02 U.S. Politics

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The BRICS bloc of developing nations at their summit in Brazil on Sunday condemned the increase of tariffs and attacks on Iran, but refrained from naming US President Donald Trump.

The group’s declaration, which also took aim at Israeli military actions in the Middle East, spared its founding member Russia from criticism and mentioned war-torn Ukraine only once.

The bloc issued a declaration in which they raised “serious concerns” about the rise of tariffs which it said were “inconsistent with WTO (World Trade Organisation) rules.” In an indirect swipe at the US, they said those restrictions ”threaten to reduce global trade, disrupt global supply chains and introduce uncertainty.”

Lula also criticised NATO’s decision to hike defence spending up to 5% of member states’ GDP. He said it was “always easier to invest in war than peace.”

The declaration also criticised the attacks on Iran without mentioning the US or Israel, the two nations who conducted them.

BRICS leaders expressed “grave concern” for the humanitarian situation in Gaza, called for the release of all hostages, a return to the negotiating table and reaffirmed their commitment to the two-state solution.

The group’s 31-page declaration mentions Ukraine just once, while condemning “in the strongest terms” recent Ukrainian attacks on Russia.

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Leading researchers in Denmark are sounding the alarm after uncovering a disturbing link between Covid mRNA “vaccines” and surging cases of disabling neuropathy.

A bombshell new study led by Danish scientists has reignited concerns that the mRNA injections are responsible for soaring reports of Small Fiber Neuropathy (SFN), a serious neurological condition affecting the nerves.

The peer-reviewed case series was led by Dr. Giulia Carolina Primicerio at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen.

The results of the study were published in the Journal of the Neurological Sciences (Volume 474).

Dr. Primicerio and the team of researchers found compelling clinical evidence linking mRNA and viral vector Covid vaccines to new-onset nerve damage.

 

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Brazil is playing host to a summit of the BRICS bloc of developing economies Sunday and Monday during which pressing topics like Israel’s attack on Iran, the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and trade tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump are expected to be handled with caution.

Analysts and diplomats have said the lack of cohesion in an enlarged BRICS, which doubled in size last year, may affect its ability to become another pole in world affairs. They also see the summit’s moderate agenda as an attempt by member countries to stay off Trump’s radar.

Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has some of his priorities, such as debates on artificial intelligence and climate change, front and centre for the talks with key leaders not in attendance.

Lula said in his speech on Sunday that “we are witnessing the unparalled collapse of multilateralism” and that the meeting is taking place “in the most adverse global scenario” of the four times Brazil has hosted it. He called for the group to promote peace and mediate conflicts.

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RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazil will play host to a summit of the BRICS bloc of developing economies Sunday and Monday during which pressing topics like Israel’s attack on Iran, the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and trade tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump are expected to be handled with caution.

Analysts and diplomats said the lack of cohesion in an enlarged BRICS, which doubled in size last year, may affect its ability to become another pole in world affairs. They also see the summit’s moderate agenda as an attempt by member countries to stay off Trump’s radar.

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will have some of his priorities, such as debates on artificial intelligence and climate change, front and center for the talks with key leaders not in attendance.

China’s President Xi Jinping won’t attend a BRICS summit for the first time since he became his country’s leader in 2012. Russian President Vladimir Putin, who will make an appearance via videoconference, continues to mostly avoid traveling abroad due to an international arrest warrant issued after Russia invaded Ukraine.

The restraint expected in Rio de Janeiro marks a departure from last year’s summit hosted by Russia in Kazan, when the Kremlin sought to develop alternatives to U.S.-dominated payment systems which would allow it to dodge Western sanctions imposed after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

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President Trump threatened to impose an additional 10 percent tariff on countries “aligning” themselves with the BRICS bloc of developing nations.

“Any Country aligning themselves with the Anti-American policies of BRICS, will be charged an ADDITIONAL 10% Tariff. There will be no exceptions to this policy. Thank you for your attention to this matter!” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post Sunday evening.

The threat comes after members of the BRICS group issued a declaration on Sunday condemning the U.S. increase in tariffs, as well as the strikes on Iran — all without mentioning Trump by name.

The group’s statement raised “serious concerns” tariffs, saying they are “inconsistent with WTO (World Trade Organization) rules” and threaten to “reduce global trade, disrupt global supply chains, and introduce uncertainty.”

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The European Union is considering a temporary trade agreement with the United States that would maintain a 10 percent tariff on most exports, according to a briefing by the European Commission to EU ambassadors on Friday, reported news portal Politico.The update came after a key round of negotiations in Washington on Thursday, where EU trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič aimed to defuse US President Donald Trump’s threat to impose a sweeping 50 percent tariff on all European imports starting July 9, if a deal is not reached.Talks will continue on potential exemptions for certain sectors, including the automotive industry, two national officials familiar with the discussions said, according to the news portal..However, the outcome was seen as underwhelming in several European capitals, especially after earlier signals from the Commission’s negotiating team that some industries could receive immediate tariff relief. The US currently imposes tariffs of 25 percent on cars and 50 percent on steel and aluminum imports.

EU remains divided

Despite intensive negotiations, reaching a consensus on a trade agreement with the United States remains challenging for European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, amid ongoing divisions among EU member states over how to proceed. According to three diplomats, all possibilities, including a failure to reach any deal, are still being considered.In a fresh twist, US officials have reportedly threatened to impose a 17 percent tariff on European food imports, two national officials confirmed, backing a report by the Financial Times.Von der Leyen is expected to hold one-on-one consultations with EU leaders over the weekend before deciding on the bloc’s next steps, one official said. Meanwhile, Trump is likely to meet with his advisers on Monday, meaning any official announcement would be delayed until after those discussions.

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In the ongoing discussion of trade and tariffs, Politico and others reported that the US and China are following through on a deal to lift export restrictions on items essential for technology production.

Following the temporary trade deal between the two countries to slash tariffs back in May, talks continued in June as the US and China agreed to resume the flow of rare earth minerals and magnets (which are essential in civilian and military technology manufacturing) from China to the US Meanwhile, the US would lift export restrictions on items like chip software, ethane, and jet engines.

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Former DOGE adviser writes to Tesla Board against Elon Musk after he launches ‘America Party’.

Former DOGE adviser James Fishback wrote to the Tesla Board urging them to ask Elon Musk to clarify his political ambitions. Fishback said his investment firm Azoria Partners will defer the listing of its Azoria Texla Convexity exchange-traded fund after Musk’s announcement that he was forming a new political party called ‘America Party’. The paperwork of the America Party was done, and it was registered with the Federal Election Commission with Tesla CFO Vaibhav Taneja listed as its treasurer.”Elon has gone too far…Our decision comes in direct response to @ElonMusk’s announcement that he is launching a new national political party. This creates a conflict with his full-time responsibilities as CEO of Tesla. It diverts his focus and energy away from Tesla’s employees and shareholders,” Fishback wrote. “In May, when Elon stepped back from his work at DOGE and returned his attention to Tesla, we were encouraged. With Elon fully engaged, he gave shareholders renewed confidence in Tesla’s future. Elon’s announcement today undermines that confidence,” the letter added.

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The letters initially were supposed to go out on July 4 with a tariff imposition date of Aug. 1, based on Trump’s earlier comments. But US officials were busily negotiating through the holiday weekend, including with Japan, South Korea, the EU, India and Vietnam.

For more, read Bloomberg Economics’ INSIGHT: What to Expect as July 9 Trade Deadline Looms

One of Trump’s signature moves in dealmaking is a unilateral threat when negotiations reach critical stages, so it’s unclear whether the letters he describes are real, or merely meant to strike fear into trading partners still reluctant to offer last-minute concessions.

After Trump announced an agreement with Vietnam last week, the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said negotiators were still coordinating with their US counterparts to finalize the details.

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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Sunday that tariffs announced back in April will take effect on Aug. 1 for countries that have not reached an agreement with President Donald Trump’s administration.

“President Trump’s going to be sending letters to some of our trading partners saying that if you don’t move things along, then on August 1, you will boomerang back to your April 2 tariff level,” Bessent said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

On Aug. 1, countries will “get a letter saying that if we have not reached an agreement, then you will go back to the April 2 level,” he said.

Bessent rejected the idea that Aug. 1 is yet another new tariff deadline, but the August date could still give trading partners more time to renegotiate tariff rates.

“We are saying this is when it’s happening, if you want to speed things up, have at it, if you want to go back to the old rate that’s your choice,” Bessent said.

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The Trump administration is stepping up pressure on trading partners to quickly make new deals before a Wednesday deadline, with plans for the United States to start sending letters Monday warning countries that higher tariffs could kick in Aug. 1.

That furthers the uncertainty for businesses, consumers and America’s trading partners, and questions remain about which countries will be notified, whether anything will change in the days ahead and whether President Donald Trump will once more push off imposing the rates. Trump and his top trade advisers say he could extend the time for dealmaking but they insist the administration is applying maximum pressure on other nations.

Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, told CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday that Trump would decide when it was time to give up on negotiations.

“The United States is always willing to talk to everybody about everything,” Hassett said. “There are deadlines, and there are things that are close, so maybe things will push back past the deadline or maybe they won’t. In the end the president is going to make that judgment.”

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Apple has launched an appeal against an “unprecedented” €500m (£430m) fine imposed by the EU on the company, in the latest clash between US tech companies and Brussels.

The iPhone maker accused the European Commission – the EU’s executive arm – of going “far beyond what the law requires” in a dispute over its app store.

In April, the commission fined Apple €500m after finding the company had breached the Digital Markets Act by preventing app developers from steering users to cheaper deals outside the app store.

Last month, Apple overhauled its app store rules to comply with the EU order to scrap its technical and commercial curbs on developers in order to avoid fines of 5% of its average daily worldwide revenue, or about €50m a day.

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The EU is entering a crunch week with only two days of talks left to secure a trade deal with Washinton to avert Donald Trump’s threatened 50% tariff on its imports into the US.

According to the US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, on Friday, the negotiations – which continued over the weekend – are focussed on 15 to 18 agreements with important partners, while Trump warned of import tax rates of up to 70% on others.

The uncertainty created by Washington has sent shock waves through the global economy. Businesses have paused investment and the dollar posted its worst performance in 50 years in the first half of the year.

With the clock ticking down to Trump’s 9 July deadline, the European Commission remains uncertain how he will treat the bloc, threatening €1.6tn of transatlantic trade.

“Among member states, the big question will be whether we should reach a deal at all costs to avoid a trade war, or show muscle if the deal is not good enough,” one EU diplomat said.

The German chancellor, , has said he wants a quick UK-style deal to avert a full-scale trade war, while the French president, Emmanuel Macron, favours holding out for a better deal if a rushed deal is “imbalanced”.

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U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened an additional 10% tariff on countries that orient themselves along the “Anti-American policies of BRICS.”

Trump’s announcement, which did not elaborate on any specific policy of BRICS, came as the group’s meeting is underway in Rio de Janeiro.

The bloc’s leaders appeared to take aim at Trump’s sweeping tariff policies in a joint statement on Sunday, warning against “unjustified unilateral protectionist measures, including the indiscriminate increase of reciprocal tariffs.”

Without calling out the U.S., the leaders voiced “serious concerns about the rise of unilateral tariff and non-tariff measures which distort trade and are inconsistent with WTO rules,” warning that the “proliferation of trade-restrictive actions” threaten to disrupt the global economy and worsen the existing economic disparities.

“Any Country aligning themselves with the Anti-American policies of BRICS, will be charged an ADDITIONAL 10% Tariff. There will be no exceptions to this policy,” Trump said in a post Sunday evening stateside on Truth Social.

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While Americans and foreign nationals continue to protest and riot in the United States under the slogan “no human is illegal,” a very different sentiment is emerging at our southern border.

It turns out that open-border policies are largely a phenomenon of the Western world, while most other countries show little interest in taking on the world’s challenges. Who would’ve thought?

Rioters in Mexico City are demanding that Americans stop moving to the United States, as they claim gentrification is affecting that area and making housing unaffordable for everyone else.

LOL. If legal immigration causes this much trouble, just imagine the toll illegal immigration causes for America.

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New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is sounding the alarm, but what else is new?

On Thursday, the House of Representatives cast the votes needed to pass President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” with 218 in favor and 214 against.

AOC, being one of those 214, left the Capitol building after the vote to speak to the press, engaging in her usual histrionics and bombast she keeps at the ready for when Trump or Republicans take a breath.

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President Donald Trump signed the GOP’s massive tax and funding cuts bill into law on July 4, meeting his self-imposed deadline, in an outdoor ceremony attended by hundreds of supporters and military jets flying over the White House.

The newly minted law will fund many of Trump’s domestic policies, including his immigration crackdown, resulting in nearly $170 billion to support the administration’s border goals.

The final bill, as detailed by NPR, allocates $45 billion for immigration detention centers, around $30 billion to hire more Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel, for transportation costs, and to maintain ICE facilities.

Additionally, roughly $46.5 billion has been earmarked to complete Trump’s border wall—a campaign promise he’s been repeating for nearly a decade—and includes $5 billion for Customs and Border Protection facilities and $10 billion for other border security initiatives. Approximately $13.5 billion will be set aside to reimburse states and local governments for their assistance with immigration and border-related enforcement.

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For decades, Republicans have extolled the virtues of removing loopholes and carveouts from the tax code, arguing it would make the system fairer and more efficient, while allowing for lower overall tax rates.

“The tax code is littered with hundreds of preferences and subsidies that pick winners and losers and create complexity,” House Republicans led by then-Speaker Paul Ryan and then-Rep. Kevin Brady, said in their 2016 tax plan. “Instead of free-market competition that rewards success, our tax code directs resources to politically favored interests, creating a drag on economic growth and job creation.”

Fast forward to the present day, and one thing is for sure: President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill is not an exercise in tax simplification.

Instead, it began with a push to extend the party’s 2017 tax cuts — which despite some streamlining also introduced some complexity — and piled more on top, in line with a slew of presidential campaign promises. Add in a heavy dose of congressional politics, and the result was a sprawling and quirky piece of legislation that is distinctively Trumpy: lower taxes and a bigger pile of tax breaks.

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Rejoicing in the Lord, and giving thanks for his victories, is a command of God’s Word. In fact, not only are we told to rejoice in good times, but always (cf. Phil. 4:4)and not only are we told to give thanks for blessings, but for all things (cf. 1 Thess. 5:18).

And we are in good times right now.

The pro-life movement saw the reversal of Roe vs. Wade three years ago. Last November, we saw election victories that not only advance our cause, but preserve the very tools we need to fight for this cause (freedom of speech, freedom of religion, the right to protest peacefully, and more).

And now we are on the cusp of the greatest victory since Dobbs, namely, the cutting off, by law, of the largest government funding stream for Planned Parenthood and the entire abortion industry.

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On July 4, 2006, NASA’s space shuttle Discovery launched on a “return to flight” mission that paved the way for it and its sister ships to fly for another five years. Now, a sprawling budget enacted on Independence Day will seemingly lead to Discovery lifting off again — though this time not into space, but rather from its place in the national collection.

President Donald Trump signed into law the so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill” today (July 4), a day after the legislation was narrowly passed out of Congress with only Republican support. Deep within the 900-page bill is a provision added by Texas’ senators to transfer a “space vehicle” to a NASA center “involved in the administration of the Commercial Crew Program” and “placed on public exhibition at an entity within the Metropolitan Statistical Area where such center is located.”

The vague language, written in such a way to skirt Senate restrictions on reconciliation bills, was aimed at achieving the “Bring the Space Shuttle Home Act” introduced by Senators Ted Cruz and John Cornyn in April.

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More than $45 billion in the “big, beautiful bill” that President Trump signed Friday is earmarked for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention space, which officials say will add up tens of thousands of beds for migrants being held in federal custody.

An estimated $170 billion of the bill has been designated for immigration enforcement as the Trump administration has promised to orchestrate the largest mass deportation effort in American history. But the funding that has been devoted to ICE detention space in the final bill. passed by the House on Thursday, is more than the government spent on housing migrants during the Obama, Biden and first Trump administrations combined, The Washington Post reported.

Federal officials estimate the $45 billion will provide an additional 100,000 beds in ICE facilities at a time when ICE has nearly 56,400 migrants in its detention centers nationwide as of mid-June, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. The number of detainees increased by more than 5,000 during the first two weeks of June.

Data showed that of those detained, 28 percent have a prior criminal conviction, while 25 percent have pending criminal charges.

The funding bump in the bill was approved after Trump and Department of Homeland Security Secretary (DHS) Kristi Noem toured a new detention facility that administration officials have called “Alligator Alcatraz.” White House Border Czar Tom Homan told NewsNation’s “CUOMO” this week that the facility in the Florida Everglades will cost an estimated $450 million to operate each year.

eautiful bill’ funding aids ICE detention– thehill.com
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More than $45 billion in the “big, beautiful bill” that President Trump signed Friday is earmarked for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention space, which officials say will add up tens of thousands of beds for migrants being held in federal custody.

An estimated $170 billion of the bill has been designated for immigration enforcement as the Trump administration has promised to orchestrate the largest mass deportation effort in American history. But the funding that has been devoted to ICE detention space in the final bill. passed by the House on Thursday, is more than the government spent on housing migrants during the Obama, Biden and first Trump administrations combined, The Washington Post reported.

Federal officials estimate the $45 billion will provide an additional 100,000 beds in ICE facilities at a time when ICE has nearly 56,400 migrants in its detention centers nationwide as of mid-June, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. The number of detainees increased by more than 5,000 during the first two weeks of June.

Data showed that of those detained, 28 percent have a prior criminal conviction, while 25 percent have pending criminal charges.

The funding bump in the bill was approved after Trump and Department of Homeland Security Secretary (DHS) Kristi Noem toured a new detention facility that administration officials have called “Alligator Alcatraz.” White House Border Czar Tom Homan told NewsNation’s “CUOMO” this week that the facility in the Florida Everglades will cost an estimated $450 million to operate each year.

But officials said the facility could be a blueprint for more ICE detention centers that the government plans to open now that funding has been approved.

President Donald Trump, Gov. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and others, tour “Alligator Alcatraz,” a new migrant detention facility at Dade-Collier Training and Transition facility, Tuesday, July 1, 2025, in Ochopee, Fla. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

“Everybody we arrest, we need a bed, because they’re going to be in detention from several days to several months, depending on the case,” Homan said. “So, this will give us a little breathing room, give us extra beds so we can target more criminals throughout the country.”

The border czar had previously called on Congress to provide more funding for detention that would allow ICE to detain migrants taken into federal custody. In June, the agency published a list of more than 40 contractors that could assist with the “emergency acquisition” of space for migrant detainees, the Post reported.

In addition to the $45 billion set aside for ICE detention and agents, the funding bill that was approved by Congress this week allocates another $46 billion for continued construction of the border wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Where will additional ICE detention centers be located?

Real Clear Politics reported this week that the $45 billion that will be devoted to ICE represents a 265 percent increase in its current detention budget, which will be higher than that of the American prison system.

The current load of detainees is the highest since that data has been compiled by ICE since the first time Trump was in office. In addition to providing more beds, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in an emailed statement to the Post that the funding for ICE in the bill will allow the agency to hire an additional 10,000 federal agents.

Officials announced earlier this year that the agency’s migrant detention centers were at capacity. The government contracts with private prison companies to operate detention facilities. The two main companies, CoreCivic and the GEO Group, have been awarded nine contracts by ICE for expanded detention, per the Post.

Contracts have also been awarded to companies to produce temporary tent structures, which would be used to house migrants, the report said. Last year, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) determined through a Freedom of Information Act request that private companies were looking to enter into government contracts in states like Michigan, California, Kansas, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas and Washington state.

The Post’s report indicated that CoreCivic and the Geo Group already own prisons that are sitting empty in several states, including Kansas (Leavenworth), Colorado, Minnesota, North Carolina, and Oklahoma.

The ACLU also reported that in 2022, the GEO Group made $1.05 billion in revenue from ICE contracts alone, while CoreCivic made $552.2 million during the same year.

“Never in our 42-year company history have we had so much activity and demand for our services as we are seeing right now,” said CoreCivic CEO Damon Hininger during an earnings call in May with shareholders, according to The Associated Press.

The expansion of detention space comes at a time when more than a dozen people have died in ICE facilities since October, including 10 during 2025. In 2024, an ACLU report indicated that 95 percent of deaths that took place in ICE facilities between 2017 and 2021 could have been prevented or possibly prevented.

That investigation, which was conducted by the ACLU, American Oversight and Physicians for Human Rights, analyzed the deaths of the 52 people who died in ICE custody during that time frame.

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Camp officials at Presbyterian Mo-Ranch Assembly evacuated about 70 children and adults staying near the Guadalupe River around 1:00 a.m. on July 4 after seeing the river rising.

Aroldo Barrera, the facilities manager at Mo-Ranch, notified his boss of the rising water after monitoring the storm, according to The Associated Press. The 500-acre camp was hosting a summer camp and a large youth conference.

“We actually have been monitoring this for about 24 hours,” Mo-Ranch communications director Lisa Winters told KENS5 on Friday. “And we prepared well in advance. We were making plans and changing our plans and moving people up to higher ground well in advance last night.”

“We had no warning this was coming,” she told the AP, saying county officials did not directly communicate to them about potentially deadly flooding.

Officials swiftly moved the approximately 70 campers to a building in the vicinity, where they remained overnight, the outlet reported.

Winters said it could have been “devastating” if the camp’s officials had not been monitoring the weather.


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Camp officials at Presbyterian Mo-Ranch Assembly evacuated about 70 children and adults staying near the Guadalupe River around 1:00 a.m. on July 4 after seeing the river rising.

Aroldo Barrera, the facilities manager at Mo-Ranch, notified his boss of the rising water after monitoring the storm, according to The Associated Press. The 500-acre camp was hosting a summer camp and a large youth conference.

“We actually have been monitoring this for about 24 hours,” Mo-Ranch communications director Lisa Winters told KENS5 on Friday. “And we prepared well in advance. We were making plans and changing our plans and moving people up to higher ground well in advance last night.”

“We had no warning this was coming,” she told the AP, saying county officials did not directly communicate to them about potentially deadly flooding.

Officials swiftly moved the approximately 70 campers to a building in the vicinity, where they remained overnight, the outlet reported.

Winters said it could have been “devastating” if the camp’s officials had not been monitoring the weather.

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Camp officials at Presbyterian Mo-Ranch Assembly evacuated about 70 children and adults staying near the Guadalupe River around 1:00 a.m. on July 4 after seeing the river rising.

Aroldo Barrera, the facilities manager at Mo-Ranch, notified his boss of the rising water after monitoring the storm, according to The Associated Press. The 500-acre camp was hosting a summer camp and a large youth conference.

“We actually have been monitoring this for about 24 hours,” Mo-Ranch communications director Lisa Winters told KENS5 on Friday. “And we prepared well in advance. We were making plans and changing our plans and moving people up to higher ground well in advance last night.”

“We had no warning this was coming,” she told the AP, saying county officials did not directly communicate to them about potentially deadly flooding.

Officials swiftly moved the approximately 70 campers to a building in the vicinity, where they remained overnight, the outlet reported.

Winters said it could have been “devastating” if the camp’s officials had not been monitoring the weather.

Other camps were not as fortunate. The flooding followed a sudden storm that caused the Guadalupe River to spill over its banks, flooding Camp Mystic, a Christian children’s summer camp. 27 campers and counselors died at the site, according to an announcement. (RELATED: Death Toll Rises To 70 In Texas Flood Disaster, Including 15 Children At Christian Summer Camp)

The total death toll has now risen to at least 82, including those at Camp Mystic.

“Our hearts go out to all of the other camps,” Winters told KENS5. “If you’re in the camp and conference industry, you’re a family. And so we are all trying to pull together, trying to get information from the other camps and trying to help each other where we can.”

All the campers at Mo-Ranch were reunited with families, Winters said.

Alaska D

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Alaska’s senior Senator, Princess Lisa Murkowski, originally inherited her Senate seat like a feudal title from her father, Frank Murkowski, when the old man was elected governor in 2002. But credit where credit’s due; she has managed to hold that seat ever since. In 2010, she was successfully primaried by Republican Joe Miller, and managed to win nonetheless on a write-in campaign. She has a coalition, a brew of squishy Republicans and Anchorage and Juneau Democrats who are (properly) aware that the Great Land probably won’t send a Democrat to the Senate.

That coalition may be coming apart now.

The Democrats are done with the “using” of Sen. Lisa Murkowski. Now, they are into the “abusing” phase of the relationship.

US Sen. Ruben Gallego, an Arizona first-term Democrat, was brought in as the featured guest at a virtual “emergency town hall” hosted by the Alaska Democratic Party on Wednesday evening, giving him a platform to bash and trash Alaska’s congressional delegation.

Gallego used the platform to sharply criticize Alaska’s Republican Sens. Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, both of whom supported the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

emocrats Turning on Lisa Murkowski – RedState– redstate.com
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Alaska’s senior Senator, Princess Lisa Murkowski, originally inherited her Senate seat like a feudal title from her father, Frank Murkowski, when the old man was elected governor in 2002. But credit where credit’s due; she has managed to hold that seat ever since. In 2010, she was successfully primaried by Republican Joe Miller, and managed to win nonetheless on a write-in campaign. She has a coalition, a brew of squishy Republicans and Anchorage and Juneau Democrats who are (properly) aware that the Great Land probably won’t send a Democrat to the Senate.

That coalition may be coming apart now.

The Democrats are done with the “using” of Sen. Lisa Murkowski. Now, they are into the “abusing” phase of the relationship.

US Sen. Ruben Gallego, an Arizona first-term Democrat, was brought in as the featured guest at a virtual “emergency town hall” hosted by the Alaska Democratic Party on Wednesday evening, giving him a platform to bash and trash Alaska’s congressional delegation.

Gallego used the platform to sharply criticize Alaska’s Republican Sens. Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, both of whom supported the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

Gallego had some pretty sharp words for Princess Lisa. Oh, most of what he said was pure horse squeeze, but that won’t matter to those Anchorage and Juneau Democrats. To them, horse squeeze is ambrosia.

“Alaska’s senators sold out their constituents by backing billionaire tax cuts while slashing Medicaid and children’s health care,” Gallego said in a statement released alongside the event. “People will die because of these cuts, thousands will lose coverage, and families will face impossible choices.”

Alaska Democrats, who in 2022 effectively cleared the path for Murkowski’s reelection by fielding only token opposition, now appear to be turning against the longtime incumbent. A Democrat flyer circulating on social media reads: “COWARDS DON’T BELONG IN ALASKA — Get Murkowski out in 2028.”

We should note that Alaska’s most prominent Democrat, former Congresswoman Mary Peltola, has already taken some jabs at Princess Lisa:


See Also: Friends No More? Mary Peltola Jabs Lisa Murkowski Over Vote for OBBB

 


Mary Peltola hasn’t yet announced any further political ambitions, although it’s rumored she’s considering a run for governor; Governor Mike Dunleavy’s term ends in 2026, and he is term-limited.

Could Alaska Democrats going to finally give Alaska’s Republicans a gift – a committed Republican senator? That remains to be seen; Senator Murkowski has already mused about turning independent, but Democrats, in the wake of the One Big Beautiful Act’s passage, aren’t likely to be mollified by a gesture like that.


See Also: New: Lisa Murkowski Considers Bailing on GOP, Turning Independent


Senator Murkowski’s vote on the OBBA was contingent, of course, on her bringing in a lot of federal dollars to Alaska, mostly in the form of waivers to things like Alaska’s SNAP program. The real substantive gains for Alaskans in that legislation were brought in by Congressman Nick Begich, including a substantial increase in Alaska’s share of oil and gas lease revenues. This will shore up the state’s Permanent Fund, of which every Alaskan is a shareholder. That’s a real win.

Still, nobody should underestimate Princess Lisa’s political skills. She’s managed to pull off win after win, even, as we noted, a write-in win. Give the devil her due; she’s a survivor. But there may be an opening here, if Democrats keep targeting her for that OBBA vote. If she is to be sent to the sidelines, it won’t be Alaska Democrats that do it; Alaska Republicans will have to pick a solid candidate and back them all the way down the line, ranked-choice voting or not. If we can do that – if we can actually herd all the cats that are the Alaska GOP – maybe, finally, we’ll be able to send Lisa Murkowski into retirement.

 

Alaska isn’t a huge state, politically. We have a small population for such a huge area, and in presidential elections, we only have three electoral votes. But Alaska’s importance over the next few years will only grow as the Trump administration ends decades of Washington treating the Great Land like a huge national park. You can’t talk about energy or mineral resources without talking about Alaska, and you can’t talk about geopolitics, especially in the nations of the Pacific, without talking about Alaska. We need strong, committed, conservative representation in Washington. Alaska Democrats, in their petulant sniping against Lisa Murkowski, may actually help us in that.

 

Editor’s Note: The Deep State is working overtime to subvert President Trump’s agenda and the will of the people.

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“When the bad guys see that the police are not there to deter crime and catch criminals, they remain on the streets to do more bad stuff.”

Nearly half of all murderers in the United States get away with the crime, with only 58 percent of murder cases being solved in the nation where someone is arrested, according to FBI data from 2023 cited by the New York Times.

The outlet added, “In other words, a murderer’s chance of getting caught within a year essentially comes down to a coin flip.” For other crimes, the rate of arrest and solving of the issue is even lower, with the example of car thefts only resulting in 8 percent of perpetrators getting detained.

In other countries similar to the US, the cases solved rate for murders is usually higher, around the 70, 80 or 90 percent marks. Multiple factors have played into the statistic, the outlet reported, including the distrust of police, lack of resources, as well as the number of cases, and the lack of consequences allows for criminals to get away with more.

“It’s a vicious cycle,” criminologist Brian Frost told reporters. “When the bad guys see that the police are not there to deter crime and catch criminals, they remain on the streets to do more bad stuff. And the rest of the community is less deterred from crime. They think, ‘Why not? I’m not going to get caught.’”

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Federal agents killed a man after he fired at a Border Patrol facility in McAllen, Texas. The man had a rifle and was wearing tactical gear. One agent who returned fire was wounded but is in stable condition.

The shooter was identified as Ryan Louis Mosqueda. His motive is unknown, but investigators believe it was a targeted attack on Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a post on X that such attacks will not be tolerated.

“The Department [of Justice] has zero tolerance for assaults on federal officers or property and will bring the full weight of the law against those responsible,” Blanche said.

Border czar Tom Homan, who previously served as acting director of ICE, said on Fox News that attacks on ICE officers have increased since last year by 690% as of July 4. Homan cited Congress’s rhetoric as one reason for the increase in attacks.

“We have senators, we have Congresspeople, that compare ICE to the Nazis, compare ICE to racists, and it just continues. The public thinks, ‘well if a member of Congress can attack ICE, why can’t we,’” Homan said.

In 2024, from Jan. 21 to June 30, there were only 10 attacks on ICE agents, according to the Department of Homeland Security. In 2025, during that same period, ICE reported 79 attacks on agents. DHS said the increase is likely due to the speed at which the attacks occur, some of which go unaccounted for.

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On Sunday night AXIOS reported on a new FBI, DOJ memo obtained by Axios concludes Jeffrey Epstein did not have a client list that he used for blackmail.

The FBI earlier determined that Epstein did commit suicide in August 2019.

And the DOJ-FBI also released a 10-hour video on Sunday from outside Jeffrey Epstein’s jail cell.

** The full video is posted at the DOJ website here.

But now we can confirm that an entire minute was cut from the DOJ video that was released last night. Why? What are they hiding?

If you follow the full video you can see for yourself that the video is cut off at 11:59:00.

The video feed then restarts exactly at 12:00:00.

Where is the missing video?

Trump Cuts Millions in

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In yet another under-the-radar but significant victory for taxpayers and transparency, the President Donald Trump administration has quietly terminated federal contracts with one of the world’s largest academic publishing conglomerates.

The funding cuts for Springer Nature come following mounting evidence of political bias, scientific censorship, and misuse of federal tax dollars.

Springer is accused of helping former National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Director Dr. Anthony Fauci and ex-National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Dr. Francis Collins to cover up evidence that COVID-19 leaked from a Chinese lab.

The administration canceled one active contract and allowed three others to lapse, ending taxpayer funding for the German-based publishing company.

Taxpayer Funding for Science Group Accused of Aiding Fauci’s Covid ‘Cover-Up’– slaynews.com
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In yet another under-the-radar but significant victory for taxpayers and transparency, the President Donald Trump administration has quietly terminated federal contracts with one of the world’s largest academic publishing conglomerates.

The funding cuts for Springer Nature come following mounting evidence of political bias, scientific censorship, and misuse of federal tax dollars.

Springer is accused of helping former National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Director Dr. Anthony Fauci and ex-National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Dr. Francis Collins to cover up evidence that COVID-19 leaked from a Chinese lab.

The administration canceled one active contract and allowed three others to lapse, ending taxpayer funding for the German-based publishing company.

The company controls prestigious science journals but has increasingly come under fire for operating more like a political advocacy group than a scientific institution.

While corporate media barely acknowledged the move, conservative watchdogs are applauding the decision as a long-overdue rejection of the kind of institutional rot that flourished during the pandemic and under prior administrations.

Springer Nature has become infamous for pushing politically charged narratives, downplaying the COVID-19 lab leak theory, and censoring research to appease authoritarian regimes like China.

According to Retraction Watch, Springer was forced to issue 2,923 retractions in 2024 alone, making it one of the most error-prone publishers in the world.

Many of these retractions, critics argue, stem from ideological groupthink and a broken peer-review system overwhelmed by activism.

Fox News media reporter Brian Flood noted in June that Springer “has also been accused of significantly downplaying the Covid lab-leak theory and censoring content to appease the Chinese government.”

One of the most notorious examples was the now-discredited 2020 article in Nature Medicine titled “The Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2”, which sought to declare the lab-leak hypothesis “implausible” just weeks after the virus emerged.

The paper played a pivotal role in shutting down discussion of the lab-origin theory.

However, as the tide has turned, the lab-leak theory is now widely considered the most likely scenario, even by mainstream outlets.

A House Oversight Committee investigation in 2023 found that then-NIH leaders Fauci and Collins tracked the paper’s progress through the review process and pushed for its publication to silence dissent.

Dr. Collins even emailed Fauci, lamenting that the article hadn’t fully killed the lab-leak theory and asked if “there was anything more they could do.”

The committee’s conclusion was damning: “This is the anatomy of a cover-up.”

Springer’s problems don’t end with Covid.

In 2017, the company admitted to censoring hundreds of articles to conform to Chinese government demands.

And more recently, Springer retracted a peer-reviewed article on gender dysphoria after activist pressure, marking the first retraction ever for the study’s lead author, Michael Bailey.

Bailey is an experienced academic with no prior history of such action.

Critics say this pattern of suppressing politically inconvenient science represents a full-blown crisis in credibility.

And now, the Trump administration is holding them accountable.

Springer is also notorious for its sky-high publishing fees, charging researchers hundreds of millions in so-called “article processing charges.”

One study found that Springer had raked in $589.7 million in just three years, with profit margins estimated between 30% and 40%, higher than many major corporations.

So why was U.S. taxpayer money ever propping up this bloated foreign publisher in the first place?

That’s a question the Trump administration is answering with bold action.

The Trump administration has now cut around $20 million in taxpayer funds that were being funneled to Springer.

By cutting Springer’s funding and evaluating billions more in unnecessary contracts, President Trump is sending a clear message: the days of American taxpayers underwriting woke, censorious institutions are over.

In a powerful show of commitment to transparency, NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya announced on July 1 a new policy ensuring that federally funded research will now be available to the public immediately upon publication.

“The American people should have immediate free access to the science that we so generously fund through the @NIH. Starting today, we do,” Bhattacharya wrote.

In prior Republican administrations, critics say this kind of waste and ideological entrenchment would have quietly continued.

But under President Trump, the federal government is being recalibrated, slashing woke funding and restoring accountability.

Americans are no longer footing the bill for Springer’s censorship and bias.

As one source told Axios, this is just the beginning.

President Trump gets to say what no one else could: We don’t fund them anymore.

READ MORE – Lawsuit Reveals CDC Has ‘ZERO’ Evidence Proving ‘Vaccines Don’t Cause Autism’