE STREETS OF WESTERN CITIES

Fight! Fight! Fight!

Jewish victimization should not be dismissed as unbeatable. It must be fought harder and better. 

 

By Melanie Phillips 

 

JNS

Feb 19, 2026

 

 

Britain's March Against Antisemitism approaches Trafalgar Square, September 7, 2025 (Nathan Lilienfed/Campaign Against Antisemitism)

Britain's March Against Antisemitism approaches Trafalgar Square, September 7, 2025 
 

A lively debate is underway in the Jewish world about whether Jews are wise to present themselves as victims.

In the Jewish Journal, Rabbi Amitai Fraiman has written that Jewish victimization is now an outdated paradigm. Jews are no longer seen as vulnerable and marginal, but ever since Israel’s iconic victory in the 1967 Six-Day War, they’ve been associated with force, power and agency.

The Hamas-led atrocities in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, may have slaughtered innocent people, says Fraiman, but this was met by a “ferocious response from a Jewish army.” Portraying it as a story of pure victimhood is therefore “a conceptual failure.”

At the beginning of this month, New York Times columnist Bret Stephens argued in an address at New York’s 92nd Street Y that antisemitism isn’t just a prejudice but a neurosis that can never be eradicated.

So rather than engaging with it, he suggested, Jews should ignore it. The millions of dollars that community leaders had devoted to fighting it had been mostly wasted and would be better spent on reinforcing Jewish education, culture and identification.

Both Fraiman and Stephens said that Jews shouldn’t expect people to feel compassion for them. It was wrong to assume that if the world was reminded of Jewish suffering, moral clarity would follow. Nor would Jewish virtues or successes move hearts; constantly seeking to prove ourselves worthy to win the world’s love was a fool’s errand.

Victimhood has certainly figured hugely in the way Diaspora Jews have viewed themselves. In America, where Jews are less focused on synagogue life and religious observance than they are in the United Kingdom, the Shoah has become a central pivot of Jewish identity with an explosion of Holocaust memorials, museums and educational tools.

Jews reflexively depict Israel as having been the permanent target and victim of the Arab and Muslim world ever since the rebirth of the Jewish state in 1948. They also point to the antisemitism that mars the West itself, and which has been around for as long as there have been Jews in the world.

Clearly, none of these indisputable facts has prevented the current tsunami of hatred and bigotry from inundating the West. Diaspora Jews are being abused, harassed, vilified, intimidated and attacked—targeted over their identity, whether this is couched in the exterminatory language of anti-Zionism or in the paranoid tropes of Jew-hatred.

Jews in Britain, Australia and Canada are being accused of “killing babies” in the Gaza Strip. Groups of “anti-racists” are going from house to house in British cities, writing down the names of anyone who refuses to support a boycott of Israeli goods to create “Zionist-free” zones.

People shrug aside chants for the death of Jews on Western streets. After brief periods of performative shock when Jews were gunned down on Sydney’s Bondi Beach or at a Manchester synagogue on Yom Kippur, nothing serious was done by the Australian or British governments to address the anti-Jewish incitement now rampant in their societies.

 

The Bondi Beach terrorists. After brief periods of performative shock when Jews were gunned down on Sydney’s Bondi Beach or at a Manchester synagogue on Yom Kippur, nothing serious was done by the Australian or British governments to address the anti-Jewish incitement now rampant in their societies.

 

This onslaught has been fueled by the demonization of Israel through wall-to-wall lies and vicious distortions. These have been widely believed to be true, and because of that, have cast Israel and its supporters as the worst people in the world.

The driving force behind all this is the Islamists, who have mounted a globally organized and funded campaign of propaganda and psychological warfare.

The acceptance of this malicious and false narrative, however, rests upon far deeper Western cultural pathologies about the Jews and Jewish suffering.

This was obvious in the reaction to the Oct. 7 attacks, with a widespread refusal to acknowledge the depraved, sadistic and psychopathic way in which the Israelis were slaughtered, raped, tortured, kidnapped and otherwise abused.

The obvious reason for that is that any evidence of Jewish victimization by Palestinian Arabs gets in the way of the default narrative of Western liberals that the State of Israel is the colonialist oppressor and the Palestinian Arabs are its victims.

But there’s a still deeper reason—the widespread resentment that the Jews are considered victims at all.

In the world of “intersectional” victim culture that has created overlapping categories of “the oppressed,” Jews are viewed as oppressors because they are seen as capitalists in key positions in finance, the media, the law and other professions. Ludicrously, as a result of the special status afforded by Western society to the Holocaust, the Jews have also been accused, in this writer’s hearing, of “sucking up all the victimhood in the world, leaving none for us.”

This is closely allied to resentment at the very idea of antisemitism. People believe the Jews use the claim of Jew-hatred not only to sanitize the “crimes” of Israel. They believe Jews also use it to sanitize themselves by making it impermissible to express “legitimate” dislike of Jews as hateful, devious, grasping and the embodiment of other classic antisemitic canards.

They are baffled by, as well as jealous of, the Jews’ conspicuous and disproportionate success. Since they can’t understand the source of this unsurpassed record of achievement, they assume the Jews must have hidden powers. Israel’s very real military power confirms them in the paranoid view that the Jews embody some kind of demonic cosmic force.

In other words, the Jews make them feel frightened. And people who frighten them, they think, can’t themselves be victims of anyone.

This is all obviously a form of cultural derangement. So how should Jews deal with it?

It’s certainly beyond foolish to believe that the world will ever feel sorry for the Jews because of their victimization. But that’s not a reason for remaining silent about the abuses they are facing.

Jews have a duty to stand up for truth over lies and for justice over injustice. It would also be insane for them not to protest against the systemic incitement and indifference that is turning them into sitting ducks for genocidal fanatics roaming the streets of Western cities.

And it’s essential for the safety and security of everyone to call out the moral bankruptcy of inverting victim and oppressor—the mind-twisting obscenity at the core of the demonization of Israel.

Plenty of people in the West aren’t anti-Jew, but they might tumble down this rabbit hole unless they’re hauled back from it by Jews sounding the alarm.

Similarly, Jews themselves must be prevented from believing such lies, which is causing increasing cultural demoralization as well as turning so many young Jews against both Israel and Judaism.

Antisemitism and anti-Zionism need to be fought, but harder and better. Diaspora Jews have never combated them properly. They’ve assumed the default position of exile—the nervous belief that they exist at the pleasure of their host community, which must therefore be appeased and never challenged.

As a result, their stand has always been defensive. Sucked into arguing on the ground designated by their tormentors, Jews have found themselves struggling to answer accusations that are so preposterous they are innately unanswerable—and then they wonder why they always lose.

As I explain in my new book Fighting the Hate: A Handbook for Jews Under Siege, to be published next month by Wicked Son, Jews must go on the offensive and take the fight to the enemy.

Jewish history teaches that the ancient Israelites did precisely this—fighting and defeating their enemies with a clear-sighted understanding that anything short of doing so decisively would lead to the extinction of their people.

Israel today similarly fights its enemies on the battlefield of kinetic war. Diaspora Jews must fight their own enemies with equivalent tenacity and courage on the battlefield of the mind.

MR. PRESIDENT, WE'RE ALL IN FAVOR OF YOUR WALL, BUT JUST NOT IN OUR NEIGHBORHOOD

Opposition mounts to border wall construction in Big Bend National Park

Towering steel barriers could soon cut across one of Texas' most remote and iconic landscapes.

 

The Rio Grande near Santa Elena Canyon in Big Bend National Park is the international border between Mexico and the United States.
 
U.S. Customs and Border Protection is preparing to build more than 100 miles of new border wall through Big Bend National Park, according to reporting by Marfa Public Radio. The project is part of President Donald Trump's "Smart Wall" plan and would also extend into Big Bend Ranch State Park and other stretches of the Chihuahuan Desert.

Until recently, CBP's public map labeled the entire 800,000-acre national park as a "technology only" zone, signaling surveillance rather than physical barriers. In mid-February, the agency updated its interactive map to show a 111- to 112-mile segment titled "Big Bend 4," now classified as a "primary border wall system" along much of the Rio Grande inside the park.

The proposed route runs from near Santa Elena Canyon east toward Mariscal Canyon, crossing long stretches of riverfront and passing near the Rio Grande Village campground and the Boquillas border crossing. The deepest canyon corridors are currently excluded from physical wall construction but would still fall under expanded surveillance.

A CBP spokesperson told Inside Climate News that Big Bend National Park is now included in the scope of the Smart Wall plan. Contracts could be awarded in the coming weeks and months, with construction potentially lasting several years.

North of the park, another roughly 175-mile stretch of the Rio Grande—from Fort Quitman in Hudspeth County to Colorado Canyon in Big Bend Ranch State Park—has also been identified as part of a separate Smart Wall project.

On its website, CBP describes the Smart Wall as "comprised of a steel bollard wall or waterborne barrier, along with roads, detection technology, cameras and lighting and in some cases a secondary wall – creating an enforcement zone."

To speed construction, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem recently signed waivers for 28 federal laws, including the Endangered Species Act and the National Environmental Policy Act, clearing the way for segments from Fort Quitman through parts of Big Bend Ranch State Park.

The National Parks Conservation Association is pushing back. "Building a border wall through Big Bend National Park would choke off vital wildlife migration routes, intensify flooding risks and inflict irreparable damage to one of our country’s most iconic national parks," the group said in a statement.

 

The proposed wall would cut through the remote Big Bend sector along the US-Mexico border  and extend across surrounding desert and mountain terrain

 

The Rio Grande forms the southern boundary of Big Bend National Park for 118 miles, separating the United States from Mexico. In Big Bend Ranch State Park, the river similarly marks the international boundary, carving steep canyons through the desert.

Dividing the landscape with a wall "would force residents and resource stewards to manage one side of the river at a time," the NPCA said. "Wildlife and communities on both sides of the wall would suffer, and nobody would be the winner here."

The group argues the region's harsh terrain already acts as a natural barrier and says surveillance technology would have less impact than a physical wall. "Customs and Border Protection already maintains a presence in Big Bend," the NPCA said. "Building a wall here makes no logistical sense and only serves to harm the region’s wild scenery and thriving community-based tourism economy."

Big Bend National Park draws more than half a million visitors annually and generated more than $60 million in visitor spending in 2024, according to National Park Service data.

The Big Bend region has operated under heightened federal security over the past year, with troops deployed across parts of West Texas and ongoing coordination between park officials and Border Patrol. Even so, statistics show unlawful crossings have fallen sharply in recent months, including within the Big Bend Sector. 

Attempts to extend a border wall through Big Bend have surfaced before. During Trump's first term, internal Department of Homeland Security plans envisioned a wall reaching the park, but legal challenges, funding issues and engineering concerns stalled the effort. At the time, then-DHS Secretary John Kelly acknowledged there were places, including Big Bend, where the terrain made wall construction unlikely.

THE SCOURGE OF WIND TURBINES

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