Saturday, February 28, 2026

COLLEGE OF THE MAINLAND USED TO BE RULED BY MARXISTS, BUT THAT IS NO LONGER SO

College of the Mainland drops $2,700 fee for early college students

 

By David Mercado

 

The Galveston County Daily News

Feb 26, 2026 


Aerial view of the entire campus.

College of the Mainland

 

TEXAS CITY -- Students enrolled in College of the Mainland’s Collegiate High School program won’t have to pay a $2,700 annual fee starting fall 2026 after trustees voted Monday to eliminate the charge.

Trustees voted to waive the fee for students who qualify under the state’s Financial Aid for Swift Transfer program and to create a financial assistance program for students who don’t qualify but demonstrate financial need.

“At College of the Mainland, making education accessible to every student is our responsibility,” President Dr. Helen Brewer said. “When state funding allows us to reinvest directly back into our students, we do. Removing this fee protects opportunity for families and strengthens the long-term economic future of our region.”

The fee was previously covered by participating school districts. Several districts notified the college they’d stop covering the cost for the 2026-27 academic year and instead require families to pay it, college officials said.

The Collegiate High School program currently enrolls 249 students. Of those, 146 qualify under the state program and 103 don’t, according to college records.

Under the state’s funding formula, the college receives $58.52 per credit hour for eligible students. That amount includes reimbursement for standard tuition plus a $27.52 supplement, which offsets the loss of the annual program fee, administrators said.

Before the change, program revenue relied on two sources: a $31 per credit hour fee and the $2,700 annual program fee.

With the state reimbursement in place, projected revenue under the revised structure totals about $598,800, covering the program’s budget without creating a deficit, administrators said.

The program has surplus grant funding from previous years that could help stabilize the budget if enrollment shifts.

The Collegiate High School program is one of two dual-credit options offered by the college. In traditional dual credit, students take college-level courses at their high school, online or on the college campus and pay tuition under standard dual-credit arrangements.

In the Collegiate High School pathway, students attend classes on the college campus in a structured cohort while completing high school graduation requirements. Many graduate with an associate degree before earning their high school diploma, reducing the time and cost required to complete a bachelor’s degree, officials said.

The revised fee structure takes effect in fall 2026. Additional details about the financial assistance program are expected to be shared with families and partner districts ahead of the 2026-27 academic year, according to the college. 

EDITOR'S NOTE: My son recently took me by COM where I taught from 1970-1993. I didn't recognize the place because it was now 10 times as large as when I was there. 

GOOD MOVE ..... NOW IF TRUMP COULD SHUT DOWN THESE MARXIST INSTITUTIONS WE WOULD BE MUCH BETTER OFF

NOTABLE SUICIDE ... ROBERT CARRADINE, COUNT DRACULA'S SON

By Howie Katz

 

                         Robert Carradine on the red carpet.

Robert Carradine of the famous John Carradine acting family passed away on February 23  at the age of 71 following a nearly two-decade battle with Bipolar Disease.

His death was ruled a suicide by the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner's office.


ohn Carradine with sons Christopher Carradine, Keith Carradine, Robert Carradine, Bruce Carradine and Mike Carradine in 1979. 

John Carradine with sons Christopher Carradine, Keith Carradine, Robert Carradine, Bruce Carradine and Mike Carradine in 1979.

 

Robert's father John was considered one of the greatest character actors in American cinema. He was best known for portraying Count Dracula in House of Frankenstein (1944), House of Dracula (1945), Billy the Kid Versus Dracula (1966), and Nocturna: Granddaughter of Dracula (1979).

Three of Robert's four brothers,  David, Keith, and Bruce, also turned to acting. Robert's tragic death will be mourned by many movie followers.

AND THEY WONDER WHY CALIFORNIA IS CONSIDERED ANTI-BUSINESS

By Bob Walsh

 

Lauren Sanchez (seated, on right) will be the new chair of the California Air Resources Board.
Lauren Sanchez (seated, on right) is the chair of the California Air Resources Board. 
 
 
The California Air Resources Board is a tremendously powerful body of unelected government officials.  They have just approved rules, which have the force of law, putting into place the state's Climate Disclosure laws for mandatory reporting of greenhouse gas emissions required by SB 253 and SB261.  These rules take effect on August 1 of this year.

These rules apply to U. S. companies with more than $1 billion in annual revenue mandating emissions reporting and companies of with more than $500 million in annual revenue must report climate risk disclosure.  It should be noted that these are not necessarily CA based companies but rather companies that do any business whatsoever in CA.

These companies are required to make extensive and expensive "mea culpa" reports to the state of CA confessing their sins.  Pretty much any emissions source can be covered, such as customers driving to and from business locations to purchase goods or services or vehicles being operated by third parties to deliver goods as well as manufacturing.  

There are some exemptions, notably including the insurance industry.  

It is not clear how many companies (if any) will say "fuck you" and shut down business operations in sunny California.

EXCREMENT HITTING THE AIR CIRCULATION DEVICE IN IRAN

By Bob Walsh

APTOPIX Iran US Israel
People watch ash clouds rise over the rooftops of Tehran.
 
 
It seems that Donald Trump is actively pursuing regime change in Iran.  Assuming the media has it right the head of the Iranian army and the head of the Revolutionary Guard have both been terminally rehabilitated.  The Ayatollah may, or may not, be alive right now.  The bombs are falling and Donald Trump is actively soliciting action by the Iranian people after the bombs stop dropping.  

It would be nice of the Iranian people are able and willing to achieve regime change from within.  It would be GREAT if they can manage to change the structure of the government away from a repressive theocracy to something resembling a modern more-or-less secular democracy.  That might be a bridge too far.  

I have no doubt that both us and the Israelis are backing dissident groups within Iran.  I hope it is successful.  

In the next few days we should have an idea of which way the wind is blowing.  

If Trump can pull this off it may be his legacy.  There are worse things to be remembered for.

NOTABLE DEATH ... NEIL SEDAKA

By Bob Walsh

 

In this April 30, 2012 file photo, singer and children's book author Neil Sedaka poses for a portrait in New York.


 
Neil Sedaka moved on to whatever comes next yesterday at the age of 86.  I thought his song Calendar Girl was absolutely one of the great pop songs of the 1960s.  He was a very talented guy.   
 
EDITOR'S NOTE: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" was also one of his great hits.

ASSHOLE OUT ON BOND MURDERS TWO MISSOURI COPS

By Bob Walsh

 

 Deputy Gabriel Ramirez, Richard Bird , Deputy Michael Hislope

Deputy Gabriel Ramirez, suspect Richard Bird , Deputy Michael Hislope.
 
 
Richard Dean Bird was, by any reasonable definition, a violent asshole.  Back in 2014 he was charged with attempted first degree murder for shooting at deputies who responded to a theft in progress at a construction sight.  He copped a plea.

On February 18 of this year he was in court in Stone County, Missouri, for thievery and tampering with evidence.  He was released on $50,000 bond.  In Missouri bond is supposed to be set for both public safety and likely court appearance.

On February 23 Bird shot and killed Christian County Sheriff's Deputy Gabriel Ramirez during a traffic stop.  He was tracked down to Stone County where he engaged the deputies with gunfire.  Bird killed Deputy Michael Hislope and wounded a deputy from Webster County and a deputy from Christian County.    Bird had a lengthy history of violence including shooting at cops.

Bird did not survived the encounter.

Friday, February 27, 2026

MISMANAGEMENT OF MINNEAPOLIS HAS RESULTED IN A RIFT BETWEEN THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION AND STATE REPUBLICANS

Republican Governor tells Kristi Noem GET OUT OF MY STATE as Trump insiders warn growing mutiny 'is a huge problem'

 

By Phillip Nieo 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 27, 2026

 

 

Kelly Ayotte

New Hampshire governor Kelly Ayotte

 

Donald Trump's immigration crackdown is fracturing his own party, with Republican governors openly defying the White House over detention expansion as political fallout from the carnage in Minneapolis threatens to cost him at the midterms.

Kristi Noem was rebuffed this week when she tried to build a new illegal migrant camp in New Hampshire by the state's Republican Governor, Kelly Ayotte. 

Merrimack residents were outraged when it emerged that the Homeland Security Secretary planned to use their town to expand Trump's mass deportation effort.

Ayotte, a moderate Republican governing a blue state, informed Noem that she would not assist in the construction of the facility, according to Politico.

Noem faced further pushback in Mississippi when the state's senior GOP senator, Roger Wicker, successfully derailed her plans for a proposed site earlier in February. 

'It's a huge problem,' a Trump administration official told Politico. 'The mismanagement of Minneapolis lost us the narrative, and the dominos are falling as a result.'

The rift between the Trump administration and state Republicans comes amid mounting political backlash against the Minneapolis crackdown, where two Americans were shot dead by immigration agents.

An ICE spokesman attempted to downplay Noem's failure to build new immigration detention facilities by claiming the secretary had a 'great discussion' with Ayotte last week. The representative added that Noem plans to 'carry out the largest deportation effort in American history' and 'keep Americans safe.'

 

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem participates in Iowa's Roast and Ride in Des Moines, Iowa, in October

The rift between the Trump administration and state Republicans comes amid mounting political fallout from the Minneapolis crackdown

The rift between the Trump administration and state Republicans comes amid mounting political fallout from the Minneapolis crackdown

Noem and other top White House officials denounced Americans fatally shot by immigration agents in Minneapolis

Noem and other top White House officials denounced Americans fatally shot by immigration agents in Minneapolis 

Some in the GOP are wary that voters could punish them at the polls if they appear too closely aligned with the White House on immigration

Some in the GOP are wary that voters could punish them at the polls if they appear too closely aligned with the White House on immigration

 

Republican hesitation to back Trump's mass deportation agenda also comes as the midterm elections approach.

Republicans hold a slim majority in both the House and the Senate, with recent polling suggesting Democrats are poised to flip one or both chambers. 

If the GOP suffers heavy losses in November, Trump would enter the final two years of his term as a lame-duck president.

Some in the GOP are wary that voters could punish them at the polls if they appear too closely aligned with the White House on immigration.

Alex Pretti, an ICU nurse, and Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother, were killed by Border Patrol and ICE agents in January. 

Noem and other top White House officials, including Stephen Miller, labeled the dead Americans 'domestic terrorists.' 

The President, however, was displeased with the wave of negative press the White House faced following Pretti's death.

Trump then tapped Noem's chief rival, border czar Tom Homan, to take control of the Minneapolis crackdown. 

 

Ayotte, a moderate Republican governing a blue state, informed Noem that she would not assist in the construction of a immigration detention facility

Ayotte, a moderate Republican governing a blue state, informed Noem that she would not assist in the construction of a immigration detention facility

Noem holds an assault rifle in an unorthodox fashion during a photo op with ICE agents last year

Noem holds an assault rifle in an unorthodox fashion during a photo op with ICE agents last year 

 

After brokering a deal with local and state leaders, Homan initiated a drawdown of immigration enforcement operations in the Twin Cities earlier this month.

Trump returned to the White House claiming a clear electoral mandate from voters after campaigning heavily on a promise of mass deportations.

Noem is facing mounting scrutiny after she accused her own DHS employees of installing software on her phone and laptop to spy on her. 

The DHS chief on Thursday was interviewed by conservative podcaster Patrick Bet-David, claiming: '[Elon Musk] helped me identify that some of my own employees in my department had downloaded software on my phone and my laptop to spy on me, to record our meetings.'

Noem did not provide any evidence to substantiate her claims.

SHE'S BUSY SHACKING UP WITH COREY

Kristi Noem faces more scrutiny as she's accused of causing major national security risk by ignoring TSA flaw at airports

 

By Stephen M. Lepore 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 27, 2026

 

 On the left, this political cartoon depicts a person in a frog costume holding a sign that reads, “Frogs against facism.” A caricature of Kristi Noem is at right. She holds an automatic rifle and is dressed in a cowboy hat, short shorts, military vest, and cowboy boots. She has large red lips and earrings. She says, “By the way, your inflatable frog costume is ridiculous!”

 
Kristi Noem has been accused of ignoring an internal watchdog's report that her changes to airport security are creating 'significant' national security risks. 

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) inspector general Joseph Cuffari's report referred to Noem's decision last summer to get rid of requirements forcing passengers to take off their shoes when going through screenings. 

In November, Cuffari filed a classified report claiming that TSA scanners are unable to scan shoes - meaning that Noem's new rule had created newfound airport security risks, The Wall Street Journal reported. 

DHS officials allegedly blocked the watchdog's filing - which expanded on problems Cuffari claimed he made Noem aware of this past August - from being released to the public and gave it a higher level of classification. 

Homeland security officials told WSJ that Noem's treatment of the report is typical of her attitude toward national security concerns.

Noem, who has been nicknamed 'ICE Barbie,' was also accused by department-wide officials of being more concerned with her public image and standing with Donald Trump than DHS's actual work. 

A spokesperson for DHS told The Daily Mail that they had appropriately responded to the report and disputed Cuffari's claims. 

They also argued that many of his recommendations had already been put into practice.


Screenshot2026-02-13at12.42.46PM.png

Kristi Noem faces another wave of controversy after it was revealed she's ignored an internal watchdog who says her changes to airport security are creating 'significant' risks

The report refers to Noem getting rid of requirements forcing passengers to take off their shoes when going through screenings

The report refers to Noem getting rid of requirements forcing passengers to take off their shoes when going through screenings

 

As far as getting rid of the policy of taking your shoes off, DHS claimed it had been tested and risk assessed over a thousand times, dating back to the Biden administration. 

Cuffari told Congress in a letter, dated February 17, that DHS and TSA have not responded to any request to deal with the problem, breaking the law by not addressing his recommendations within three months. 

He wrote that he made 'four recommendations for corrective action' that TSA has yet to engage with. A department spokesperson disputed that. 

Many White House officials are allegedly unaware of the report. 

Trump's press secretary Karoline Leavitt told the Daily Mail in response to the allegations: 'President Trump and Secretary Noem have ensured the most secure border in our Nation’s history and our homeland is undoubtedly safer today than it was when the President took office last year. 

'The President continues to have full confidence in the Secretary.' 

The Daily Mail has reached out to DHS for further comment. 

After more than two decades of forcing travelers to remove their shoes in airport security lines, the shoe removal requirement was suddenly pulled effective immediately last July.

According to an internal memo at the time, the policy shift appeared to be tied to recent improvements in screening technology and an updated assessment of current security threats. 

Travelers enrolled in TSA PreCheck have long enjoyed the privilege of keeping their shoes on but now that same courtesy is being extended to the general public.

 

DHS inspector general Joseph Cuffari (pictured) referred to Noem getting rid of requirements forcing passengers to take off their shoes when going through screenings

DHS inspector general Joseph Cuffari (pictured) referred to Noem getting rid of requirements forcing passengers to take off their shoes when going through screenings

The policy shift appeared to be tied to recent improvements in screening technology and an updated assessment of current security threats

The policy shift appeared to be tied to recent improvements in screening technology and an updated assessment of current security threats 

 

To bypass the shoe rule, passengers must hold a federally approved REAL ID or passport to board a domestic flight, with a standard driver's license no longer cutting it. 

Travelers requiring special security procedures may still be asked to remove their footwear under the new requirements.

The original rule was introduced in the wake of the 2001 incident involving Richard Reid, infamously known as the 'Shoe Bomber,' who attempted to detonate explosives hidden in his sneakers during a transatlantic flight. 

Since then, passengers have been required to walk through security checkpoints barefoot or in socks unless they were PreCheck members, under 12, or over 75 years old.

Noem has been as under fire as any cabinet secretary under the second Trump administration, especially following the two ICE-involved shootings in Minnesota in January.

Last week, it was reported that Noem has developed a secret plan to quit the Trump administration to run for the Senate as voters begin turning on the president's mass deportation agenda. 

Noem and her rumored lover Corey Lewandowski commissioned a poll to evaluate her approval rating with the public, a source told the Daily Mail.  

Around this time, however, voters in South Dakota were asked whom they would vote for in a matchup between herself and the state's Republican Sen. Mike Rounds, according to the Atlantic. 

 

Kristi Noem and Corey Lewandowski are allegedly having an affair

Noem and her rumored lover Corey Lewandowski commissioned a poll to evaluate her approval rating with the public, a source told the Daily Mail last week

Last week, it was reported that Noem has developed a secret plan to quit the Trump administration for a return to the Senate as voters begin turning on the president's mass deportation agenda

Last week, it was reported that Noem has developed a secret plan to quit the Trump administration to run for the Senate as voters begin turning on the president's mass deportation agenda

 

Noem previously served two terms as South Dakota's governor before joining Trump's cabinet. 

The possibility of Noem running to electoral office in the state has prompted clandestine discussions among advisers close to Trump about waiting to shake up Homeland Security leadership until after next month's filing deadline, according to the Atlantic.

Noem’s potential departure from Homeland Security would make her the first cabinet secretary to exit the Trump administration since the start of his second term.

Her tenure at DHS has been marred by allegations of corruption and bitter infighting within the department.

Widespread reports paint a culture of fear among the rank-and-file in Homeland Security as Noem and Lewandowski openly began firing and demoting officials not viewed as loyal to her for the past year. 

The department has splintered into two camps: those loyal to Noem and a bloc of career law enforcement officials aligned with Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, multiple DHS insiders have revealed. 

Homan’s decades-long career in immigration enforcement has earned him credibility among law enforcement officials frustrated with Noem and Lewandowski’s leadership.

As pressure grows for Noem to meet Trump's deportation goals, approximately 80 percent of career leadership at ICE has been fired or demoted by Noem. 

After the death of Pretti, Trump sidelined Noem by placing Homan in charge of the immigration crackdown in Minneapolis. 

THE CLOCK IS TICKING ... HOW MUCH WILL ISRAEL SUFFER FROM A US ATTACK ON IRAN?

Fire everything: Iran's 'doomsday order'

Israel's security establishment is examining the possibility that Tehran is preparing to activate the entire "Axis of Evil" against Israel, but officials assess that under current conditions this does not constitute an existential threat.

 

By Amit Segal  

 

Israel Hayom

Feb 26, 2026

 

 


 
Will Khamenei pull a Hitler? 
 
Hitler called it the "Nero Decree." In March 1945, when the Allies were already on German soil advancing toward Berlin, he signed an order to burn all bridges, destroy all local industry and leave behind scorched earth.

A fierce debate is taking place in the upper floors of the Kirya and the lower levels of the "Bunker." It concerns the possible existence of a parallel Iranian directive, three words long: "The Doomsday Order." If such an order exists, it would not deal with destroying Iranian infrastructure but rather with issuing a "go" command to the entire Axis of Resistance—Hezbollah, the Houthis, Hamas and the militias—to fire everything they have.

If such an order exists, its meaning is no longer existential from Israel's perspective: Hamas has been dismantled as an army, Hezbollah has been cut down by 90%, and Syria no longer takes instructions from Tehran. But it would still be a major headache for the military, a serious challenge for Israel's defense systems and a prelude to a broad military operation in Lebanon.

Supporters of this view argue this is the way of fundamentalists—they do not know how to compromise and, from their perspective, will allow the entire region to go up in flames. Opponents believe there is no evidence for this and, in any case, question what exactly a button pressed in Tehran would even activate.

But Israel's actions over the past week seem to be driven—perhaps as a result of the lessons of October 7—by the assumption that it will happen. That is the reason for the escalating attacks on Hezbollah strongholds, with emphasis on its rocket array. It is also the reason for the growing concern and attention devoted to the Houthi threat.

How quickly we have forgotten the nightly rush of millions to shelters because of a single missile. The concern about the fanatics from Yemen goes far beyond that nuisance, whose main damage so far has been the prolonged destruction of the tourism industry. The Houthi army includes nearly 1 million fighters, and its plans include raids into Israeli territory. It is not an immediate threat, of course, and the distance is great, but we have already learned that seemingly far-fetched plans—in this case, an invasion via Jordan—cannot simply be dismissed.

The Gadi–Naftali showdown

A major question has accompanied party leaders in recent months: Why is Netanyahu insisting on passing a deeply unpopular draft law for a few months at most? The answer, always delivered in a mysterious tone, is "security matters." As far as is known, this concerns not only a possible war with Iran but another front as well. Another invasion of Gaza? A ground operation to renew the security zone in Lebanon? Perhaps an attack on the Houthis? There is no shortage of possibilities.

Amid the chaos reigning in the opposition, it is easy to miss the main struggle taking place these days. It is Bennett versus Eisenkot; everyone else is background noise and distraction.

The math is simple: Yair Golan is boxed into the left; Liberman has a glass ceiling; Lapid is still deep in his rebranding campaign. The question of who leads the bloc lies between Bennett and Eisenkot. The gap between them has narrowed recently and stood in polls last week at 7-9 seats—still significant, but less so.

In Bennett's party they always ask in polls, "How much Gadi?" and in Yashar they immediately ask, "How much Naftali?" The reason is those 10 or so mandates—hundreds of thousands of voters—who for seven years have given their vote to the main challenger to Netanyahu. Today they are here, tomorrow elsewhere, without commitment or sentiment. Whoever leads, even by one seat, will receive them all. Right now they are with Bennett; a year ago they were with Benny Gantz. Where will they be on Election Day?

The important news in the bloc, therefore, is the one never officially announced: Gadi Eisenkot recently decided to run for prime minister. That is why he did not rush to unite with Bennett even though he was promised half the kingdom, literally. That is why Bennett pushed so hard for a joint run in recent months until he temporarily gave up. No negotiations have taken place between the sides for weeks, but they will certainly resume under pressure from bloc voters and strategic advisers, and the question is who will arrive there in the lead.

Eisenkot's strength lies in his exceptionally high favorability ratings, his relative newness and his organic connection to the camp. Bennett's strength lies in more than a year of leading in the polls, experience as prime minister and the ability to draw votes from the right. That is why he got tangled in Efrat with remarks about partnership with Smotrich and not ruling out Ben-Gvir. It was an unnecessary misstep that recalled the joke about the beggar who said that if he were Rothschild, he would be richer than Rothschild because he would continue begging. The attempt to gather a handful of votes from beyond the Green Line could cost Bennett valuable mandates on the other side.

Bitan's revenge

Knesset member No. 28 of Likud in the 1990s was one of the factors in Netanyahu's 1999 defeat to Ehud Barak. Could MK David Bitan in the 2020s do something similar?

The defeat on the VAT issue inflicted on Netanyahu and Smotrich was delivered by an eclectic coalition. It included socialist Knesset members (of which Likud has many); the hostility of ministers Barkat and Dichter toward the finance minister; Yuli Edelstein's revenge on his party (probably soon to be former), which removed him from chairing the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee; and perhaps, though I may suspect unfairly, an ethnic component—Mizrahi Likud MKs versus the Ashkenazi faction of Religious Zionism.

The group was led by a very sharp and vengeful political mind: David Bitan. A decade ago he was Netanyahu's all-powerful coalition chairman. Years passed; his contemporaries became senior ministers, even those younger than him. His indictment derailed his career, a black cat crossed between him and the prime minister, and in the last primaries the Prime Minister's Office nearly managed to push him off the list. Surprisingly, despite his complex legal situation and health condition, Bitan is strengthening. So much so that after the recent Likud convention elections, the chairman's office is trying to invalidate the results. Earlier he mobilized as chair of the Economics Committee against Shlomo Karhi's communications reform. Suddenly, the man who led the fight against opening the public broadcaster became the channels' main supporter. From his office this week he managed the campaign to topple Smotrich's initiative. Had he wished, he could already have brought down the draft law and triggered early elections. But he did not. It is therefore too early to eulogize Netanyahu's absolute control over his faction. His regime in Likud is not dictatorial but authoritarian: high control, but not absolute.

The ultra-Orthodox parties are watching developments in Likud with concern, wondering whether they will go all the way only to suffer defeat in the plenum. They are worried but have no choice. Their overarching goal is to reach elections from the government table, with the sword of sanctions removed, even temporarily, from the necks of yeshiva students. It is still unclear how much time they have; unusually, the Knesset has not yet set the date for the Passover recess.

A prisoner cannot free himself

Finally, a historic announcement by Agudat Yisrael in favor of military enlistment: "After all demands to preserve religion in functioning camps have been guaranteed—sanctity of the Sabbath, kosher food and the creation of a religious atmosphere through special units for ultra-Orthodox youth—the Central Committee of Agudat Yisrael calls upon every individual to report for service to the nation, in light of the increasingly grave dangers posed day by day by enemies who have said, 'Come, let us destroy them.'"

How unfortunate that it is indeed historic—that is, from long ago, during the War of Independence.

The quote appears in Shmuel Rosner's new book, "On the Haredim," which addresses the question of relations between Israel and ultra-Orthodox society. He does not place blame on the Haredim but on the state. "In the decision to exempt Torah scholars from service, the IDF effectively became the one recruiting young men to yeshivot, a military police ensuring that Haredim remain in the study hall," he observes.

He then wonders what would happen if the Amish community grew at breakneck speed, entered politics and tried to impose rules on other Americans—for example, removing all cars from the roads and transferring the entire population to horse-drawn carriages.

The Haredim are not asking to remove cars from the roads on Shabbat, but in practice that is happening more and more in growing ultra-Orthodox enclaves.

What will the state look like when one-third of its citizens are Haredi? And who will pay for the roads and public transportation? The average non-Haredi Jew, the book claims, currently pays about 3,500 shekels a month to enable a nonworking Haredi Jew to live with dignity. How much will that be in a few years?

The main argument against this statistic is that everywhere in the world the rich fund the poor. The difference, Rosner explains, is that only in Israel is poverty the result of choice—both of the Haredim and of the legislator: "The state supports the poor knowing they will remain in the cycle of poverty, not in order for them to exit it."

The past two years since the war have sharpened mainly the question of military service, as the public and the IDF bang their heads against the ultra-Orthodox wall trying to break it—so far without much success and with growing concern of a concussion. But the main story, evident between the lines, is the economy.

The Zionist hope is that after enlistment will come integration, and after that education and employment. That is a false hope because someone who arrives at age 25 with a wife and two children will struggle greatly to complete the necessary education and find a job that will raise them beyond check-to-check living.

The world is full of examples of countries that found themselves on the brink before abolishing outdated arrangements. Margaret Thatcher dismantled Britain's loss-making coal mines, creating a massive rupture whose cultural echoes are still felt today, and Lyndon Johnson dismantled racial segregation in America. By contrast, there has never been a sector like the Haredim, whose political and demographic power is growing rather than shrinking.

The polls granting the ultra-Orthodox parties 16 seats are a baseless illusion in a world where every day there are 1,000 new ultra-Orthodox voters for United Torah Judaism and another 500 for Shas.

There is a phrase in Israel: A prisoner cannot free himself from prison. It may be that only the ultra-Orthodox prisoner can open this cell, not the Zionist guard.

KHAMENEI'S IRON GRIP OVER THE REGIME

Khamenei remains in control despite isolation, new report says

“If you want to change the system, you have to kill Khamenei and the bayt before you do anything else,” Saeid Golkar told JNS.

 

By Andrew Bernard 

 

Israel Today

Feb 27, 2026

 

 

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei visits the exhibition of achievements of the IRGC Aerospace Force in Tehran, Nov. 19, 2023. Credit: khamenei.ir via Wikimedia Commons.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei 
 

As the Trump administration considers renewed military strikes against Iran, one question facing policymakers is who is calling the shots in Tehran.

In January, Iran International, a UK-based opposition outlet, reported that Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has moved into an underground bunker amid security fears.

The New York Times reported on Sunday that day-to-day control in Iran has largely passed to Ali Larijani, the country’s most senior defense official, as secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.

But a new report from United Against Nuclear Iran argues that despite Khamenei’s physical isolation, he continues to be the primary source of authority in the Islamic Republic through his control of the bayt-e rahbari, his 4,000-man private office that serves as a state within the state.

One of the report’s authors, Saeid Golkar, an associate professor at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga and a senior adviser at UANI, told JNS that fatally weakening the Islamic Republic would likely require striking at both Khamenei and his inner cadre in the bayt.

“Imagine you are dealing with an onion,” Golkar said. “If you want to peel it gradually, it becomes very difficult. You start to cry. But if you smash the center of it, then you tear out the onion much more easily.”

The report describes Khamenei, his family and his personal office as the “nerve center” of the Iranian regime.

They not only call the shots on questions like the Iranian leader’s own succession, selecting candidates for president and ultimate control of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, but also control 60% to 65% of Iran’s economy through institutions like the quasi-public bonyad religious trusts that answer directly to Khamenei and employ millions of Iranians.

‘Iron grip over the regime’

Golkar told JNS that this institutional network means that limited strikes from the bottom up on IRGC commanders, like the ones that the United States and Israel carried out last June, or a top-down single strike on Khamenei, are unlikely to produce regime change.

“You have to target about 1,000 people,” Golkar told JNS. “Then the system will collapse.”

“Having said that, killing Khamenei is the most important element,” he said. “There are a lot of institutions in Iran, but all of these institutions depend on one person. They were created around that person.”

In that sense, he said, Iran was unlike Venezuela, where the US military operation to arrest Nicolás Maduro seems to have produced positive results in allowing Washington to reach agreements with Maduro’s successor.

“If you want to kill Khamenei—just Khamenei, without touching the bayt or without killing his son or that core—then this bayt, this office that is run by his son, would very easily be able to manipulate the Assembly of Experts and with the support of the IRGC pick another leader,” Golkar told JNS.

Khamenei has four sons. His second-oldest son, Mojtaba, is “considered the most politically influential” and “often described as his father’s potential successor,” according to the report.

“The system will continue. Weaker, but will continue,” Golkar said. “Unfortunately, there is no possibility that this succession will lead to the emergence of so-called ‘moderate clergy’ as the supreme leader.”

UANI’s report concludes that as long as Khamenei and his inner circle remain in power, “meaningful political transformation inside Iran is unlikely.”

“For any meaningful change to occur in the Islamic Republic, including regime change, the bayt and its extensive apparatus must be significantly weakened through a combination of sanctions, cyber operations and military measures,” the report says. “Until this takes place, the supreme leader’s iron grip over the regime will endure, regardless of Khamenei’s disappearances.”

“He can stay in a bunker for as long as he wants, and the system works through the bayt,” Golkar told JNS. “Israel tried to peel from the outside. You have to go directly. If you want to change the system, you have to kill Khamenei and the bayt before you do anything else.”

THE POLITE SMILES CONCEAL A LOOMING HEAD-ON CLASH

US-Iran talks drift toward collision course

Negotiations framed as diplomacy increasingly resemble preparations for confrontation. 

 

By Fiamma Nirenstein
 
JNS
Feb 26, 2026
 
 
 Oman's Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi meets with US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and US President Donald Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner ahead of the indirect US-Iran talks, in Geneva, Switzerland, February 17, 2026.
Oman's Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi meets with U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, as part of the ongoing Iranian-American negotiations, in Geneva, Feb. 26, 2026.
 

The latest round of negotiations over Iran’s nuclear ambitions is being conducted in polite tones and picturesque settings—but beneath the surface, the atmosphere is thick with distrust. The smiling photographs mask a reality far closer to confrontation than compromise.

A meeting held at the waterside residence of Oman’s consul, following indirect U.S.-Iran talks in Geneva, involving President Donald Trump’s envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, was described as a diplomatic consultation. In truth, these are murky negotiations whose outcome seems largely predetermined.

Iran proposes a temporary pause: three to five years of limits, minimal enrichment at 1.5%, and supervised storage of uranium that is otherwise enriched dangerously close to weapons-grade. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei signals flexibility if talks remain confined to the nuclear file.

Washington is unconvinced. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance have stated plainly that Iran has already violated past commitments and appears ready to do so again. The American demand is therefore uncompromising: dismantle Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan and accept permanent zero enrichment.

Iranian optimism, broadcast outwardly, contrasts sharply with reports—even from opposition channel Iran International—describing harsh exchanges. The polite smiles conceal a looming head-on clash.

Trump himself has publicly committed never to allow Iran to obtain nuclear weapons. Any agreement that leaves ambiguity risks appearing naïve. And ambiguity is precisely what Tehran offers—time-limited concessions that preserve the regime’s long-term capabilities.

Beyond the nuclear question lie two additional dangers: ballistic missiles and proxy warfare. Iran maintains a vast missile arsenal capable of striking not only Israel but Europe, and it directs armed organizations across the Middle East. This is why Washington defines Iran not merely as a rival but as a strategic threat to the West itself.

Meanwhile, the military backdrop grows heavier: aircraft carriers, advanced fighter jets and the concentration of force in the region. According to an analysis cited by Politico, the possibility that Israel could be drawn into opening the confrontation is openly contemplated.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently urged Israelis to spend Purim at home with their families—a remark that sounded less festive than protective. In a country accustomed to sirens, such advice carries meaning.

The moral imperative created by the tens of thousands murdered in cold blood by the regime transcends national caution and overrides internal opposition.

The negotiations, therefore, resemble not a bridge but a countdown. For decades, Iran has combined ideological hostility with strategic deception. The West hopes for reassurance; Tehran offers postponement.

Between postponement and prevention lies the narrowing space where history often decides.

WHAT'S NEXT - ARTILLERY?

West Virginia could sell its residents machine guns under new bill 

 

Thursday, February 26, 2026

THE CIA MUST HAVE MADE HITLER AND HIMMLER PROUD

Declassified CIA memo reveals plan to turn citizens into unwitting assassins

 

By Chris Melore

 

Daily Mail

Feb 26, 2026

 

 

Armed man with gun in hand 

Declassified CIA files discussed drugging a foreign worker as part of a mind control plot to assassinate a high-ranking foreign official or a US politician 

 

A secret CIA program allegedly experimented with a plan to brainwash individuals and use them as unwitting assassins against America's own leaders. 

According to declassified documents quietly added to the agency's public records in 1999, Project Artichoke was a top-secret mind control plan conducted from 1951 to 1956, which focused on influencing human behavior and psychological manipulation.

In January 1954, the CIA issued a classified report revealing that the US intelligence community had selected a target for the Artichoke experiments and was plotting to turn this foreign official into an assassin without their knowledge.

While the memo noted the target as a high-ranking politician in the unknown country, it also added that this technique could also be used against American officials 'if necessary.'

The file, from a Senior Representative whose name was redacted, stated that agents working on the Artichoke team had visited this country between January 8 and January 15 to answer one sinister question: 'Can an individual of [REDACTED] descent be made to perform an act of attempted assassination involuntarily under the influence of ARTICHOKE?'

A handwritten footnote suggested the plan was to drug the would-be assassin 'through the medium of an alcoholic cocktail at a social party.'

The scheme, however, remained hidden until 1979, when a citizens’ group obtained the documents through the Freedom of Information Act. 

Artichoke served as a precursor to the CIA's MKUltra program, which later broadened mind-altering experiments on a larger scale. Many files were destroyed in the 1970s, leaving the full extent of the research and how far it progressed unknown.

 

 

Project Artichoke revealed detailed plans to target a member of an unnamed foreign government with mind-altering drugs in order to kill their political leaders

Project Artichoke revealed detailed plans to target a member of an unnamed foreign government with mind-altering drugs in order to kill their political leaders

 

Despite intelligence officials redacting the names of government officials and the target of the mind control operation, the memo still provided a detailed picture of the CIA's assassination plot.

The individual agents selected were said to be around 35 years old, well-educated, fluent English speakers, and well-connected in both social and political circles in the unnamed foreign government.

The CIA operatives had already spied on the unwitting assassin, learning they were a heavy drinker, which helped the agency hatch a plan to spike their beverages to take over their mind, according to the memo.

CIA officials in 1954 even knew that the target had recently quit or been fired from a different job and was now working directly with that country's government.

Since the agency thought they would have limited chances to brainwash this person, the memo stated that agents would need to target 'a single social meeting' and put the Artichoke drug in their drink at that party.

However, the intelligence community wasn't just theorizing about ways to target leaders of other countries, as the memo suggested this same brainwashed killer could be used against 'a prominent [REDACTED] politician or if necessary, against an American official.'

Multiple declassified reports found in the CIA's public database have revealed the use of mind-controlling drug experiments, which allegedly targeted US citizens during the Cold War.

The four-page document claimed that this plot was only 'simulated,' suggesting it was never carried out. 

 

Although the memo claimed Project Artichoke only simulated this experiment, it mentioned 'future applications' of the mind control program, which was later seen in the CIA's MKUltra

Although the memo claimed Project Artichoke only simulated this experiment, it mentioned 'future applications' of the mind control program, which was later seen in the CIA's MKUltra

 

However, recently disclosed government documents have only fueled conspiracy theorists convinced that the CIA played a role in high-profile assassinations worldwide, including the murder of President John F Kennedy, just nine years after the memo on Project Artichoke was written.

While the thousands of pages in the JFK files released in 2025 did not prove this, they did show that one of the slain president's top advisers called for the CIA to be disbanded in 1961, referring to it as a 'state within a state.'

In November, Congressman Tim Burchett of Tennessee claimed that mind control programs were still in use today and were still transforming American citizens into potential assassins.

He claimed, without evidence, that failed presidential assassin Thomas Crooks was psychologically manipulated online using techniques reminiscent of MKUltra. 

According to the congressman, Crooks was allegedly 'programmed' to act as a disposable patsy, sending a warning that Trump and his supporters were targets of the so-called 'deep state' - a near identical description as JFK's advisor Arthur Schlesinger in 1961.

'They programmed this kid. You got a kid who's got access to guns or has some basic knowledge of firearms, he was programmed,' Burchett claimed to conservative influencer Benny Johnson on November 14, 2025.

Burchett's description of Crooks as a disposable patsy of the US intelligence community was eerily similar to Project Artichoke's thoughts on their target in 1954.

'After the act of attempted assassination was performed, it was assumed that the SUBJECT would be taken into custody by the [REDACTED] Government and thereby "disposed of,"' the document explained.

MAMDANI IS UPSET BECAUSE ONE OF THE 'KIDS THROWING SNOWBALLS' IS BUSTED

NYPD ignores woke mayor Zohran Mamdani by arresting man who hurled snowballs at cops amid mass 'assault' which left two officers in the emergency room

 

By Emma Richter, Natasha Anderson and Kelly Garino 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 26, 2026

 

 

Gusmane Coulibaly, 27, was arrested on Thursday morning for allegedly hurling snow and ice at NYPD officers on Monday afternoon

Gusmane Coulibaly, 27, was arrested on Thursday morning for allegedly hurling snow and ice at NYPD officers on Monday afternoon

 

A suspect has been arrested for allegedly hurling icy snowballs at New York City police officers, after Mayor Zohran Mamdani tried to downplay the severity of the incident that left two cops in the hospital. 

Gusmane Coulibaly, 27, was taken into custody on Thursday morning for allegedly assaulting NYPD officers on Monday afternoon in Manhattan's Washington Square Park. 

This is not Coulibaly's first run-in with the law, as he was 'previously arrested less than three weeks ago for an attempted robbery in the transit system,' the NYPD said. 

His arrest comes after Mamdani took to social media earlier this week, calling the agitators 'kids' while appearing to shrug off the incident altogether. 

When contacted by the Daily Mail about the arrest on Thursday, Mamdani doubled down and disagreed with the department charging Coulibaly. 

'As the mayor has said, police officers deserve to be treated with respect. The videos he saw showed a snowball fight that got out of hand,' the mayor's spokesperson, Dora Pekec, said. 

'He does not believe this situation rises to the level of criminal charges.' 

Footage of the snowball fight quickly spread online, showing a crowd pounding freezing snow and ice at officers following the historic blizzard that rocked the East Coast. 

 

NYPD officers in a snowy park are pelted with snowballs while responding to a crowd.NYPD cops were thrashed with freezing snow and ice at Washington Square Park. Two of them were left in the hospital with injuries

Coulibaly seen being perp-walked following his arrest on Thursday

Coulibaly seen being perp-walked following his arrest on Thursday 

 

The clip showed a group shouting and pelting cops with snowballs as they made their way down snow and ice-covered walkways.

Some of the agitators hurled profanities, shouting expletives like 'f*** you, b***h' as police tried to push through the crowd.

Two officers had to be taken to an emergency room after being struck in the face, head and neck, the department said. 

They are in stable condition, the NYPD told the Daily Mail. It is unclear if they are still in the hospital. 

After hearing about the incident, Mamdani shared a brief statement that left many outraged over his apparent disregard for the safety of officers in his city.

’I've seen the videos of kids throwing snowballs at NYPD officers in Washington Square Park,' the mayor said. 

'Officers, like all city workers, have been out in a historic blizzard, keeping New Yorkers safe and cars moving. Treat them with respect. If anyone’s catching a snowball, it’s me.' 

On Tuesday, Mamdani held a press conference with the Office of Emergency Management to discuss Manhattan's historic blizzard and defend his response to the snowball clash that sparked mounting criticism.

 

 New York Mayor Mamdani Retains Jessica Tisch as Police Commissioner

Police commissioner Jessica Tisch called the snowball attack on cops as 'criminal' and said that NYPD detectives are investigating the attack

When contacted by the Daily Mail about the recent arrest, Mamdani (pictured Wednesday) doubled down and disagreed with officer's charging Coulibaly

When contacted by the Daily Mail about the recent arrest, Mamdani (pictured Wednesday) doubled down and disagreed with officer's charging Coulibaly

After hearing about the incident, Mamdani shared a brief statement that left many outraged over his apparent disregard for the safety of officers in his city

After hearing about the incident, Mamdani shared a brief statement that left many outraged over his apparent disregard for the safety of officers in his city

 

'I can just tell you from the video I saw, it looked like kids at a snowball fight,' Mamdani said, doubling down again. 

However, he emphasized that city workers have been essential in keeping New Yorkers safe during this record-breaking winter and deserve respect for their efforts.

'They have been keeping New Yorkers safe. And they have also been at the heart of our efforts of digging New Yorkers' cars out of these kinds of conditions and ensuring that our ambulances, our MTA buses, can keep functioning,' the mayor said.

While Mamdani appeared easygoing about the ordeal, others were fed up and have since demanded a criminal investigation. 

PBA President Patrick Hendry told Fox 5 News that Mamdani's response was 'a complete failure of leadership.'

'This was not just a "snowball fight." This was an assault - by adults throwing chunks of ice and rocks - that landed two police officers in the hospital with head and face injuries,' Hendry said.

'By ignoring their injuries and dismissing the incident, the mayor has sent a disgraceful message to every police officer who serves this city,' he added.

Hendry also warned that the mayor’s reaction could send a dangerous message to anyone thinking about targeting a police officer in the future. 

 

A group of people are seen pelting snow at an NYPD cruiser on Monday

A group of people are seen pelting snow at an NYPD cruiser on Monday 

More people are seen appearing to hide behind a makeshift shield while others throw snow

More people are seen appearing to hide behind a makeshift shield while others throw snow 

 

'Unacceptable and outrageous - this is the environment that NYC police officers are up against. Our police officers are being treated for their injuries, but the case CANNOT end there,' the union, NYC Police Benevolent Association (PBA) wrote. 

'All of our city leaders must speak up to condemn this despicable attack,' they added.

Jessica Tisch, the NYPD Police Commissioner, called the agitators' behavior 'disgraceful' and 'criminal.' 

'The NYPD is aware of certain videos taken earlier today in Washington Square Park showing individuals attacking cops,' Tisch said right after. 

'I want to be very clear: The behavior depicted is disgraceful, and it is criminal. Our detectives are investigating this matter.'

The NYPD initially released two images of potential suspects. The department has not announced any further arrests.