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Arctic Blast To Plunge U.S. East Temperatures To Nuuk, Greenland Levels

Zero Hedge -

Arctic Blast To Plunge U.S. East Temperatures To Nuuk, Greenland Levels

By early next week, much of the eastern United States "will be about as cold as Nuuk, Greenland," warned meteorologist Ben Noll, adding, "It will be warmer in St. John's, Newfoundland, than in parts of northern Florida." 

Temperatures in the Mid-Atlantic region, particularly around Washington, D.C., will begin sliding this weekend and could average in the mid-30s by Tuesday morning.

The Arctic cold blast detailed in a note earlier this week isn't expected to linger long, with temperatures forecast to rebound to seasonal 5,10,30 year seasonal norms between 45°F and 50°F by the end of the week.

"The COLDEST part of the airmass will actually be felt into the south through midweek with some of the highest anomalies from GA into FL especially with morning lows," meteorologist Jim Cantore wrote in a note on X, adding, "Lake effect snow should really set up from Sunday night to Tuesday from west to east and down the spine of Appalachia." 

Separate from the upcoming cold blast, but something we told readers weeks ago, is that globalist Bill Gates' climate-change crisis doom narrative turned out to be utter nonsense; the billionaire himself even admitted as much.

Remember, the only reason Democrats ramped up their "climate crisis" propaganda against the American taxpayer was to put a heist on the U.S. Treasury and enrich their globalist allies.

Like this guy. 

Now, far-left Al Gore just has to admit that he has been wrong for three decades. 

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 19:40

The Democrats' Man Problem

Zero Hedge -

The Democrats' Man Problem

Authored by Kurt Schlichter via Townhall,

It’s a challenge when you want to be a major political party and you can’t seem to avoid alienating about 90 percent of 50 percent of the population, but that’s the challenge the Democrats have accepted. People with penises who identify as men, I have some bad news for you. They don’t like you. Not at all. And their solution to this problem – and it’s a serious problem – is to try to convince you, in the least convincing possible way, that they dig you so you’ll shut up and vote as you’re told.

But they do not dig you. Not at all. And they deeply resent that the brutal arithmetic of politics requires that they at least try to appeal to dudes who are not femboys, pinkos, pervs, or eunuchs dominated by their evil faux first wives.

What do they dislike about men and masculinity? Well, the men and masculinity parts. Somebody has to be to blame for the fact that everything they lay their soft, girlish hands on turns to Schiff. Normal men are as good a scapegoat as any; there will never be any introspection about how the common denominator in the disasters that inevitably stem from feminized government (and everything else) is the feminization part. Helen Andrews has called it—check out her viral take on the phenomenon.

Ambition, clear standards, and a willingness to engage in direct conflict rather than passively-aggressively trying to cancel anyone who dares to wrongthink are among the laudable attributes of masculine institutions that have slowly been eroded over the years in favor of the soft, mushy goo of naggy, scoldy failure we have seen in recent decades. Look at the institutions that have embraced their inner girl, which is better at doing the job the institution was meant to do, rather than following the feels of its feminine figureheads. Look at one institution that has unashamedly rejected this pernicious trend and done a 180-degree turnabout. The military, a year ago, was a DEI-addled, barely functional bureaucracy dedicated to imposing civilian society’s social pathologies on what were supposed to be warriors. Diversity is our strength? No, it never was. That’s a soft-headed cliche masquerading as a profound leadership insight. Under Pete Hegseth, the military is once again enforcing standards, on hair, on bellies, on not pretending to be a chick. It’s no longer body-positive, trans-welcoming, and war-losing. Just ask the mullahs, or the Houthis, or the fragments of the drug runners bobbing out there in the ocean about our newly retoxified military’s masculine effectiveness. Name a feminized institution that’s better than the masculine version. Public schools? Hollywood? Academia? Our government, before that big meanie Donald Trump, with his expectations and testosterone, started demanding excellence over demographic box-checking?

The last few elections have demonstrated that normal men want nothing to do with the condescending political nursery school teachers that the Democrats offer. If you’re a man – a real man – the last thing you want to do is spend four years listening to Kamala Harris or one of her analogues hectoring you about how disappointed she is with you about your unwillingness to utterly submit to her domination. If you wield testicles, you can’t vote against the harridans hard enough.

So, what can the Democrats do? Well, they are in quite a pickle, considering how they need to win the votes of men they want to literally disarm and figuratively (at least, sometimes, figuratively) castrate. Will they change their policies to make a nod to men’s concerns and win them back? You know, stop trying to take our guns – you are not a man if you don’t pack heat – or stop shipping our jobs away so we can support ourselves and our families, or end the outright discrimination against straight males in the workplace and academia? That sort of thing.

Of course not. Making men into Ken dolls is an objective, not a side effect. After all, the existence of manbosses is a threat to the rule of girlbosses. And the Democrat women yearn to be girlbosses – the alternative is to be mothers, and that terrifies them. A proper Democrat female slaves for a corporation, non-profit, or the government, and, if she really wants to do the mom thing, waits until she’s down to her last dozen eggs to give motherhood a shot.

So, the plan has to be to trick men into thinking they are a vital component of the Democrat coalition as opposed to an unruly inconvenience that must be tolerated. The Democrats first offered their own version of Real Men, often a vet or some hicklib with a real man’s job, like oysterman, cop, or coach. That’s why Kamala picked Tim Walz – he was a man’s man, if you never hung out with any men. Currently, in Maine, the left is gaga over Graham Platner; they secretly believe his casual racism, psychotic violence fantasies, and Nazi tattoo just make him more authentic.

In another flex, they tried the Harry Sisson model. If there’s anything a real man respects, it’s a hairless boychild who looks like he can barely do a push-up. Of course, Harry disqualified himself in the eyes of the Democrats, not because of his laughable unsuitability for the mission but because he was trying to pick up chicks online. Typical Democrats, hating the player and not the game. 

They have also explored offering the James Spader archetype from every ’80s movie; Gavin Newsom is a spoiled, degenerate rich kid, but with astonishing hair. His oily charm and habit of banging his way through his friends’ wives is exactly what Democrats expect from men, even though it’s alien to most of us. They fear him, yet they are drawn to him; it’s akin to how good-looking convicts on death row get tons of marriage proposals. As usual, we are all living in these people’s personal psychodramas.

Then there are the women who they use to try to leverage men to do their will at the ballot box, and sometimes said leveraging is physically necessary. You might think that if one really wanted to appeal to men, one might go with a slinky ingenue à la Sydney Sweeney. But when that starlet rolled around on screen to sell jeans, the Democrat types called her a “Nazi.” Take that, heterosexuality on the part of men and women! Yeah, if there’s anything men hate, it’s pretty girls.

Instead, the Democrats decided that what men wanted was Olivia Julianna and sent her out to arouse the troops. That initiative quickly fizzled; she looks like she’s got a contract out on Han Solo, who would definitely fire first if she cornered him.

And then there are the new Joe Rogans, lefty online influencers who the left hopes will perform the male-speaking function Joe Rogan performed before the left decided to cancel Joe Rogan. One candidate is Hasan Piker, a tiresome commie who plays footsie with threats of violence and tortures his dog. Men just love people who hurt dogs, according to people who never sat in an audience that was cheering on John Wick.

Piker’s at least in shape and not a bloated slob. Filling in the bloated slob slot is Stavros Halkias, an enormous, sweaty comic with political takes of the Mamdani-stan variety, best known for his role as a scabrous degenerate in the very funny show “Tires.” He’s amusing on TV, but he’s not exactly a guy men long to emulate. He looks like he should be telling you, “No Coke, Pepsi,” and awkwardly propositioning your girlfriend. Do not Google the name of his former podcast.

And then there’s the Great White Wine Woman Hope, someone called Jennifer Welch. This bizarre mutant has been getting a lot of play lately, an indicator of Dem desperation. Billed as a “red state mom,” she talks like a Santa Monica Chardonnay swiller and looks like a plastic surgery cautionary example. I don’t know if it’s a Botox OD or a facelift too far, but her mug looks like a snare drum, and she appears so alien you expect her to demand you take her to your leader, which, to her consternation, is Donald Trump. She comes off like every woman you’ve ever seen berating a manager over some petty gripe. So angry, so bitter – if she’s not gobbling handfuls of SSRIs, maybe she ought to be.

An interior designer and former Bravo star on some show you haven’t seen, Welch is from Oklahoma, which is supposed to be a selling point, but hey, so is Jimmy Lankford – there’s always a blue streak in the deep red, and vice versa. Her thing is big talk to rile up the weirdos, losers, and mutations; she’s very mad at, for example, Riley Gaines for being normal and attractive. Welch is the kind of person who shouts “No Kings!” unironically; a man’s response to her is “no thanks.” But, more sinisterly, she recently told the Dems they need to get even more psychotic: “You can either jump on board with this s---, or we’re coming after you in the same way that we come after MAGA. Period.” The “s---” she was referencing was the base’s open delight over the murder of Charlie Kirk. Charming. Nothing appeals to men like a literal gargoyle badgering them with up-talky monologues that blend absolute ignorance about politics with sociopathology.

The main challenge for the Democrats is that they hate the people they want to appeal to. They don’t want to win men over, much less compromise with them. They want to shut them up and teach them to comply. Some males will, but no men will.

Follow Kurt on Twitter @KurtSchlichter and order Kurt Schlichter’s action-packed new novel, American Apocalypse: The Second Civil War out now! Get Kurt Schlichter and Irina Moises’s noir fantasy novel, Lost Angeles: Silver Bullets On The Sunset Strip! Also, check out Kurt’s Kelly Turnbull People’s Republic series of conservative action novels.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 19:15

UN Bends The Knee, Revokes Sanctions On Syrian Leaders Ahead Of Trump Meeting

Zero Hedge -

UN Bends The Knee, Revokes Sanctions On Syrian Leaders Ahead Of Trump Meeting

The U.N. Security Council voted Thursday to end terrorism-related sanctions on Syria’s interim president and interior minister, acknowledging the country’s change after Bashar al-Assad was deposed in early December 2024.

The resolution, sponsored by the United States, was adopted via 14 votes in favor and an abstention by China.

It removes Ahmed al-Sharaa—previously known as Mohammed al-Jolani—leader of political and military group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), and Interior Minister Anas Khattab from sanctions aimed at ISIS and al-Qaida associates.

The move comes ahead of a reported meeting between al-Sharaa and President Donald Trump in Washington next week.

As Kimberley Hayek details below for The Epoch Times, Thursday’s decision means al-Sharaa and Khattab will no longer be subject to asset freezes and travel bans, which were imposed in 2014 when HTS was designated a terrorist organization by the United Nations.

In May, the United States, the UK, and the EU lifted measures targeting Syria worth about $15 billion that restricted asset transfers and trade. The United States then removed HTS’s designation as a foreign terrorist organization in July. The UK did the same in October.

The U.N. resolution recognizes the interim Syrian government’s pledges for unencumbered humanitarian access, fighting terrorism, including against ISIS and al-Qaida, and preserving human rights.

U.S. Ambassador Mike Waltz viewed it as a “strong political signal” recognizing Syria’s new era.

The Syrian government, said Waltz, “is working hard to fulfill its commitments on countering terrorism and narcotics, on eliminating any remnants of chemical weapons, and promoting regional security and stability as well as an inclusive, Syrian-led and Syrian-owned political process.”

Syria’s delegate, Ambassador Ibrahim Abdulmalik Olabi, celebrated the decision.

“We consider [this resolution] a sign of a growing confidence in the new Syria, its people and its leadership,” he said, calling it a “badge of honour.”

The Security Council has regularly approved travel exemptions for al-Sharaa this year, meaning the upcoming White House meeting between Trump and al-Sharaa did not hinge on the U.N. vote.

Al-Sharaa, in 2005, joined the organization that would become Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI), according to a congressional report published in September. Al-Sharaa, according to a former U.S. intelligence official, led an AQI cell.

Al-Sharaa was arrested by U.S. forces in Iraq in about 2005 and held in Camp Bucca until his release in either 2010 or 2011. After returning to Syria, he helped found the al-Nusra Front (al-Qaida’s Syrian affiliate) in early 2012. He later severed his group’s formal relationship with al-Qaida in 2016 and oversaw its rebranding into HTS in 2017.

In February, a European Parliament report outlined the reasons behind action being taken by multiple countries to delist the Syrian government from sanctions.

“Internally, the HTS leadership has taken several measures to ensure continuity of governance and prevent anarchy in Syria, for instance, by working with former regime officials to preserve state institutions and making efforts to disarm and integrate the various armed groups into the security forces,” reads the report.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 18:50

America’s Future: Food Stamp Riots And Communism?

Zero Hedge -

America’s Future: Food Stamp Riots And Communism?

Authored by Brandon Smith via Alt-Market.us

There’s a lot of black-pilling Republicans out there this week after a handful of elections in the northeastern US led to “sweeping” Democrat victories in New York, New Jersey and Virginia. As is always the case whenever Republicans lose any race no matter how insignificant to the bigger picture, suddenly the sky is falling and doom is about to come crashing down on America for all eternity. The panic has become quite tiresome.

Keep in mind, the gloom is limited mostly to social media and is exacerbated by a few hundred conservative influencers. As usual, these people still don’t realize that the social media world is not the real world.

If you were shocked by someone like Zohran Mamdani winning the mayor’s race in New York for example, then you have not been paying any attention to what’s been happening in blue cities lately. I predicted that liberals would turn out in droves to vote for the guy back in July. In my article “Batman vs The Joker: Democrats Will Double Down On Chaos To Save Their Party”, I noted:

Leftists in the US will rally around uncompromising socialists like Mamdani because they’re tired of pretending that they care about “democracy”, free markets, property rights, moral codes or freedom in general. They need an all encompassing vision, even if it’s a monstrous and dystopian one. And, they want leadership that is transparent and unapologetic in its psychopathic intent. They don’t want to play the role of humanitarians anymore – They want to take the mask off and taste the flavors of blood and power…”

It’s New York, folks. It’s one of the largest hives of far-left scum and villainy in the world and conservatives only make up 26% of the city’s population.  OF COURSE Mamdani won. He represents everything the political left wants; a radical repudiation of western culture and free markets. Let’s not forget, these are the same people who celebrated the assassination of Charlie Kirk.

The same goes for New Jersey. In Virginia, the GOP decided to run a woman (Winsome Earle-Sears) who positioned herself as a “Never-Trumper” in 2022. She claimed that Trump was a liability for the Republican Party and that he should step aside. She then suddenly flipped in 2024 after Trump won again. OF COURSE she lost the race in Virginia. Conservatives have scruples about their candidates. They aren’t going to show up at the ballot box for someone who trashes their party leader and then jumps on the bandwagon at the last minute.

My point is, the hysteria going around social media over these “losses” is limited to a tiny bubble of people bouncing their ideas around in perpetuity. These few elections are in no way an indicator of America shifting far-left. They are, however, a reminder that our country is thoroughly divided on almost every issue and policy. Conservatives and progressives could not be more opposed in every way.

And, as I keep saying but I’m not sure if conservatives are hearing, it’s a reminder that leftists and Democrats are fighting A WAR while conservatives continue to play politics.  The leftists are consolidating around communist figures and ideas of radical insurgency.   Meanwhile GOP members and influencers are freaking out about “how to get more college-age white women in NYC” to vote for them.  It’s pure stupidity.

I would like to use the EBT/SNAP debate as a model for this divide because I think it’s revealing. Food subsidies are the epitome of socialism and the growing dependency on government that they create cannot be denied. Over 42 million Americans are now collecting SNAP; that’s 12.5% of the population. When the program first started in the late 1960s (on a national level), only 1.4% of the population qualified.

When SNAP was created it was promoted as a stop gap, a temporary safety net for people out of work and looking for employment. The primary focus of welfare benefits was supposed to be the disabled and the elderly, not able bodied working-age people (who now make up 80% of SNAP recipients). The program was a helping hand and then it became a crutch or a trap.

Right now the government shutdown is up in the air and emergency funds will do little to keep food subsidies running. The crux of the shutdown is the debate over healthcare benefits (more socialism) going to illegal immigrants (at least 1.8 million illegal migrants collected ACA in 2024). Only 5 Senate Democrats are need to vote for a clean funding bill, but they have refused 14 times.

As I have been warning for the past couple months, the Democrats are hoping for food riots that can be blamed on Trump and conservatives. Another few weeks and yes, this could happen in some major cities where Democrats refuse to enforce property theft laws.  The Democrat message is this:  “We will use mob violence and chaos to FORCE you to give us what we want.  Even if you win elections, we are in control…”

It’s political extortion.  Give them what they want and they will only continue to mobilize angry mobs over and over again to exert leverage over government decisions.

But what will the result be? Corporate chains and grocers will inevitably close up shop and those cities will become permanent food deserts. Leftists can’t force retailers to stay open, stock shelves and put employees at risk. Food riots will not have the effect that Democrats are hoping for.  Businesses will leave these cities. Smart people will leave these cities.  And the Democrat politicians still running the cities will be targeted by the same criminal mobs they have allied with.

There are certainly a number of people out there that are in actual need. I would never hold it against someone if they turned to a government program for support when life goes wrong. If they’re trying to rebuild and get a job and they need a short term boost, that’s okay. I prefer charity be private and personal rather than government enforced, but I grew up dirt poor; I know people will take whatever help they can get and usually they don’t care if it comes from the government.

The problem arises when welfare becomes a social mainstay, or an expectation. The level of entitlement surrounding SNAP is truly incredible. The number of people taking to the internet to call for blood because “Trump is stealing their SNAP” is disturbing. It’s the same thing that always happens with socialist projects – They draw support because they start small and innocuous. Then, they turn into an expensive society draining monstrosity that the populace is addicted to.

A number of commentators have been ringing warning bells about potential food riots, but I would like to point out some positives if cuts to SNAP continue.

First, the program was never supposed to become as large and costly as it is today. Reducing it to people who are truly in need (disabled, elderly and short term jobless) would help to reduce government spending which helps to reduce national debt and inflation.

Second, with 42 million people on food subsidies, grocery retailers are collecting billions in taxpayer dollars through artificially created demand. This demand eats up supply and, in turn, helps to drive up food prices. Cutting down SNAP would lead to a reduction in grocery traffic and deflation in prices for everyone.

Third, if labor shortages are persisting as the BLS claims, then able bodied people living on SNAP for years will now be forced to go back to work, filling the labor pool and solving the shortage problem. All the talk of migrant deportations leaving industries without workers? That goes away.

Free stuff is not free stuff. There is always a terrible price to be paid for government subsidized living. There are only two kinds of people that support long term welfare for the able bodied – Entitled people who are lazy and don’t want to work for what they have, and the politicians that want those people to vote for them.

Zohran Mamdani won in New York in part because of his many promises of socialist handouts, from government run grocery stores with cheap food to a rent freeze to free public transportation and subsidies for minorities and low income residents.  Mamdani is growing a “free stuff army” and the only way he can fund these programs is through overt taxation; he has admitted this.

He claims rich individuals and corporations will pay the heft of the bill, but we’ve seen similar attempts in cities like Seattle and San Francisco. They all end the same way – With wealthy residents leaving the city by the thousands and taking their businesses with them. The socialist politicians are then left with only middle-class taxpayers who then bear the pain of funding those programs.

The goal of the far-left is to make everyone equal: Everyone becomes equally poor. Meanwhile the wealthy have the ability to simply leave and go to economies where they are more appreciated. Socialism and communism lead to a larger wealth gap, not a smaller wealth gap.

Mamdani will likely attempt a capital flight tax, which will not work. Businesses and money will rush out of New York like blood from an arterial wound. The rent freeze will push many property owners to stop leasing or sell, which will result in a shrinking rental market for the poor and middle class. Within 2-3 years the metropolis will be an economic wasteland.

Socialism only works when you can force everyone to participate in the scam, and even then it still ends with a far lower standard of living for most people. The only places where this doesn’t happen are highly homogeneous countries with small populations and vast natural resources.  In every other case, progressive economic policies encourage dependency and then trigger disaster.

Is America facing food riots if the shutdown continues? Probably. In limited pockets of the country certainly, but mostly in places where Democrats are already running the economy into the ground. In other words, people who vote far left will suffer the most.  The riots will take place in their backyards.

Is the increasing radicalism of the left a sign that the US will descend into full bore communism? Is Mamdani just the beginning?

No, that’s not going to happen. Even if GOP fears over the mid-terms turn out to be accurate, elections are not the only determinant of the direction of a nation. Millions of conservatives and patriots are not going to allow widespread communism/globalism to take hold. We’ve already got a taste of that under the Biden Administration. We’ve also seen many progressives brag about how they plan to take revenge on us (for winning in 2024) once they get back into power.

Conservatives need to STOP constantly worrying about the next election and start considering what needs to be done now.  They need to stop playing politics and start defending themselves against the insurgency that is targeting them. Many of us are prepared to fight an internal war before we become a punching bag for the political left (there will never be another covid shutdown, for example).  And if a war happens, the left will lose.

Let’s hope violence isn’t necessary.  Let’s hope that a political solution is possible, but let’s prepare accordingly anyway.  The only way war can be avoided is if the political left changes their ways and stops poking the bear.  Who actually thinks they will change?

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 18:25

Maduro Open To 'Managed Exit' If Trump Provides Amnesty; Putin On Standby With Military Aid

Zero Hedge -

Maduro Open To 'Managed Exit' If Trump Provides Amnesty; Putin On Standby With Military Aid

Last week, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro reached out to Russia, China and Iran for possible military aid, after US President Donald Trump mulled a military attack amid a massive buildup of American forces in the region.

"The requests to Moscow were made in the form of a letter meant for Russian President Vladimir Putin and was intended to be delivered during a visit to the Russian capital by a senior aide this month," the Washington Post (CIA) reported, adding that Maduro also sent a letter to Chinese President Xi Jinping seeking "expanded military cooperation" between the two countries in order to counter "the escalation between the U.S. and Venezuela."

Now, The Atlantic (also CIA) writes that Maduro is open to a managed exit / exile, as long as Trump promises amnesty. 

Maduro would be open to a managed exit if the United States provides amnesty for him and his top lieutenants, lifts its bounties, and facilitates a comfortable exile, people who have dealings with the Caracas regime say. “If there is enough pressure, and if there is enough candy in the dish,” the person who speaks to officials in both countries said, “everything is on the table with Maduro.”

Of course, one needs to view the 'managed exit' thing with a grain of salt given the source and timing of what's going on. 

Of note, Trump's Venezuela envoy Richard Grenell was originally tasked with negotiating a deal with Maduro that would allow: 

  • U.S. access to Venezuela’s oil and minerals
  • Crackdowns on gangs/drug transit
  • Release of detained Americans
  • Resumption of deportation flights to Venezuela

While Grenell secured early concessions, including the release of six American hostages, Trump abruptly ended Grenell's negotiations after Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed for a more aggressive strategy. 

Grenell, however, had made headway in negotiating a "managed exit" for Maduro

Talks of a managed exit come amid US strikes on allegedly cartel-linked boats near Venezuela and in the Pacific, killing at least 65 people across 16 attacks, which was followed by the Pentagon launching the largest Caribbean buildup since 1962 - which include: 

  • the USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier
  • 8+ warships
  • ~10,000 troops
  • nuclear submarine
  • drones and fighter jets

In short - way more than what might be needed to take on cartels - implying imminent regime change (which The Atlantic is surely happy about). Trump has also authorized the CIA to conduct potentially lethal activities in Venezuela (as if they needed permission). 

Russia Ready to Rock Soldiers, formation, deployment, missiles on vehicles, weapons systems. Military parade of the Russian Army on Red Square in Moscow on May 9. | The Kremlin

With tensions escalating, Russia has responded to Maduro's pleas for aid - with Moscow now publicly saying it's prepared to provide support, including:

  • Repairing Russian-made Sukhoi fighter jets
  • Upgrading radar and engines
  • Delivering ~14 missile units
  • Possible supply of new Oreshnik missile systems

Moscow is considering this to be legitimate bilateral military-technical cooperation, not covert aid - which would of course raise the cost and the risk of a US strike or invasion, and risks a direct proxy confrontation, Newsweek reports, noting that foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova confirmed Caracas's request. 

Moscow’s response could reshape great power dynamics in Latin America and alter the regional security balance. Maduro’s request underscores Venezuela’s heightened sense of vulnerability and its turn to Moscow for critical military backing.

Zakharova said that Moscow stood ready to “respond appropriately to the requests” from Venezuela while requesting that all parties refrain from escalatory actions. Earlier statements from her have emphasized that Moscow acts within bilateral military‑technical cooperation agreements and laws, and that the maintained presence of Russian military advisers in Venezuela is consistent with those deals.

Russia's involvement would rugpull Marco Rubio's dreams of "quick regime change" - after framing Venezuela as a narco-terrorist state and a destabilizing force that serves as a proxy to US adversaries. It also means Grenell's push for a negotiated exit may be off the table, as Maduro may feel he now has leverage to wait out Trump, and/or demand larger incentives. 

And so, it appears the entire regime change endeavor just became much riskier for team Trump.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 18:00

Supreme Court Issues Major Opinion On Transgender Identity & The Trump Passport Policy

Zero Hedge -

Supreme Court Issues Major Opinion On Transgender Identity & The Trump Passport Policy

Authored by Jonathan Turley,.

In a significant win for the Trump Administration, the United States Supreme Court issued an opinion on Thursday afternoon on the Trump Administration’s requirement that passport holders use their sex assigned at birth and that such requirements do not violate equal protection guarantees. While a brief, unsigned opinion issued on the interim docket, it represents a major ruling on the constitutional protections afforded to transgender individuals.

The case began with a challenge to an executive order issued on January 20, 2025, declaring that the federal government would only “recognize two sexes, male and female.” The order instructed the State Department to “require that government-issued identification documents, including passports, visas, and Global Entry cards, accurately reflect the holder’s sex.”

The litigants alleged that the order and underlying policy were a denial of equal protection.

previously discussed the Supreme Court’s upholding a Tennessee ban on transgender medical treatments for adolescents. One of the most notable aspects of this decision was the concurrence of Justice Amy Coney Barrett, rejecting the claim that transgender status qualifies as a group entitled to heightened scrutiny under the Constitution.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that “The Equal Protection Clause does not resolve these disagreements.” However, the Court stressed that “This Court has not previously held that transgender individuals are a suspect or quasisuspect class. And this case, in any event, does not raise that question because SB1 does not classify on the basis of transgender status.”

In her concurrence, Justice Amy Coney Barrett directly rejected the claim:

The Sixth Circuit held that transgender individuals do not constitute a suspect class, and it was right to do so.3 To begin, transgender status is not marked by the same sort of “‘obvious, immutable, or distinguishing characteristics’” as race or sex.

…Nor is the transgender population a “discrete group,” as our cases require.

…The boundaries of the group, in other words, are not defined by an easily ascertainable characteristic that is fixed and consistent across the group. Finally, holding that transgender people constitute a suspect class would require courts to oversee all manner of policy choices normally committed to legislative discretion.

…The conclusion that transgender individuals do not share the “obvious, immutable, or distinguishing characteristics” of “a discrete group” is enough to demonstrate that transgender status does not define a suspect class.

…The Equal Protection Clause does not demand heightened judicial scrutiny of laws that classify based on transgender status. Rational-basis review applies, which means that courts must give legislatures flexibility to make policy in this area.

While that was a concurrence with only Justice Thomas, I wrote at the time that the concurrence “likely speaks to the view of a three or four other members on the Court.”

It now appears that it clearly did represent the majority’s view.

In this opinion, the Court rejects the rulings of U.S. District Judge Julia Kobick, a Biden appointee in Massachusetts, and the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit on the injunction of the policy. Both courts would have forced the Trump Administration to issue passports to transgender and nonbinary Americans that reflect the sex designation of their choosing.

However, the Court ruled that “Displaying passport holders’ sex at birth no more offends equal protection principles than displaying their country of birth—in both cases, the Government is merely attesting to a historical fact without subjecting anyone to differential treatment.”

In rejecting the equal protection claim, the Court added that there is no evidence that a policy requiring a passport to display the holder’s biological sex can only be the result of “a bare  . . . desire to harm a politically unpopular group.” It further found that the challengers are unlikely to prevail under the Administrative Procedure Act as “arbitrary and capricious.”

The Trump administration is thus “likely to succeed on the merits” of its defense against the challengers’ claims, the court wrote. And because Kobick’s order “enjoins enforcement of an Executive Branch policy with foreign affairs implications concerning a Government document,” the court said, the government “will ‘suffer[] a form of irreparable injury’” if the order is not paused.

That produced another fiery dissent from Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson in her dissent, which Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan joined.

Jackson slammed her colleagues:

“The Court … fails to spill any ink considering the plaintiffs, opting instead to intervene in the Government’s favor without equitable justification, and in a manner that permits harm to be inflicted on the most vulnerable party.”

Jackson dismissed the opinion as a type of “back-of-the-napkin assessment” in a cursory opinion. She objected that, not only had the Administration not shown any irreparable harm absent emergency relief, but the challengers “have shown they will suffer concrete injuries if the Government’s Passport Policy is immediately enforced.” She concluded by claiming that “the Court’s failure to acknowledge the basic norms of equity jurisdiction is more than merely regrettable. It is an abdication of the Court’s duty to ensure that equitable standards apply equally to all litigants—to transgender people and the Government alike.”

The opinion substantially reinforced Barrett’s earlier position. While the government had the advantage of a case in an area where considerable deference is given to executive decision-making, the underlying equal protection holding is a major setback for advocates seeking to establish transgender status as protected in the same way as race or religion.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 17:40

Obama-Appointed Judge Restricts Trump's Use Of Tear Gas, Other Anti-Riot Measures In Chicago

Zero Hedge -

Obama-Appointed Judge Restricts Trump's Use Of Tear Gas, Other Anti-Riot Measures In Chicago

A federal judge has restricted the federal government’s use of tear gas and other types of anti-riot measures in Chicago.

On Thursday, Obama-appointed U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis said during a hearing that government witnesses’ claims of violence at protests in Chicago were not credible, citing several occasions where she said video recordings contradicted immigration officials’ accounts about what happened.

“The government would have people believe instead that the Chicagoland area is in a visehold of violence, ransacked by rioters, and attacked by agitators,” she said.

“That simply is untrue.”

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in a statement from a spokesperson on the ruling described protesters in the city as “rioters, gangbangers and terrorists” who pose a threat to federal agents.

“Despite these real dangers, our law enforcement shows incredible restraint in exhausting all options before force is escalated,” the DHS spokesperson said, noting that the government would appeal the decision.

The spokesperson described the injunction as “an extreme act by an activist judge that risks the lives and livelihoods of law enforcement officers.”

As Joseph Lord reports for The Epoch Times, Ellis has seen at least one of her earlier rulings related to immigration enforcement in the city overruled, and this latest ruling could face similar challenges if the judge is found to have overstepped her authority by an appellate court. If it isn’t overturned in a higher court, Ellis’s ruling will stay in effect as proceedings related to this issue move forward.

The court hearing comes amid escalating showdowns between protestors opposed to the administration’s immigration enforcement operations and federal agents in America’s third-largest city.

For weeks, protestors and civil liberties groups have alleged that tactics used by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) have become increasingly aggressive in the city.

Ellis agreed with these allegations in her ruling, finding that the government’s use of force in several cases wasn’t merited by the circumstances on the ground.

Court Order

Ellis ordered the federal government to restrict the use of anti-riot measures against peaceful protestors and members of the press.

The preliminary injunction granted by Ellis restricts agents from using items such as tear gas and pepper balls, “unless such force is objectively necessary” to prevent “an immediate threat.”

It also bars agents from using physical force, including shoving, against protestors and journalists, and requires agents to give two verbal warnings before using riot control weapons.

The order comes after days of testimony about Chicagoans’ encounters with federal agents.

During hours of proceedings on Wednesday, Ellis heard testimony from multiple protestors, journalists, and members of the clergy who said they had been subjected to tear gassing and pepper balls from federal agents during protests in the city.

Witnesses gave testimony about alleged violent encounters with federal agents outside an immigrant detention center in Broadview, Illinois, and on Chicago’s residential streets.

Several people testified that they had had guns pointed at their heads while filming agents, while one pastor testified that he had been struck in the face by a pepper ball while praying.

Ellis granted the preliminary injunction in response to a request brought by some of those affected to restrict the use of federal force against them.

First Amendment

The plaintiffs argued that using excessive force at protests could make individuals less inclined to exercise their rights out of fear of consequences or reprisal.

In her decision, Ellis ruled that there was merit to the plaintiffs’ claims that the government’s conduct could have a chilling effect on First Amendment rights to freedom of speech, assembly, and religion, saying that her order would prevent this.

Federal agents’ use of force, including anti-riot measures, has historically been guided by broad standard requiring the force to be “objectively reasonable,” a standard laid out in the 1989 Supreme Court case Graham v. Connor.

This entails a general requirement to use as little force as possible and respect constitutional rights, while responding proportionately to legitimate threats.

U.S. Justice Department attorney Sarmad Khojasteh argued during the hearing that in every instance, federal agents were justified in their use of force, and told the court that protestors’ actions did not constitute protected First Amendment activity.

Ellis said that in several cases, federal agents had misrepresented events, presenting a different story than events captured on video, in order to justify an escalation of force.

Ellis said during the hearing that Gregory Bovino—the Border Patrol commander-at-large spearheading the administration’s immigration enforcement effort in the city—claimed that he had been hit with a rock prior to throwing tear gas, but that “Video evidence ultimately disproved this.”

According to the judge, Bovino admitted during a deposition that he was struck after tear gas had been dispersed.

Attorneys for the government responded that Bovino has started wearing a body camera since this incident took place, but was not equipped with one at the time. As part of her order, Ellis directed immigration agents to wear body cameras and clearly present their badges or identification.

A similar order was issued by Ellis last month in a temporary restraining order, which expired on Nov. 6.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 17:20

What Might Happen If The Shutdown Never Ends...

Zero Hedge -

What Might Happen If The Shutdown Never Ends...

Authored by Chuck Devore via DailyCaller.com,

Shutdown, Day 100

I’m walking through the haze of what still lays claim to be the capital city of the United States of America. The monuments still stand, though graffiti covers a few now. Weeds are starting to poke up in lawns that were once well-tended. Trees and bushes look a bit rangy.

Leviathan bureaucracy has simply… stopped. Or has it? No more IRS audits? No EPA enforcers? Really? Certainly, the endless streams of grants propping up about a third of state spending (along with 1,000 strings—those are gone) but the programs remain, at least in name.

Shutdown, Day 200

Anarcho-capitalists speak of a coming paradise, but in the flickering neon of my neural implant—courtesy of a black-market hack—I saw the edges blurring.

Was this freedom? Or was the simulation unraveling?

The military, those stoic guardians of the Republic, unpaid for months, started to splinter. Enterprising commands offered themselves as mercenaries for hire. In Virginia, a battalion rented themselves to a tech mogul, guarding server farms against looters who mistook data farms for food depots. “Protection services,” they called it, bartering ammo for crypto.

The Lone Star State, seeing opportunity, decreed that active-duty troops on Texan soil would draw from state coffers—filled by oil revenues swelling without federal siphons.

Churches in red states swelled with tithes, now untaxed fortunes, funneled into soup kitchens and orphanages. In Alabama, Pastor Clarke preached, “The Lord provides where Caesar fails,” as congregations pooled resources, feeding the poor with communal farms that bloomed in the absence of regulations. 

But in New York, the dream swiftly soured. Comrade-Governor Mamdani, the firebrand socialist, swept into statewide power months earlier on waves of elite discontent, promising a workers’ paradise. “Seize the means!” his rallies thundered, as crowds stormed Wall Street’s empty towers. Yet the production had fled—factories shuttered, supply chains evaporated without federal bailouts. Bread lines snaked through Manhattan, citizens trading heirlooms for scraps. Mamdani’s decrees echoed hollowly: universal income from thin air, but the air made a thin gruel.

Shutdown, Day 500

Out West, Reason Foundation libertarians made their move. Selecting the best beachfront, they declared the Santa Monica pier their sovereign zone. “Voluntary exchange,” they proclaimed, as free market chemists in lab coats brewed designer highs, partnering with shadowy Chinese syndicates via encrypted drones. Profits soared, with drugs flooding the coast—euphorics that made the shutdown feel like bliss. Their privateer fleet, retrofitted yachts with missile launchers, patrolled the Pacific, “neutralizing competition” from Mexican cartels. On the sidewalks, illuminated by a gaudy cacophony of LED light, legions of voluntary sex slaves, many missing a kidney, called out their price and specialty. Was this to be capitalism’s final form? Its highest triumph?

The dream had morphed into a nightmare loop, reality folding like a Dickian origami. My implant glitched nightly, replaying shutdown announcements in a loop.

Federal buildings were squats now, haunted by gaunt bureaucrats peddling secrets for sustenance.

States clawed back independence; locals thrived or withered on their own merits. No transfer payments meant blue cities begged for alms, while red heartlands prospered, untaxed incomes fueling private charities. Churches became mini-welfare states, bishops as CEOs, harvesting souls and auditing spreadsheets. “Faith-based efficiency,” it was called, outpacing any government program.

The military’s atomization accelerated. Unpaid sailors auctioned submarines on dark web markets; pilots flew freelance for agribusiness, dusting crops with precision strikes. The exception was in Texas where, flush with petrodollars, the rebirthed Republic of Texas nationalized its garrisons, renaming the force the “Lone Star Legion.” The world’s third most-powerful military was on Austin’s payroll with inevitable whispers of border ambitions and score-settling against the increasingly restive criminal cartels to the south.

New York’s paradise imploded. Mamdani’s regime mandated collectives, but the “means” were ghosts—corporations relocated to tax havens, leaving rusting husks. Starvation riots gripped the boroughs, with workers seizing empty warehouses only to find dust—even the rats decamped to New Jersey.

The Santa Monica cartel, allied with Beijing’s ghost ships, dominated the West Coast dope trade. Euphorics, laced with neural enhancers, turned users into loyal consumers—love was mandatory, the shutdown as engineered bliss. Their privateers raided cartel convoys, sinking rivals in international waters. “Market correction,” the Reason scholars penned in manifestos, profits funding seasteads off Malibu.

But in my dreams, I could see ragged outlines of code: anarchy or programming? I no longer cared.

Shutdown Day 1,000

My implant shorted out 24 days ago, leaving me in a searing funhouse reality—or was it?

Federal remnants passed into myth, D.C. a feral zone where survivalists bartered artifacts.

The best of states were fiefdoms: locals patched roads, red America nurtured the needy through a multitude of churches providing poorhouses, farms, and shelter. Untaxed wealth birthed benevolence: poverty waned in Bible Belt bastions, and volunteers outnumbered the destitute.

The military devolved into a patchwork of warlords. Many rented to corporations, securing trade routes. Texas, however, had ascended. Its Legion, battle-hardened and state-funded, crossed the Rio Grande at dawn on Day 1,000, tanks rolling into cartel strongholds, drones whirring overhead. Old revanchist dreams revived—annexing borderlands, eradicating narco empires. Mexico City protested, but without U.S. aid, its forces crumbled. Texan privateers, now allied with Santa Monica’s fleet in a marriage of convenience, bombarded cartel coastal hideouts, “liberating” resources in the name of free enterprise and Texas.

Mamdani’s paradise was a shell, a starving farce. Seizures yielded nothing; producers had vanished to freer climes. Famine struck the vanguard last, with the masses fleeing to red sanctuaries where churches offered bread and salvation.

Santa Monica gleamed a libertarían Valhalla. Its cartel, in cahoots with China, monopolized highs from British Columbia to Baja. Profits sustained armadas—their privateer navy obliterating Mexican remnants. They toasted to an “Ancap ascendancy.”

Was the shutdown a dream, or had we all awakened in someone else’s simulation?

*  *  *

Chuck DeVore is Chief National Initiatives officer at the Texas Public Policy Foundation. He served in the California State Assembly and is a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve. He’s the author of “Crisis of the House Never United.”

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation or ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 17:00

Inside Meta's $16 Billion Scam Ad Economy

Zero Hedge -

Inside Meta's $16 Billion Scam Ad Economy

Internal Meta documents reveal that the company expected to make about 10% of its 2024 revenue—roughly $16 billion—from ads promoting scams and banned goods, according to a new expose from Reuters

The files show that Meta knew for years Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp were flooded with fraudulent ads for investment schemes, fake e-commerce, illegal gambling, and prohibited medical products, but repeatedly failed to stop them.

A December 2024 document estimated that users were shown 15 billion “higher-risk” scam ads every day, generating about $7 billion in annual revenue. Rather than banning questionable advertisers outright, Meta only blocks them if it’s “95% certain” they’re committing fraud. When suspicion is lower, the company instead charges them higher ad rates—a “penalty bid” system that lets Meta profit while claiming deterrence. Its ad algorithms also tend to show more scam ads to users who click on them, amplifying exposure.

The documents describe Meta’s internal balancing act: cutting down on fraudulent ads without hurting its profits. In 2024, executives proposed reducing revenue from scams and illegal goods from 10.1% to 7.3% in 2025, then to 5.8% by 2027. However, managers were instructed not to take enforcement actions that would cost more than 0.15% of total revenue—about $135 million that half-year. “Let’s be cautious,” one manager wrote, warning staff to stay within “specific revenue guardrails.”

Reuters writes that an April 2025 internal review concluded it was “easier to advertise scams on Meta platforms than Google.” Despite this, Meta leadership opted for what it called a “moderate approach,” focusing enforcement only in countries facing imminent regulatory scrutiny. The company also accepted that fines—expected to reach up to $1 billion—were likely inevitable but far smaller than the profits from scam-related ads.

Regulators have taken notice. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Meta for hosting financial scam ads, while a British regulator found its platforms were linked to 54% of all payments-related scam losses in 2023—more than twice the total of all other social media combined.

Meta spokesperson Andy Stone dismissed the leaked materials as “a selective view that distorts Meta’s approach to fraud and scams.” He said the 10% estimate was “rough and overly-inclusive,” and emphasized that “we aggressively fight fraud and scams because people on our platforms don’t want this content, legitimate advertisers don’t want it and we don’t want it either.” Stone also noted that Meta had reduced scam-ad reports by 58% and removed more than 134 million pieces of fraudulent ad content in 2025.

Still, internal safety staff estimated Meta’s platforms are tied to one-third of all successful scams in the U.S. Former Meta investigator Sandeep Abraham summarized the situation bluntly: “If regulators wouldn’t tolerate banks profiting from fraud, they shouldn’t tolerate it in tech.”

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 16:40

Good Luck To The Big Apple's Moiling Masses Of Latté-Clutchers

Zero Hedge -

Good Luck To The Big Apple's Moiling Masses Of Latté-Clutchers

Authored by James Howard Kunstler,

Side of Jihad With That Pastrami on Rye?

"Socialism is a wonderful idea. It's only as a reality that it has been disastrous."

- Thomas Sowell

Does Zohran’s radiant smile put you in mind of a labradoodle puppy? The guy was just that soft and fluffy during the mayoral election campaign, beaming remorselessly for the cameras, summoning a cushy nirvana of give-aways that would deliver an “affordable” life to the moiling masses of under-employed latte-clutchers doomed by their unpayable college loans and the gender-study diplomas they innocently bought with all that money. Under Zohran, New York City will soon be one colossal student lounge, and even the baristas serving the lattes will get nice one-bedroom river-view apartments, ride to work on free buses, and buy their take-out chili-crisp fried tofu for cheap at the city-run food store.

Brothers in Arms: Alex Soros (L), Zohran (R)

Look (above): there is Zohran with his billionaire friend and patron Alex Soros. Alex does not seem to realize that Zohran wants to eat him for lunch. Fluffy as they might be, labradoodles are actually carnivores. And Zohran has declared that billionaires should not exist. He says the billionaires of New York are going to pay for those lattes, free buses, river-view apartments, and all the rest of the package. Is he planning to hold them hostage? Staple their John Lobb bespoke alligator leather loafers to the parqueted floor of the penthouse at 15 Central Park West while he loots their accounts?

No! They are going to make like Snake Pliskin and escape from New York with all their assets and chattels. Florida, Nashville, Boise! It’s a big country and, let’s face it, your laptop is your office. Then what? Maybe it will be like the old glory days of Soviet Russia in New York. The people will pretend to work and Zohran will pretend to pay them and everybody will be all happy and equal. That city-run food store will become the city-run free food store, just like the hippies dreamed about in 1967, the summer of love! Jews and Jihadis will march together, arm-in-arm, into a gleaming future. . . !

Then there was the victory speech. Not so labradoodle smiley. More like Fidel Castro (if anyone remembers that guy) in harangue mode. But know this: Zohran is a talented demagogue. He got game! He can bring it! He exudes charm like the Knicks’ Jalen Brunsen sweats at the three-point line! He can put it over, whip up a crowd, paint dazzling word-panoramas of a democratic-socialist promised land in the offing. He will have a glorious Christmas season awaiting the swearing-in at one minute past midnight, New Years Day.

Waitaminnit! Zohran probably doesn’t do Christmas, and certainly not Hanukkah. But it’s conceivable that he will huddle at Zabar’s with his constituents, the altekakers of the Upper West Side who (perhaps foolishly) voted for him, and together figure out how to arrest Benjamin Netanyahu the next time he comes to the UN — a campaign promise! And he can prepare to ride out of the gate on Jan 1 at warp speed to freeze a million rents, change-out social workers for cops, set up the free child-care, and perform all the other miracles promised.

I hate to break the spell, but here’s what you are really going to get in New York City with Mayor Zohran Mamdani: far and away the most corrupt administration ever in the history of the place, making the Boss Tweed era look like a model of efficiency and rectitude. I will tell you why: Zohran has zero managerial experience. In the decade, roughly, since he graduated from Bowdoin College up in faraway piney Maine, Zohran has worked as a campaign volunteer, a rapper (“Kanda Chap Chap” under the name Young Cardamom), a voter field-operator, a music supervisor for his Mom’s documentary film, and, since 2021, a New York State Assemblyman for District 36 in the Borough of Queens who rarely shows up in the chamber to vote for anything.

The New York City government comprises over a hundred agencies with a budget of $112.4-billion. The opportunities for grift are fantastic beyond comprehension. Now, appoint and hire thousands of Gen Z DEI types to run all those services, young folk who worked for Zohran’s campaign and were promised jobs in the new admin. What will you get? Cosmic level incompetence at best, and more likely wholesale looting of the public till. Now layer-on the omnipresent mob action in the New York City unions and the mafia-associated contractors who do business with the city. Doesn’t look great. And how much will be creamed off for the Zakaat, the obligatory Islamic tithe turned over to the poor, the needy, the homeless, the debtors and the practice of jihad?

So, good luck Big Apple as you await the luscious caramel coating of Woke-socialism to be laid on you.

Zohran’s elevation capped an election week of Democratic Party triumph that left the faithful too hungover to even perform the much ballyhooed “Trump Must Go Now” exorcism promised for the day after the vote. Alex Soros & Friends bought plane tickets for a few “furry” Transtifas to fly in from Portland, OR, their training ground, but the event was a bust. Mr. Trump was not squeezed out of the known universe like a watermelon seed, as hoped.

The Golden Golem of Greatness lurches on, coping with the Democrat’s never-ending seditious jihad against our country, featuring such new stars as New Jersey’s Mikie Sherrill and Virginia’s next governor, Abigail Spanberger, shown below wearing the winsome regalia of Covid-19 she modeled on the floor of the US House of representatives back in pandemic-time.

How does that thing work. . . ?

You go, girl!

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 16:20

Consumer Credit Jumps More Than Expected To New Record High Driven By Surge In Student Loans

Zero Hedge -

Consumer Credit Jumps More Than Expected To New Record High Driven By Surge In Student Loans

The consumer credit rollercoaster continues.

One month after total consumer credit grew far less than expected, barely printing in the green, moments ago the Fed reported that in September consumer credit jumped once again, rising by $13.093 billion to a new record high of $5.077 trillion. 

The increase was driven by a modest rebound by revolving credit, which rose by $1.65 billion in September after contracting in August by the 2nd biggest amount since Covid, shrinking by $6.1 billion (only last November's $11.2 billion was larger).

The modest increase in revolving credit was more than offset by another solid bounce in non-revolving credit which increased by $9.2 billion, the second biggest increase of 2025.

Broken down by components, student loans - now that the repayment moratorium is over - surged by $27.4 billion in Q3 to a record $1.841 trillion. As discussed previously, student loans have a magical capability of being abused for everything but college, which is why enterprising "students" binge on them any time they can to fund all their other purchases. Meanwhile, car loans rose by a far more modest $6.2 billion to $1.567 trillion.

Finally, and this will come as a surprise to nobody, despite 1.50% in rate cuts by the Fed since last September, we can now confirm that rates on credit cards have gone... nowhere at all, as banks continue to bleed US consumers dry.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 15:52

Appeals Court Lets Texas Enforce Law Limiting Drag Shows

Zero Hedge -

Appeals Court Lets Texas Enforce Law Limiting Drag Shows

Authored by Matthew Vadum via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A federal appeals court on Nov. 6 allowed Texas to enforce a state ban on drag shows performed in the presence of minors.

Conservative Texans showed up to protest a drag-queen event held at a Katy, Texas, church Sept. 24, 2022. Darlene McCormick Sanchez/The Epoch Times

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit voted 2–1 to vacate a 2023 injunction blocking the law that was issued by a federal district court.

The appeals court directed the district court to throw out pending claims against all of the defendants except Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in the case known as The Woodlands Pride Inc. v. Paxton for lack of standing. The lead plaintiff, a nonprofit known as The Woodlands Pride Inc., which was found to lack standing, sponsors an annual pride festival in Montgomery County, Texas.

Standing refers to the right of someone to sue in court. The parties must show a strong enough connection to the claim to justify their participation in a lawsuit.

The law known as Texas Senate Bill 12 regulates “sexually oriented performances” that take place on public property and in the presence of minors, U.S. Circuit Judge Kurt Engelhardt wrote in the majority opinion.

A “sexually oriented performance” is defined as “a visual performance” that features a performer who “is nude” or “engages in sexual conduct,” and “appeals to the prurient interest in sex.”

The law has never been enforced because the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas blocked it before it could take effect. Claiming the law violated the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, challengers sued to block it under Section 1983 of Title 42 of the U.S. Code, a federal law that allows individuals to sue the government for civil rights violations, Engelhardt said.

The appeals court found that The Woodlands Pride Inc. does not have standing to pursue an injunction against any of the appellants because its activities are not affected by the state law.

The activities the nonprofit acknowledged doing, such as distributing condoms and lubricant, and testing for sexually transmitted diseases, are not prohibited by the state law, Engelhard said.

“None of the trial evidence indicates that the performances are ‘in some sense erotic.’ Because Woodlands Pride does not intend to engage in conduct that is arguably proscribed by S.B.12, it does not have standing to seek an injunction against any of the appellants,” he said.

However, the co-plaintiff production company, 360 Queen Entertainment, may continue its lawsuit challenging the state law. Its performances may be affected by the law because they contain nudity and have been attended by children, the appeals court ruled.

Engelhardt said that the district court’s ruling came out before the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2024 decision in Moody v. NetChoice, which laid out criteria for determining whether the rights of performers or businesses were being violated.

The appeals court found that the district court did not carry out a proper analysis of whether the state law violates the First Amendment rights of performers and businesses.

Consequently, we are unequipped to undertake this task in the first instance, and remand for the district court to do so,” the appeals court said, sending the case back to the district court.

U.S. Circuit Judge James Dennis dissented in part.

Dennis agreed with the majority that the case should be remanded to the district court, but disagreed with denying standing to The Woodlands Pride Inc. and another co-plaintiff.

The plaintiffs and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which was part of the legal team challenging Senate Bill 12, expressed disappointment at the new ruling.

“Today’s decision is heartbreaking for drag performers, small businesses, and every Texan who believes in free expression,” they said in a statement.

The Epoch Times reached out for comment to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. No reply was received by publication time.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 15:25

Un-Sustainables: ESG Outflow Bloodbath Hits Ninth Consecutive Month

Zero Hedge -

Un-Sustainables: ESG Outflow Bloodbath Hits Ninth Consecutive Month

The downward spiral of sustainable equity stocks built on the environmental, social, and governance (ESG) globalist movement has deepened under the Trump era, as investor focus and capital flows have pivoted sharply toward the booming artificial intelligence trade.

A Goldman Sachs team led by analyst Varsha Venugopal offered clients a fresh snapshot of the darkening ESG space, cautioning that:

Sustainable equity outflows continued in September (-$8.4 bn) for the ninth consecutive month. Outflows were driven by W. European active funds (-$8.3 bn), while active funds in N. America (-$2.5 bn) and RoW (-$0.4 bn) saw more modest outflows. Passive strategies saw inflows (+$2.8 bn) across all regions in the latest month. Integration strategies saw outflows (-$8.3 bn), as did thematic strategies (-$0.8 bn), though only marginally. Global Sustainable fixed income flows turned modestly negative in September (-$1.8 bn).

The broader picture for sustainable equity fund flows reveals a continued wave of outflows, driven mainly by heavy redemptions across Europe and the U.S. during the summer months.

Sustainable equity funds saw outflows in 3Q25 (-$70.1 bn), largely driven by redemptions from select funds in July (Exhibit 6).

W. Europe drove outflows in September (-$6.2 bn), while N. America (-$2.1 bn) and RoW (-$0.01 bn) saw marginal to negligible outflows.

Europe

North America 

All sustainable thematic categories, climate, human development, etc., have recorded nonstop outflows for nine consecutive quarters.

"Sustainable fund equity AUM penetration" refers to the percentage of total equity assets under management (AUM) invested in ESG-labeled funds. The data below shows that this phenomenon has largely lost momentum after globalist Wall Street bankers drove the ESG bubble into hyperdrive during the Biden–Harris regime era.

For the last few years, we've pointed out that the ESG and climate-driven investment bubble was destined to burst. This latest report confirms that equity outflows are continuing and that the ESG obsession, which forced the premature retirement of reliable fossil-fuel power generation in favor of unreliable solar and wind, has proven a disaster for grid stability in the age of energy-hungry AI data centers.

ZeroHedge Pro Subs can read the full report in the usual place

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 15:05

Can't Afford A Vacation? Blame The Fed

Zero Hedge -

Can't Afford A Vacation? Blame The Fed

Authored by Ron Paul via DailyReckoning.com,

According to data collected by the research firm Statista, 29 percent of Americans cannot afford to take a vacation this year. A vacation is not the only thing Americans are struggling to afford. The failure of wages to keep up with price inflation is why household debt hit a record level of 18.4 trillion dollars this year, with the average household owing more than 100,000 dollars.

The Federal Reserve is responsible for the decline in American living standards and the rise in income inequality. The turning point in the people’s economic fortunes was on August 15, 1971.

That is when then-President Richard Nixon closed the “gold window,” severing the last link between the dollar and gold. This left America with a purely fiat currency and no restraint on the Federal Reserve’s ability to create money.

When the Federal Reserve pumps money into the economy the new money is not equally distributed. It first goes to wealthy and well-connected individuals. These individuals benefit from having increased purchasing power before the new money has caused price increases.

The Fed also contributes to economic instability and inequality by creating bubbles that distort the signals sent by the market. This causes over-investment in some sectors. When bubbles burst, workers employed in certain sectors lose their jobs, while those at top often suffer at most a modest setback.

The government bails out the “too big to fail” corporations, but the government never considers workers and homeowners too big to fail.

The Federal Reserve facilitates the growth of the welfare-warfare state by purchasing Treasury bonds, thus monetizing federal debt.

The majority of government spending is on programs benefiting powerful special interests. This includes in large part the military-industrial complex that gobbles up more money from the government each year.

The Federal Reserve’s continued devaluation of the dollar to finance an empire abroad and a welfare state at home is the driving force behind the erosion of the people’s living standards. As the dollar loses purchasing power, demand for government assistance increases, leading to more government spending, more debt monetization, and a further decline in living standards.

The fact that almost a third of Americans cannot afford a vacation illustrates how fiat money harms average Americans. Continued growth of federal debt and Fed-created inflation will lead to a major economic crisis.

This will either induce or be caused by a rejection of the dollar’s world reserve currency status. The result will be a rise of demagogic authoritarians of both left and right and increased political violence, leading to an increase in government repression.

Those of us who know the truth must continue to explain that the solution to our problems is a vacation from the welfare-warfare state and the fiat money system that facilitates government growth at the expense of the people’s standards of living and liberty.

Limited government, free markets, and peaceful relations and free trade with as many nations as possible are components of the path to lasting peace and prosperity.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 14:45

Realtor.com Reports Median listing price "dipped slightly" year over year

Calculated Risk -

What this means: On a weekly basis, Realtor.com reports the year-over-year change in active inventory, new listings and median prices. On a monthly basis, they report total inventory. For October, Realtor.com reported active inventory was up 15.3% YoY, but still down 13.2% compared to the 2017 to 2019 same month levels. 
Here is their weekly report: Weekly Housing Trends: Latest Data as of Nov. 1
Active inventory climbed 14.0% year over year

The number of homes active on the market climbed 14.0% year-over-year, marking the two full years (104 weeks) of annual gains in inventory. There were about 1.1 million homes for sale last week, marking the 27th week in a row over the million-listing threshold. Active inventory is growing significantly faster than new listings, an indication that more homes are sitting on the market for longer, and homeowners aren’t eager to sell.

New listings—a measure of sellers putting homes up for sale—fell 3.2% year over year

New listings were down 3.2% last week compared with the same period a year ago, The decline marks a reversal after three weeks of consecutive growth, suggesting that seller momentum is starting to cool heading into November.

The median listing price was flat year-over-year

The median list price dipped slightly compared to the same week one year ago. Adjusting for home size, price per square foot fell 0.7% year-over-year, dropping for the ninth consecutive week. Price per square foot grew steadily for almost two years, but the weak sales activity has finally caught up and shaken underlying home values despite stable prices.

In Search Of The AI Bubble's Economic Fundamentals

Zero Hedge -

In Search Of The AI Bubble's Economic Fundamentals

Authored by William Janeway via Project Syndicate,

The rise of generative AI has triggered a global race to build semiconductor plants and data centers to feed the vast energy demands of large language models. But as investment surges and valuations soar, a growing body of evidence suggests that financial speculation is outpacing productivity gains.

In recent weeks, the notion that we are witnessing an “AI Bubble” has moved from the fringes of public debate to the mainstream. As Financial Times commentator Katie Martin aptly put it, “Bubble-talk is breaking out everywhere.”

The debate is fueled by a surge of investment in data centers and in the vast energy infrastructure required to train and operate the large language models (LLMs) that drive generative AI. As with previous speculative bubbles, rising investment volumes fuel soaring valuations, with both reaching historic highs across public and private markets. The so-called “Magnificent Seven” tech giants – Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla – dominate the S&P 500, with each boasting a market capitalization above $1 trillion, and Nvidia is now the world’s first $5 trillion company.

In the private market, OpenAI reportedly plans to raise $30 billion at a $500 billion valuation from SoftBank, the most exuberant investor of the post-2008 era. Notably, this fundraising round comes even as the company’s losses totaled $5 billion in 2024 despite $3.7 billion in revenue with its cash burn expected to total $115 billion through 2029.

Much like previous speculative cycles, this one is marked by the emergence of creative financing mechanisms. Four centuries ago, the Dutch Tulip Mania gave rise to futures contracts on flower bulbs. The 2008 global financial crisis was fueled by exotic derivatives such as synthetic collateralized debt obligations and credit default swaps. Today, a similar dynamic is playing out in the circular financing loop that links chipmakers (Nvidia, AMD), cloud providers (Microsoft, CoreWeave, Oracle), and LLM developers like OpenAI.

While the contours of an AI bubble are hard to miss, its actual impact will depend on whether it spills over from financial markets into the broader economy. How – and whether – that shift will occur remains unclear. Virtually every day brings announcements of new multibillion-dollar AI infrastructure projects. At the same time, a growing body of reports indicates that AI’s business applications are delivering disappointing returns, indicating that the hype may be running well ahead of reality.

The Ghosts of Bubbles Past

Financial bubbles can be understood in terms of their focus and locus. The first concerns what investors are betting on: Do the assets that attract speculation have the potential to boost economic productivity when deployed at scale? Second, is this activity concentrated primarily in equity or credit markets? It is debt-financed speculation that leads to economic disaster when a bubble inevitably bursts. As Moritz Schularick and Alan M. Taylor have shown, leverage-fueled bubbles have repeatedly triggered financial crises over the past century and a half.

The credit bubble of 2004-07, which focused on real estate and culminated in the global financial crisis of 2008-09, is a case in point. It offered no promise of increased productivity, and when it burst, the economic consequences were horrendous, prompting unprecedented public underwriting of private losses, principally by the US Federal Reserve.

By contrast, the focus of the tech bubble of the late 1990s was on building the internet’s physical and logical infrastructure on a global scale, accompanied by the first wave of experiments in commercial applications. Speculation during this period was mainly concentrated in public equity markets, with some spillover into the market for tradable junk bonds, and overall leverage remained limited. When the bubble burst, the resulting economic damage was relatively modest and was easily contained through conventional monetary policy.

The history of modern capitalism has been defined by a succession of such “productive bubbles.” From railroads to electrification to the internet, waves of financial speculation have repeatedly mobilized vast quantities of capital to fund potentially transformational technologies whose returns could not be known in advance.

In each of these cases, the companies that built the foundational infrastructure went bust. Speculative funding had enabled them to build years before trial-and-error experimentation yielded economically productive applications. Yet no one tore up the railroad tracks, dismantled the electricity grids, or dug up the underground fiber-optic cables. The infrastructure remained, ready to support the creation of the imagined “new economy,” albeit only after a painful delay and largely with new players at the helm. The experimentation needed to discover the “killer applications” enabled by these “General Purpose Technologies” takes time. Those seeking instant gratification from LLMs are likely to be disappointed.

For example, while construction of the first railroad in the United States began in 1828, mail-order retail, the killer app in this instance, began with the founding of Montgomery Ward in 1872. Ten years later, Thomas Edison introduced the Age of Electricity by turning on the Pearl Street power station, but the productivity revolution in manufacturing caused by electrification only came in the 1930s. Similarly, it took a generation to get from the Otto internal combustion engine, invented in 1876, to Henry Ford’s Model T in 1908, and from Jack Kilby’s integrated circuit (1958) to the IBM PC (1981). The first demonstration of the proto-internet was in 1972: Amazon and Google were founded in 1994 and 1998, respectively.

Where does the AI bubble fit on this spectrum? While much of the investment so far has come from Big Tech’s vast cash reserves and continued cash flow, signs of leverage are beginning to emerge. For example, Oracle, a late entrant to the race, is compensating for its relatively limited liquidity with a debt package of about $38 billion.

And that may be only the beginning. OpenAI has announced plans to invest at least $1 trillion over the next five years. Given that spending of this scale will inevitably require large-scale borrowing, LLMs have a narrow window to prove their economic value and justify such extraordinary levels of investment.

Early studies offered reason for optimism. Research by Stanford’s Erik Brynjolfsson and MIT’s Danielle Li and Lindsey Raymond, examining the introduction of generative AI in customer-service centers, found that AI assistance increased worker productivity by 15%. The biggest gains were among less experienced employees, whose productivity rose by more than 30%.

Brynjolfsson and his co-authors also observed that employees who followed AI recommendations became more efficient over time, and that exposure to AI tools led to lasting skill improvements. Moreover, customers treated AI-assisted agents more positively, showing higher satisfaction and making fewer requests to speak with a supervisor.

The broader picture, however, appears less encouraging.recent survey by MIT’s Project NANDA found that 95% of private-sector generative AI pilot projects are failing. Although less rigorous than Brynjolfsson’s peer-reviewed study, the survey suggests that most corporate experiments with generative AI have fallen short of expectations. The researchers attributed these failures to a “learning gap” between the few firms that obtained expert help in tailoring applications to practical business needs – chiefly back-office administrative tasks – and those that tried to develop in-house systems for outward-facing functions such as sales and marketing.

The Limits of Generative AI

The main challenge facing generative AI users stems from the nature of the technology itself. By design, GenAI systems transform their training data – text, images, and speech – into numerical vectors which, in turn, are analyzed to predict the next token: syllable, pixel, or sound. Since they are essentially probabilistic prediction engines, they inevitably make random errors.

Earlier this year, the late Brian Cantwell Smith, former chief scientist at Xerox’s legendary Palo Alto Research Center, succinctly described the problem. As quoted to me by University of Edinburgh Professor Henry Thompson, Smith observed: “It’s not good that [ChatGPT] says things that are wrong, but what is really, irremediably bad is that it has no idea that there is a world about which it is mistaken.”

The inevitable result is errors of different sorts, the most damaging of which are “hallucinations” – statements that sound plausible but describe things that don’t actually exist. This is where context becomes critical: in business settings, tolerance for error is already low and approaches zero when the stakes are high.

Code generation is a prime example. Software used in financially or operationally sensitive environments must be rigorously tested, edited, and debugged. A junior programmer equipped with generative AI can produce code with remarkable speed. But that output still requires careful review by senior engineers. As numerous anecdotes circulating online suggest, any productivity gained at the front end can disappear once the resources needed for testing and oversight are taken into account. The Bulwark’s Jonathan Last put it well:

“AI is like Chinese machine production. It can create good outputs at an incredibly cheap price (measuring here in the cost of human time). Which means that AI – as it exists today – is a useful tool, but only for tasks that have a high tolerance for errors … if I asked ChatGPT to research a topic for me and I incorporated that research into a piece I was writing and it was only 90 percent correct, then we have a problem. Because my written product has a low tolerance for errors.”

In her new book The Measure of Progress, University of Cambridge economist Diane Coyle highlights another major concern: AI’s opacity. “When it comes to AI,” she recently wrote, “some of the most basic facts are missing or incomplete. For example, how many companies are using generative AI, and in which sectors? What are they using it for? How are AI tools being applied in areas such as marketing, logistics, or customer service? Which firms are deploying AI agents, and who is actually using them?”

The Inevitable Reckoning

This brings us to the central question: What is the value-creating potential of LLMs? Their insatiable appetite for computing power and electricity, together with their dependence on costly oversight and error correction, makes profitability uncertain. Will business customers generate enough profitable revenue to justify the required investment in infrastructure and human support? And if several LLMs perform at roughly the same level, will their outputs become commodified, reducing token production to a low-margin business?

From railroads to electrification to digital platforms, massive upfront investment has always been required to deliver the first unit of service, while the marginal cost of each additional unit rapidly declined, often falling below the average cost needed to recover the initial investment. Under competitive conditions, prices tend to gravitate toward marginal cost, leaving all competitors operating at a loss. The result, time and again, has been regulated monopolies, cartels, or other “conspiracies in restraint of trade,” to borrow the language of the Sherman Antitrust Act.

There are two distinct alternatives to enterprise-level LLM deployment. One lies in developing small language models – systems trained on carefully curated datasets for specific, well-defined tasks. Large institutions, such as JPMorgan or government agencies, could build their own vertical applications, tailored to their needs, thereby reducing the risk of hallucinations and lowering oversight costs.

The other alternative is the consumer market, where AI providers compete for attention and advertising revenue with the established social-media platforms. In this domain, where value is often measured in entertainment and engagement, anything goes. ChatGPT reportedly has 800 million “weekly active users” – twice as many as it had in February. OpenAI appears poised to follow up with an LLM-augmented web browser, ChatGPT Atlas.

But given that Google’s and Apple’s browsers are free and already integrate AI assistants, it is unclear whether OpenAI can sustain a viable subscription or pay-per-token revenue model that justifies its massive investments. Various estimates suggest that only about 11 million users – roughly 1.5% of the total – currently pay for ChatGPT in any form. So, consumer-focused LLMs may be condemned to bid for advertising revenue in an already-mature market.

The outcome of this ongoing horse race is impossible to call. Will LLMs eventually generate positive cash flow and cover the energy costs of operating them at scale? Or will the still-nascent AI industry fragment into a patchwork of specialized, niche providers while the largest companies compete with established social-media platforms, including those owned by their corporate investors? As and when markets recognize that the industry is splintering rather than consolidating, the AI bubble will be over.

Ironically, an earlier reckoning might benefit the broader ecosystem, though it would be painful for those who bought in at the peak. Such a deflation could prevent many of today’s ambitious data-center projects from becoming stranded assets, akin to the unused railroad tracks and dark fibers left behind by past bubbles. In financial terms, it would also preempt a wave of high-risk borrowing that might end in yet another leveraged bubble and crash.

Most likely, a truly productive bubble will emerge only years after today’s speculative frenzy has cooled. As the Gartner Hype Cycle makes clear, a “trough of disillusionment” precedes the “plateau of productivity.” Timing may not be everything in life, but for investment returns it pretty well is.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 14:05

China-U.S. Rare Earth Deal "May Have Hit A Snag" As Beijing Reportedly Unlikely To Fully Reverse Restrictions

Zero Hedge -

China-U.S. Rare Earth Deal "May Have Hit A Snag" As Beijing Reportedly Unlikely To Fully Reverse Restrictions

China is developing a new rare earth licensing system that could speed up exports, though it’s unlikely to fully reverse restrictions as hoped by Washington, according to industry sources cited by Reuters on Friday. It's a headline that furthers growing doubts about China's trade deal with the U.S. that we have been writing about for days. 

Friday it was reported that the Ministry of Commerce has told some exporters they will eventually be able to apply for streamlined, one-year permits allowing higher export volumes. Companies are preparing documentation, but officials say the process could take months, and many firms have yet to receive formal notice.

Reuters writes that the new regime would simplify approvals compared to the rules introduced in April and expanded in October, which require a license for each shipment and have caused significant delays and shortages. Beijing’s curbs—covering over 90% of the world’s processed rare earths and magnets—have become a key point of leverage in its trade dispute with Washington.

Despite a recent U.S.-China agreement pausing some restrictions for a year, insiders say broader export controls remain in place. General licenses are expected to be harder to obtain for buyers linked to defense or sensitive sectors. Since April, EU firms have filed roughly 2,000 applications, with just over half approved.

Yesterday, Nikkei reported that not only is China making inroads with new export controls, but the question over the old ones still hasn't been accurately resolved.

Recall, we had speculated about how close the deal could be to collapse as recently as yesterday, and earlier this week we said that it felt like "'the cracks in this latest trade deal are already starting to show, whether it is Beijing ordering Trump what he can't talk about, or quietly ring-fencing its domestic data center by banning US Al chips" and further said that "while China granted Trump a 1 year reprieve on rare earths, it is quietly tightening the export noose on other, just as important minerals. According to the Global Times, China has introduced new export controls on silver, antimony, and tungsten."

We concluded that "the game of export whack-a-mole in the second World Trade War continues: today the US is getting rare earths (at least until Trump has another Truth Social meltdown), but just got stopped out on other, just as important materials. This export control rotation will continue until the day the US is self-sufficient, which however due to the abovementioned environmental limitations, will take a very long time..."

Rabobank added to the skepticism Friday morning: "The China-US deal to ease rare-earth export controls for a year may have hit a snag. China’s regional authorities have reportedly said export controls from April remain in place so there is still a need for special export licenses and intrusive questions."

They continued: "That’s a week into the one-year Trump-Xi deal. The US also added silver and copper to its critical minerals list, as Trump hosted Central Asian leaders, aiming for their rare earths, as Japan and the US announced they would mine deep-sea rare earths together. Does any of this read like they expect the deal to hold long-term?"

"The Financial Times reported recent US trade deals with ASEAN countries contain ‘poison pills’ which mean they can be cancelled by the White House if any action signatories take with China threatens “essential US interests” or “poses a material threat” to it. Do you think this kind of logic will only apply to those particular counterparties? No: it will apply to everyone who struck a deal," the note continued. 

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 13:45

Top Trump Officials Moved Into Military Housing Due To Left-Wing Political Threats

Zero Hedge -

Top Trump Officials Moved Into Military Housing Due To Left-Wing Political Threats

Via American Greatness,

A number of top officials in President Donald Trump’s administration are being housed, along with their families, on military bases, due to increasing threats of left-wing political violence.

High profile members of the Trump team, including Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller have all been moved into military housing typically reserved for senior officers.

According to a report from The Atlantic, members of Trump’s cabinet have faced growing concerns about political violence after many of them have been confronted at their private residences by protestors.

In one instance, Stephen Miller’s wife Katie told Fox News how she was confronted by a woman who allegedly told her, “I’m watching you,” as she walked out her front door the day after Charlie Kirk’s assassination.

Katie Miller, in a subsequent appearance on Fox News noted that while the protestors she has encountered weren’t violent, they were actively inciting the kind of violence that led to Kirk’s assassination.

The Millers listed their Arlington, Virginia home for sale earlier this month after continued protests, including wanted posters with their home address and chalked messages were scrawled on the sidewalk in front of their home.

In August, the Washington Post reported that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem had been living, free-of-charge, on a military base in the D.C. area, for her own safety.

According to a spokesperson for Noem, the move was necessary because Noem was no longer able to safely live in her own apartment after being “horribly doxxed and targeted.”

The Atlantic  report says that moves like this aren’t without precedent, as national security leaders have previously been allowed to rent homes on base “for security or convenience.”

However, in the wake of two failed assassination attempts on Trump, the Charlie Kirk assassination and increasingly violent clashes between left-wing protestors and federal immigration agents, the dangers associated with political polarization appear to be growing.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 13:25

"All Wars Are Based On Lies"; Renowned WWII Historian Faces Official Narrative Assault

Zero Hedge -

"All Wars Are Based On Lies"; Renowned WWII Historian Faces Official Narrative Assault

Mainstream historian Jim Holland and Libertarian Institute editor Keith Knight clashed over one of history’s most sacred narratives — the justification for America’s entry into World War II. Moderated by Mario Nawfal, the discussion cut through decades of conventional wisdom to ask uncomfortable questions like whether Roosevelt’s administration provoked Japan into attacking Pearl Harbor or whether Winston Churchill ought to be lionized as a great hero.

Did the war, which killed over 70 million people, actually preserve “the west” and could the death have been avoided by diplomatic means? Take a look at the highlights below, but we encourage listening to the full debate so you can decide whether the “good war” was truly good.

“Provoked Into War”: Knight’s Case Against The Pearl Harbor Narrative

“The attack on Hawaii… was intentionally provoked,” argued Knight, “so Roosevelt could engage in diversionary foreign policy after his New Deal led to the double-dip recession of 1937.”

He cited Navy Captain Arthur McCollum’s October 7, 1940 memo outlining “eight ways the United States can provoke Japan,” ending with the line: “If by this means Japan could be led to commit an overt act of war, so much the better.”

“Roosevelt supported the policy of provoking the Axis powers,” Knight continued, pointing to a New York Times article from January 2, 1972, “War Entry Plans Laid to Roosevelt,” describing Roosevelt and Churchill’s 1941 meeting. Churchill admitted Roosevelt “would wage war, but not declare it… everything was to be done to force an incident.”

Knight added: “On November 25, 1941, Secretary of War Henry Stimson wrote in his diary, ‘The question was how we should maneuver them into the position of firing the first shot without allowing too much danger to ourselves.’”

“War with Japan was not inevitable,” he said, “but an intentional policy pursued by the Roosevelt administration.”

Citing Robert McNamara’s The Fog of War, Knight quoted: “Proportionality should be a guideline in war. Killing 50% to 90% of the people of 67 Japanese cities and then bombing them with two nuclear bombs is not proportional.” McNamara recalled, “In that single night, we burned to death 100,000 Japanese civilians in Tokyo.”

Knight concluded, “The unconditional surrender of Japan destroyed America’s bulwark against Mao’s China and opened power vacuums in Korea and Vietnam—leading to millions of deaths and communist victories in both.”

Pearl Harbor, he said, “was not the price of peace—it was the product of provocation.”

Conscription: Is It Moral?

To the Libertarian Knight, compulsory military service is outright immoral. “Conscription is an indicator that the people you’re claiming to represent don’t actually think something is worth fighting for.”

Holland pushed back, arguing that, during WWII, while popular opposition to war was strong, “there is a balance to strike.” “If you give too much fuel to this bully [Hitler], he’s only going to get stronger,” he said. “There’s a point where the political metric is that you’ve got to come and stand up to this.”

“Conscription comes in for the first time ever in peacetime in March 1939. Chamberlain, who is the prime minister—not Churchill—is really nervous about suggesting conscription, and there is not a public outcry at all.” Instead, Holland said, “There is an acceptance amongst the British public that this is something that needs to happen.”

“The United States goes from very, very strongly isolationist to more and more in favor of massive rearming in the summer of 1940,” Holland noted. “When conscription comes in… there’s barely a flutter of eyelids.”

While acknowledging Knight’s moral ideal, Holland insisted that liberty itself was on the line. “The whole point about the Second World War,” he said, “is that democratic nations are standing up against authoritarianism and the taking away of personal freedoms. That’s the whole point of Nazism… the state runs everything… personal freedoms are taken away.”

Check out the full debate below:

 

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 13:05

Maryland Sues Trump Administration Over FBI Headquarters Relocation

Zero Hedge -

Maryland Sues Trump Administration Over FBI Headquarters Relocation

Authored by Kimberley Hayek via The Epoch Times,

Maryland officials filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration on Thursday for canceling the previously approved construction of a new FBI headquarters northeast of the nation’s capital, arguing the action goes against federal law and congressional directives.

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, along with other state leaders, lambasted the Trump administration’s plan to move the FBI’s headquarters several blocks from its present-day location in Washington to the Ronald Reagan Building complex, rather than to Greenbelt, Maryland. The Biden administration had selected Greenbelt as the site for the new FBI building after planning the move for years.

Moore, a Democrat, told a news conference that the current FBI building is “too old, too small, and too exposed.” He said it “lacks the modern security provisions and protections that the bureau needs in 2025.”

Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown, a Democrat, said the Trump administration’s blocking of the agreed-upon plan, which entailed years of planning by Congress, is illegal.

“What we’re really seeing is an administration that doesn’t like the decision Congress made, so they’re trying to undo it without going back to Congress,” Brown said.

“That violates federal law. It violates congressional directives. It harms Marylanders who were promised jobs and opportunities. That’s why we took action.”

Brown accused the Trump administration of  “attempting to unlawfully reprogram and transfer over $1 billion in funds that Congress designated specifically for the Greenbelt project.”

The federal lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland, requests the court to “stop the unlawful selection of the Reagan Building, prevent the diversion of congressionally appropriated funds and ensure the Trump administration follows the law,” according to Brown.

Prince George’s County Executive Aisha Braveboy said building the headquarters in Greenbelt would be the largest economic development project in the history of the county, creating more than 7,500 jobs and adding about $4 billion in economic benefit to the county and the state.

Maryland and Virginia had originally competed for the new location.

‘Cost-Effective’ Solution

FBI Director Kash Patel has said the Reagan Building offers a faster, more cost-effective solution, while remaining near the Department of Justice and other national security agencies.

“This is a historic moment for the FBI,” FBI Director Kash Patel said in a statement in July.

“Moving to the Ronald Reagan Building is the most cost-effective and resource-efficient way to carry out our mission to protect the American people and uphold the Constitution.”

Patel announced in May that the FBI was leaving its Washington headquarters, the J. Edgar Hoover Building, for safety reasons, and that 1,500 FBI employees would be sent across the United States.

The FBI and General Services Administration released a joint statement in July that relocating the FBI headquarters a few blocks away to an existing property would eliminate the need to construct a brand-new building, which they argued would have taken years and been expensive for taxpayers.

The Reagan Building houses U.S. Customs and Border Protection and other tenants.

The Senate Appropriations Committee on July 10 voted to halt the FBI’s planned move to the Ronald Reagan building, but reversed its decision a week later.

Tyler Durden Fri, 11/07/2025 - 12:40

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