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  • Commentary: Racist rhetoric from on high has hit a fever pitch. The BAFTA slur only adds to the hurt

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    Remember when racists were afraid to voice their beliefs in public for fear of being labeled “racists”? I know, it’s hard to think back that far, before 2016 when Fox News gave Tucker Carlson his own prime-time show and “Execute the [Now-Exonerated] Central Park Five” Donald Trump won the election.

    We’ve slipped so far. Now barely a day goes by without a major media platform giving equal time to Jim Crow-era ideals (because there are always two sides), a member of Congress explaining away their leader’s stunningly bigoted Truth Social post, or a major cultural institution normalizing a word that should never be normalized because they failed to see it as offensive.

    This week, the N-word was shouted at “Sinners” actors Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo as they presented the honor for visual effects during the BAFTA Awards ceremony in London. The slur was involuntarily blurted by John Davidson, whose life experience dealing with Tourette syndrome inspired the film “I Swear.” The situation was painful and humiliating, but given the circumstances, the offensive nature of the incident could have been handled with common sense and empathy. Yet the British Broadcast Co. deployed none of that.

    Instead, the BBC failed to remove or bleep the slur from its initial broadcast, even though it had a two-hour delay before the show aired on BBC One in the U.K. Even after the outcry over the inclusion of the N-word in its initial broadcast, the network waited almost 15 hours before removing the slur from BBC’s iPlayer streaming service.

    In a statement, the BBC said that the slur was “aired in error” and that it would “never have knowingly allowed this to be broadcast.” Yet the BBC did catch and remove a remark by “My Father’s Shadow” director Akinola Davies Jr. that it found to be offensive. His call to “free Palestine” was deleted from the recording before the show aired. #BBCPriorities.

    And because everything must be swept up, co-opted and expanded upon by AI, the repeating of the offensive word wasn’t just confined to the BBC’s airing of the award show. Google apologized Tuesday after a computer-generated news alert about BAFTA’s racial slur incident included the word. Its notification alert, linked to an article from the Hollywood Reporter, invited readers to “see more,” leading them to additional context that included the slur.

    In a statement, Davidson said he was “deeply mortified if anyone considers my involuntary tics to be intentional or to carry any meaning.” He removed himself from the audience during Sunday’s show to avoid another potential incident.

    There’s no reason why we can’t acknowledge Davidson’s disability while also recognizing the harm that the word caused. He sees it, of course. The aforementioned film inspired by his life shows what it’s like to live with involuntary vocal tics that belie your own beliefs or intentions.

    Lindo and Jordan’s Oscar-nominated film, “Sinners,” depicts another sort of struggle: Black people trying to survive, and daring to thrive, in Jim Crow-era Mississippi. White people hurl the N-word at them daily, accompanied by varying degrees of hatred, disgust and violence. The film reinforces a basic truth, that the word isn’t just a word. It’s a holdover from the Antebellum South, used to demean and dehumanize, to shackle self-determination, to keep Black folks down. How anyone in the BBC edit bay, or otherwise, could miss such a hateful, loaded slur is frankly unbelievable.

    BAFTA apologized for putting guests in a “very difficult situation” and thanked Jordan and Lindo for their “incredible dignity and professionalism.” It wasn’t a great response. The actors were humiliated on a public stage, in front of their peers, then thanked for keeping their cool, as if it was up to them to save the day — when they were the targets of the slur. As a colleague of mine said, “It’s always ‘be professional,’ and ‘act with dignity and grace,’ when you just want to flip a table.”

    The BAFTA slur heard round the world, or at least on both sides of the Atlantic, was not an intentionally deployed hate bomb. But it still stings, especially here in the United States, as racist rhetoric from on high has hit a fever pitch.

    Trump earlier this month posted a video on Truth Social depicting former President Obama and wife Michelle Obama as apes. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt initially defended the post, claiming it was part of a longer video that portrayed Trump as “King of the Jungle” and Democrats as characters from “The Lion King.” She told critics to “stop the fake outrage.” The video was deleted 12 hours after it was posted, and the White House blamed a staffer for “erroneously” making the post. Trump never apologized, claiming he “didn’t see” the portion of the video’s racist imagery. “No, I didn’t make a mistake,” he said.

    MAGA’s reaction to Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny performing the Super Bowl LX halftime show added to the xenophobic pile-on, from Trump calling the selection of the Spanish-language rapper and singer a “terrible choice” for the show and saying “all it does is sow hatred,” to counterprogramming for conservatives by Turning Point USA pointedly called the “All-American Halftime Show.” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and House Speaker Mike Johnson rallied behind the alternative to Bad Bunny.

    Today’s onslaught of racist ideology isn’t just confined to rhetoric. ICE’s immigration sweeps of American streets have targeted people who look like immigrants, and the administration is looking at ways to whitewash the horrors of slavery by changing how Black history is presented at public sites and museums. (Trump says historical sites focus too much on slavery instead of the “success” of the country.)

    There’s plenty of pushback, but there’s also plenty of capitulation from media outlets who fear being sued (or worse) by a weaponized FCC.

    Davidson now says he intends to apologize directly to Jordan and Lindo for his BAFTA Awards outburst. But he’s shouldering a burden that all the entities involved should claim. There’s no scapegoat here, just the daily erosion of civility and the undermining of hard-fought freedoms.

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    Lorraine Ali

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  • Cellebrite cut off Serbia citing abuse of its phone unlocking tools. Why not others? | TechCrunch

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    Last year, the phone hacking tool maker Cellebrite announced it had suspended Serbian police as customers, after human rights researchers alleged local police and intelligence agencies used its tools to hack into the phones of a journalist and an activist, and plant spyware. 

    This was a rare example of Cellebrite publicly cutting off a customer following documented allegations of abuse, citing Amnesty International’s technical report for its decision. 

    But following recent similar accusations of abuse in Jordan and Kenya, the Israeli-headquartered company responded by dismissing the allegations and declining to commit to investigating them. It’s unclear why Cellebrite has changed its approach, which appears contrary to its previous actions.

    On Tuesday, researchers at The University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab published a report alleging the Kenyan government used Cellebrite’s tools to unlock the phone of Boniface Mwangi, a local activist and politician, while he was in police custody. In another report from January, the Citizen Lab accused the Jordanian government of breaking into the phones of several local activists and protesters using Cellebrite’s tools. 

    In both investigations, the Citizen Lab, an organization that has investigated abuses of spyware and hacking technologies around the world, based their conclusions on finding traces of a specific application linked to Cellebrite on the victims’ phones. 

    The researchers said that those traces are a “high confidence” signal that someone used Cellebrite’s unlocking tools on the phones in question, because the same application had been previously found on VirusTotal, a malware repository, and was signed with digital certificates owned by Cellebrite.  

    Other researchers have also linked the same application to Cellebrite.  

    “We do not respond to speculation and encourage any organization with specific, evidence-based concerns to share them with us directly so we can act on them,” Victor Cooper, a spokesperson for Cellebrite, told TechCrunch in an email. 

    When asked why Cellebrite is acting differently from the Serbia case, Cooper said “the two situations are incomparable,” and that, “high confidence is not direct evidence.”

    Cooper did not respond to multiple follow-up emails asking if Cellebrite would investigate the Citizen Lab’s latest report, and what, if any, differences there are with its case in Serbia.

    Contact Us

    Do you have more information about Cellebrite, or other similar companies? From a non-work device, you can contact Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai securely on Signal at +1 917 257 1382, or via Telegram, Keybase and Wire @lorenzofb, or by email.

    In both its Kenya and Jordan investigations, the Citizen Lab reached out to Cellebrite in advance of publishing the reports to provide the company with a right to respond. 

    In response to the Jordan report, Cellebrite said that “any substantiated use of our tools in violation of human rights or local law will result in immediate disablement,” but did not commit to investigating the case and declined to disclose specific information about customers. 

    For the Kenya report, however, Cellebrite acknowledged receipt of Citizen Lab’s inquiry but did not comment, according to John Scott-Railton, one of the Citizen Lab researchers who worked on the Cellebrite investigations. 

    “We urge Cellebrite to release the specific criteria they used to approve sales to Kenyan authorities, and disclose how many licenses have been revoked in the past,” Scott-Railton told TechCrunch. “If Cellebrite is serious about their rigorous vetting, they should have no problem making it public.”

    Following previous reports of abuse, Cellebrite, which claims to have more than 7,000 law enforcement customers around the world, cut off relationships with Bangladesh and Myanmar, as well as Russia and Belarus during 2021. Cellebrite previously said it stopped selling to Hong Kong and China following U.S. government regulations restricting the export of sensitive technologies to the country. Local activists in Hong Kong had accused the authorities of using Cellebrite to unlock protesters’ phones.

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    Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai

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  • Man Boarded Air France Flight Outta Phoenix With Phony Ticket, 7 Driver’s Licenses & 20 Credit Cards: Cops – Perez Hilton

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    According to federal authorities, a man allegedly managed to slip through security at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport and board an international flight to Paris without a valid ticket, setting off a chain of events that raised serious questions about airport safety.

    The incident unfolded on Sunday, when Qais Ahmad Tillawi allegedly showed up at the airport claiming he had a boarding pass for Air France Flight 69. The plane was scheduled to depart for Paris around 3:50 p.m. that day, and at first glance, nothing seemed wildly out of place. But behind the scenes, red flags were already stacking up.

    Related: Lamar Odom Arrested For DUI — Details

    An FBI affidavit uncovered by multiple media outlets said Tillawi purchased a boarding pass online around 2:00 p.m. and checked in just a couple minutes later, only for the airline to cancel the pass at 2:19 p.m. due to what they described as an “unauthorized credit card.”

    What happened next is deeply unsettling. Around 2:37 p.m., Tillawi allegedly arrived at the airport in a rental car, left it abandoned at the curb, tossed two (?!) jackets into a trash can, and headed straight for the security checkpoint at TSA. Despite the canceled ticket, he allegedly made it through security and into the sterile area of the airport just before 3:00 p.m. Yes, really.

    By the time he reached the gate, at least one customer reportedly noticed something was off and described his behavior as suspicious, per People. Still, he somehow made it onto the jet bridge. When an Air France employee tried to verify his boarding credentials, the system flagged his pass as invalid. But Tillawi allegedly refused to hand over his passport or any other documents, showing it only from a distance and then holding it unnecessarily close to the agent’s face before being waved through.

    Somehow, he got on the plane — and once there, things quickly escalated. Instead of taking a seat, Tillawi allegedly paced through the economy cabin and refused to speak with flight attendants or the captain. He also would not provide his name.

    According to the affidavit:

    “Out of concern for the aircraft and the passengers, the captain ordered Tillawi to disembark the aircraft. Tillawi refused, without a verbal response, and typed on his phone, ‘Send the USA marshal.’”

    At that point, the captain made the call to involve law enforcement. Passengers were de-boarded, and Phoenix cops eventually escorted Tillawi off the aircraft. The FBI then took over the investigation.

    What authorities allegedly found at that point only added to the alarm. Agents say Tillawi was carrying around 20 credit cards, seven driver’s licenses from California and Arizona, a US passport, a Jordanian passport, a Jordanian military service book, and what appeared to be fake employment badges from major institutions including Deloitte, IBM, and the US Department of Veterans Affairs.

    Sorry, WHAT?!

    Tillawi now faces federal charges for interfering with a flight crew and entering a secured airport area without authorization.

    Related: Man Arrested In Investigation Into Woman’s Death Snaps Mugshot In UNBELIEVABLE Hoodie

    But the story doesn’t end there. According to the affidavit, agents also spoke with his brother, who claimed Tillawi had attended Arizona State University, spoke fluent English, and had been fired from PricewaterhouseCoopers back in 2024.

    The brother also alleged Tillawi struggles with drug addiction and has been diagnosed with psychosis — and that he was previously detained in Dubai for suspicious behavior and temporarily committed for mental health treatment. Wow.

    Let’s just hope he gets the help he needs — and that cops get to the bottom of whatever the heck is going on.

    [Image via MEGA/WENN]

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    Perez Hilton

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  • ‘I will not be intimidated’: Former special counsel Jack Smith defends Trump investigation

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    Former special counsel Jack Smith on Thursday defended his findings that President Trump “willfully broke the law” in his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, telling lawmakers that Republican efforts to discredit the probe are “false and misleading.”

    “No one should be above the law in our country, and the law required that [Trump] be held to account. So that is what I did,” Smith said during a frequently heated five-hour hearing before the House Judiciary Committee.

    Smith appeared at the request of Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), who accused him of pursuing a politically driven investigation and “muzzling a candidate for a high office.”

    “It was always about politics and to get President Trump, they were willing to do just about anything,” Jordan said.

    Jordan called investigations into the Jan. 6 insurrection “staged and choreographed,” and said Smith would have “blown a hole in the 1st Amendment” if his charges against Trump had been allowed to proceed.

    Trump has repeatedly called for Smith to face prosecution over the probe, demanding he be disbarred and suggesting that Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi look into his conduct.

    “I believe they will do everything in their power to [indict me] because they have been ordered to do so by the president,” Smith said at the hearing.

    Smith’s 2023 investigation found that following Joe Biden’s 2020 victory, Trump led a months-long disinformation campaign to discredit the results, evidenced by audio from a call in which he pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find 11,780 votes.”

    Trump’s attempt to sow election discord culminated in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol insurrection, Smith said. The president directed rioters to halt the certification of the election results, he added.

    In closed-door testimony to the committee last month, Smith said the Department of Justice had built a strong base of evidence of Trump’s criminal schemes to overturn the election.

    A separate case alleged that the president unlawfully kept classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago club after the loss.

    Trump was indicted in the documents case in June 2023, and later for the alleged election conspiracy and fraud claims. Both cases were abandoned after his victory in the 2024 election on the basis of presidential immunity.

    In his opening remarks, Smith reiterated his findings.

    “President Trump was charged because the evidence established that he willfully broke the law, the very laws he took an oath to uphold,” he said. “Rather than accept his defeat, President Trump engaged in a criminal scheme to overturn the results and prevent the lawful transfer of power.”

    Republicans asserted that Justice Department subpoenas of phone records were an abuse of prosecutorial power and constituted surveillance of top government officials.

    Smith replied that obtaining such data was “common” in conspiracy investigations and that the records showed call dates and times — not content — encompassing the days around Jan. 6, 2021.

    Jordan questioned the special counsel’s judgment in personnel selections, which included Department of Justice investigators who probed the Trump campaign over alleged collusion with Russia in the 2016 presidential election.

    “Democrats have been going after President Trump for 10 years — a decade — and we should never forget what they’ve done,” he said.

    Smith, who has since left the Justice Department to open a private firm with his former deputies, was quick to defend the integrity of his team, adding that Trump has since sought to seek revenge against career prosecutors, FBI agents and support staff for their involvement in the cases.

    “Those dedicated public servants are the best of us,” he said. “My fear is that we have seen the rule of law function in our country for so long that many of us have come to take it for granted.”

    The hearing routinely devolved into disputes between party adversaries, with Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Vista) lodging scathing accusations against Smith, butting heads with Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) over procedure and yielding his time “in disgust” of the witness.

    GOP committee members attempted to poke holes in Smith’s findings about the events of Jan. 6. Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) accused Republicans on the committee of trying to “rewrite the history” of Jan. 6.

    Midway through the hearing, Trump called Smith a “deranged animal” in a Truth Social post where he once again suggested his Department of Justice investigate the former special counsel.

    “I will not be intimidated,” Smith said. “We followed the facts and we followed the law. That process resulted in proof beyond a reasonable doubt that he committed serious crimes. I’m not going to pretend that didn’t happen because he threatened me.”

    The hearing came as Trump continues to repeat false claims that he had won in 2020.

    “It was a rigged election. Everybody knows that now. And by the way, numbers are coming out that show it even more plainly,” Trump said Tuesday at a White House news briefing.

    In an address to a global audience in Davos, Switzerland, the following day, he said that “people will soon be prosecuted for what they did.”

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    Gavin J. Quinton

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  • Millbrook among several Triangle teams to win in NC high school football playoffs

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    Millbrook defensive lineman Markez Wilbert (33) reacts after his sacking of Jordan quarterback Landon Melton (2) during the second half. The Millbrook Wildcats and the Jordan Falcons met in the third round of the NCHSAA 8A football playoffs in Raleigh, N.C. on November 21, 2025.

    Millbrook defensive lineman Markez Wilbert (33) reacts after his sacking of Jordan quarterback Landon Melton (2) during the second half. The Millbrook Wildcats and the Jordan Falcons met in the third round of the NCHSAA 8A football playoffs in Raleigh, N.C. on November 21, 2025.

    Even the flashiest, highest-scoring teams eventually find themselves relying more heavily on defense and the run game the deeper into the playoffs they trudge.

    When a team already relies on those two elements for efficiency, though, and especially on a damp, drizzly night, the odds are forever in your favor.

    Millbrook has been as defensively solid as any team in North Carolina this season, and on a dank fall night on which the Wildcats’ offense took a while to find its traction, the defense again came through. The offense eventually also found its footing as No. 2 Millbrook dispatched No. 3 Jordan, 27-10, in the NCHSAA 8A regional semifinal round in Raleigh on Friday.

    Millbrook running back Santonis Wright (23) runs for yardage against Jordan defensive back Ezkiel Stokes (4) during the first half. The Millbrook Wildcats and the Jordan Falcons met in the third round of the NCHSAA 8A football playoffs in Raleigh, N.C. on November 21, 2025.
    Millbrook running back Santonis Wright (23) runs for yardage against Jordan defensive back Ezkiel Stokes (4) during the first half. The Millbrook Wildcats and the Jordan Falcons met in the third round of the NCHSAA 8A football playoffs in Raleigh, N.C. on November 21, 2025. Steven Worthy

    The win sends Millbrook, a team chock-full of junior contributors on both side of the ball, to the East region final against top-seeded Hoggard of Wilmington, which trounced No. 5 Rolesville, 40-14, on Friday.

    Asher Holland started the scoring for the visiting Falcons, booting a 45-yard field goal in the opening quarter. It turned out to be Jordan’s only lead of the game, though the Falcons held onto it for a while.

    Hayes Brawner broke through for Millbrook later in the second quarter, returning a fumble 18 yards for a score. The extra point made it 7-3, Wildcats.

    Millbrook's Hayes Brawner (18) celebrates his touchdown with Malachi Thomas (6) during the first half against Durham Jordan. The Millbrook Wildcats and the Jordan Falcons met in the third round of the NCHSAA 8A football playoffs in Raleigh, N.C. on November 21, 2025.
    Millbrook’s Hayes Brawner (18) celebrates his touchdown with Malachi Thomas (6) during the first half against Durham Jordan. The Millbrook Wildcats and the Jordan Falcons met in the third round of the NCHSAA 8A football playoffs in Raleigh, N.C. on November 21, 2025. Steven Worthy

    Millbrook would have been content to run into halftime with a lead on the cold and drizzly night, but the defense wasn’t done shining. The Wildcats’ Marcus Caldwell nabbed an interception in their own zone, and following a long pass from Bryson Gray to Malachi Thomas, Santonis Wright scampered into the end zone for 10 yards and another Millbrook touchdown.

    The Gray-to-Thomas connection worked its magic again in the final minute of the half, giving the home-standing Wildcats a 21-3 advantage at the break.

    A heavy dose of Wright to start the third quarter yielded another score for Millbrook, which effectively put the game away on the first drive of the second half.

    Jordan added its lone touchdown early in the fourth quarter when Landon Melton found Steve Esdaille in the end zone. Holland’s extra point pulled the Falcons to within 17 at 27-10.

    More triangle scores

    8A

    No. 1 Hoggard 40, No 5 Rolesville 14

    7A

    No. 1 Cardinal Gibbons 40, No. 8 Hillside 19

    No. 4 Garner 63, No. 5 Cape Fear 26

    No. 3 Clayton 47, DH Conley 7

    No. 7 Southeast Raleigh 49, No. 2 Cleveland 37

    6A

    No. 3 Middle Creek 31, No. 6 Southern Alamance 30

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    Staff Report

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  • Opinion | A Mamdani Mayoralty Threatens New York’s Jews

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    By propagating lies about ‘occupation,’ ‘apartheid’ and ‘genocide,’ he helps promote antisemitism.

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    Elisha Wiesel

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  • US Health Secretary Kennedy Speeds Autism Drug With GSK Help

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    By Patrick Wingrove, Maggie Fick and Julie Steenhuysen

    (Reuters) -U.S. Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. could deliver a policy win for the Trump administration in just a few months after the Food and Drug Administration enlisted GSK to help it fast-track approval of a decades-old drug to treat an autism-related disorder.

    The FDA’s unusual move will allow it to bypass a lengthy label update for generic versions of the drug, leucovorin, or new clinical trials, a tactic academics, lawyers and doctors questioned.

    A GSK spokesperson told Reuters it plans to complete the new use application for the branded version of leucovorin “as quickly as possible.”

    Once the British drugmaker does that work, the FDA would normally take about four to six months but could process the request even faster, said Giuseppe Randazzo of the Association for Accessible Medicines, a generic medicines lobby group.

    The accelerated process will give doctors additional justification to prescribe the drug for cerebral folate deficiency, a metabolic disorder that can lead to a range of neurological symptoms including some associated with autism, delivering on Kennedy’s promise to President Donald Trump and the “Make America Healthy Again” movement with which he is aligned.

    Without robust evidence, the label change represents at most a hollow bureaucratic victory, said Ameet Sarpatwari, a pharmaceutical policy researcher at Harvard Medical School.

    However, the drug, which is used to mitigate toxic effects of certain cancer treatments and sells for $34.14 for a bottle of 30 high-dose pills on Cost Plus Drugs, would more likely be covered for the condition by insurance plans with the label change. 

    An HHS spokesperson said the evidence clearly supports leucovorin’s ability to address the causes of cerebral folate deficiency and improve patient outcomes.

    DEMAND RISES AFTER TRUMP PROMOTES DRUG

    Demand for the drug has increased, first after a February CBS story about its use in a nonverbal five-year-old boy, and more recently after Trump promoted its use.

    “My nurses have been saying the phone is ringing off the hook,” said Dr. Larry Gray, an expert in developmental and behavioral pediatrics, who sees patients with autism at Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago.

    Because the treatment is not approved for autism, the institution’s policy has been to only offer it in clinical trials, which are rare. The drug is FDA-approved, however, so doctors can prescribe it off-label.

    Kennedy has declared the rising rates of autism in the U.S., now estimated at 1 in 31 children by age 8, to be an epidemic and had pledged to find some answers behind its cause as well as cures by September.

    At a White House event on September 22, Kennedy, Trump and other health officials backed leucovorin as an autism treatment. They also warned against the use of Tylenol by pregnant women, saying studies suggested a link to autism. Health experts and medical groups called that warning dangerous and without sound scientific basis.

    The FDA was able to speed the process by using an obscure rule to reinstate GSK’s approval application and request a label update adding cerebral folate deficiency, based on the agency’s own analysis of 40 patient cases found in a review of literature from 2009 to 2024.

    GSK sold the drug as Wellcovorin until 1997. A generic version, which is also called folinic acid and is a form of folate or vitamin B9, is now made by U.K.-based Hikma.

    Once GSK’s application is approved, U.S. law requires generic drugmakers to match the change.

    The more commonly used label update process for generic drugs, which requires consultation with generic drugmakers, typically takes up to a year and a half, according to Skadden lawyer Rachel Turow. It is typically used for cancer drugs after new uses are proven in clinical trials, she and several other lawyers said.

    Aaron Kesselheim, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, described the process being used as “very atypical,” and said that without the FDA sharing its data or trials, it is hard to know if the agency is following the normal standard of evidence.

    LIMITED AVAILABLE EVIDENCE

    Dr. Andy Shih, chief science officer at the advocacy organization Autism Speaks, said the evidence for leucovorin’s use was limited and potentially suggestive of benefit for a small subgroup of autistic children. Larger trials are needed, he said.

    The evidence is based on four studies, each of which involved 50 to 60 patients, with three of them done by the same author, said Dr. Karam Radwan, director of the Neurodevelopmental Disorders Program at the University of Chicago, who uses the drug in his practice.

    “You want to replicate that with a different lab, in a different setting, to make sure we have enough support” for the change, he said.

    Three mid-stage trials are underway studying a new, liquid version of leucovorin as an early language impairment treatment for children with autism, according to the government clinical trials site. The earliest data is expected around December.

    The trials are being led by one autism researcher in partnership with the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense, and Autism Speaks, and involve up to 80 children each.

    Larger, more conclusive trials would take years. The FDA’s approach does not require new trials.

    This change should be based on scientific evidence, and so far, studies supporting its use are not robust, Radwan said.

    (Reporting by Patrick Wingrove in New York, Maggie Fick in London and Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago; Additional reporting by Robin Respaut in San Francisco; Editing by Caroline Humer and Bill Berkrot)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

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    Reuters

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  • Trump to Push Proposal for Elusive Gaza Peace in Netanyahu Talks

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    By Matt Spetalnick and Steve Holland

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Donald Trump will host Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Monday, with the U.S. president pushing a Gaza peace proposal after a slew of Western leaders embraced Palestinian statehood in defiance of American and Israeli opposition.

    In Netanyahu’s fourth visit since Trump returned to office in January, the right-wing Israeli leader will be looking to shore up his country’s most important relationship as it faces growing international isolation nearly two years into its war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    He can expect a warm welcome compared to the chilly reception he received when he spoke on Friday before the U.N. General Assembly where many delegates walked out in protest.

    Netanyahu went on to deliver a blistering attack on what he called a “disgraceful decision” over the past week by Britain, France, Canada, Australia and several other countries to recognize Palestinian statehood, a major diplomatic shift by top U.S. allies.

    They said such action was needed to preserve the prospect for a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict and help bring the war to a close.

    Trump, who had criticized the recognition moves as a prize to Hamas, told Reuters on Sunday he hopes to get Netanyahu’s agreement on a framework to end the war in the Palestinian enclave and free the remaining hostages held by Hamas.

    “We’re getting a very good response because Bibi wants to make the deal too,” Trump said in a telephone interview, using Netanyahu’s nickname. “Everybody wants to make the deal.”

    He credited leaders of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Jordan and Egypt for their assistance and said the deal aims to go beyond Gaza to a broader Middle East peace.

    “It’s called peace in the Middle East, more than Gaza. Gaza is a part of it. But it’s peace in the Middle East,” he said.

    Asked whether there is now an agreed deal for peace in Gaza, a senior Israeli official said “it’s too early to tell.” The official added that Netanyahu would give Israel’s response to the proposal when he meets Trump on Monday.

    Netanyahu is under mounting pressure from the hostages’ families and, according to public opinion polls, a war-weary Israeli public.

    A 21-point peace plan had been circulated to a string of Arab and Muslim countries on the U.N. sidelines last week.

    It calls for the release of all hostages, living and dead, no further Israeli attacks on Qatar and a new dialogue between Israel and Palestinians for “peaceful coexistence,” a White House official said on condition of anonymity. Israel angered the Qataris and drew criticism from Trump for an airstrike against Hamas leaders in Doha on September 9.

    Previous U.S.-backed ceasefire efforts have fallen apart due to a failure to bridge the gap between Israel and Hamas and Netanyahu has vowed to continue fighting until Hamas is completely dismantled.

    GAZA WAR TAKES CENTER-STAGE

    The White House meeting follows an annual gathering of world leaders in New York in which the Gaza war took center-stage and Israel was often the target. Netanyahu responded that the world leaders recognizing Palestinian independence were sending the message that “murdering Jews pays off.”

    The most far-right government in Israeli history has ruled out acceptance of a Palestinian state as it presses on with its fight against Hamas following the militants’ October 7, 2023, rampage in Israel. Hamas-led fighters killed some 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies.

    Israel’s military response has killed more than 65,000 people in Gaza, according to local health officials, leaving much of the territory in ruins, a humanitarian crisis deepening and hunger spreading.

    The International Criminal Court has issued a warrant for Netanyahu for alleged war crimes in the Gaza war. Israel rejects the court’s jurisdiction and denies committing war crimes.

    While Trump and Netanyahu have mostly been in sync and the U.S. continues to be Israel’s main arms supplier, Monday’s discussions have the potential for tensions to surface.

    Some of Netanyahu’s hardline ministers have said the government should respond to growing recognition of Palestinian statehood by formally extending Israeli sovereignty over all or parts of the occupied West Bank to snuff out hopes for Palestinian independence.

    On Thursday, however, Trump said he would not allow Israel to annex the West Bank, which the Palestinians want for their state, along with Gaza and East Jerusalem.

    Analysts say Israeli annexation of the West Bank could unravel the landmark Abraham Accords, a signature foreign policy achievement brokered by Trump’s first administration in which several Arab countries forged diplomatic ties with Israel.

    (Reporting By Matt Spetalnick and Steve Holland, writing by Matt Spetalnick, Editing by Humeyra Pamuk and Diane Craft)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

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    Reuters

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  • Israel detains four foreign nationals who illegally crossed into Israel from Jordan

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    The unarmed individuals may have been migrant workers.

    Four foreign nationals were arrested by the IDF on Friday evening after they were caught attempting to illegally cross into Israel via the border from Jordan in the Yarmouk area.

    The four were taken in for questioning.

    Army Radio reported that the unarmed detained parties had been migrant workers.

    The attempted infiltration came only a day after two soldiers were killed by a terrorist entering the West Bank from Jordan. The terrorist, who was driving humanitarian aid to Gaza, opened fire on the soldiers after entering through the Allenby Bridge crossing.

    An Israeli military vehicle waits at a barrier, at the Allenby Bridge Crossing between the West Bank and Jordan, September 8, 2024. (credit: REUTERS/AMMAR AWAD)

    Entering Israel through Jordan

    The Jordan border has been a frequently used route for both undocumented migrant workers to enter Israel and as a route for human trafficking, as the war has frequently restricted access to Israel through air travel.

    While increasingly popular, the journey carries significant risks. In February, 47-year-old Indian national Thomas Gabriel Perera was killed by Jordanian security forces while attempting to cross into Israel for work.

    The family of Perera claimed that he was the victim of a job scam, and was lured to Jordan for a well-paying job – one that failed to materialize. After failing to find work, Perera’s family said he tried to enter Israel in search of employment.

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  • ICE arrests climb in Colorado this summer, but people detained are less likely to have criminal backgrounds

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    Federal immigration arrests in Colorado surged this summer as the Trump administration charged ahead with its plans to mass-deport undocumented immigrants.

    But as arrests have spiked, law enforcement agencies increasingly have detained people without any prior criminal convictions or charges, internal data show.

    Between June 11 and July 28, ICE arrested 828 people in Colorado, according to a Denver Post analysis of data obtained by the Deportation Data Project at the University of California, Berkeley. That amounted to more than 17 arrests per day, a more than 50% increase from the first five months of the Trump administration, through June 10, a period covered in a previous Post story. The rate from this summer was also more than five times higher than the daily arrest average from the same time period in 2024.

    Of those detained over the summer, only a third had prior criminal convictions noted in the records. Another 18% had pending charges, indicating that nearly half had been neither convicted nor charged with a crime and that their only violation was immigration-related.

    That, too, is a shift: In the earlier months of President Donald Trump’s second term, two-thirds of the 1,639 people arrested in Colorado had either been convicted of a crime (38%) or charged with one (29%).

    “That tracks with what we would have expected (and) what we’ve been hearing from community sources,” said Henry Sandman, the co-executive director of the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition. “The data and the reality disproves ICE’s talking points that they’re going after criminals. We’re seeing tactics increase. They’re trying to increase arrest numbers as high as possible, whatever the reason may be for detaining folks.”

    Steve Kotecki, a spokesman for Denver’s ICE field office, did not respond to a request for comment late last week.

    The data, obtained directly from ICE by the UC Berkeley researchers through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, offers the clearest look at immigration enforcement activities available, as ICE doesn’t post recent information onlineFor this analysis, The Post examined arrests that occurred in Colorado; arrests that were listed in the dataset as occurring in Wyoming but which took place in a Colorado city; and arrests lacking a listed state but which occurred in a Colorado town or county.

    The Post removed several apparent duplicate arrests and a similarly small number of arrests in the region that did not have a specific location listed. The analysis also included a handful of people who appeared to have been arrested twice in the span of several months.

    When listing a detainee’s criminal background, the data provides no details about the criminal charges or prior crimes. Illegally entering the country is typically treated as a civil matter upon first offense, but a subsequent entry is a felony criminal offense.

    More info about July operation

    The newly released data includes the same nine-day period in July during which ICE has said it arrested 243 immigrants without proper legal status “who are currently charged with or have been convicted of criminal offenses after illegally entering the United States.” The arrests, the agency said, all occurred in metro Denver.

    But the data published by the UC-Berkeley researchers does not fully match ICE’s public representations.

    During the same time frame, the agency arrested 232 people, according to the data. Most of those arrested during that time had never been convicted or charged with a crime, at least according to what’s in the records. Sixty-six people had a previous criminal conviction, and 34 more had pending charges.

    Kotecki did not respond to questions about the July operation.

    The Post previously reported that ICE falsely claimed that it had arrested a convicted murderer in Denver as part of the July operation. The man had actually been arrested at a state prison facility shortly after his scheduled release, state prison officials said last month.

    While ICE claimed the man had found “sanctuary” in the capital city — a shot taken at Denver’s immigration ordinances — The Post found that state prison officials had coordinated his transfer directly to ICE. He was then deported to Mexico, and information matching his description is reflected in the UC Berkeley data.

    It’s unclear if all of ICE’s arrests are fully reflected in the data, making it difficult to verify ICE’s claims. The researchers’ data is imperfect, experts have told The Post. The records likely represent the merging of separate datasets before they were provided by the government, increasing the likelihood of mistakes or missing data.

    Some arrests in Colorado were listed as occurring in other states or had no state listed at all. Other arrests were duplicated entirely, and researchers have cautioned that ICE’s data at times has had inaccurate or missing information.

    The anonymized nature of the data, which lacks arrestees’ names but lists some biographical information, also can make it difficult to verify. When ICE announced the results of the July operation, it named eight of the people it had arrested. Court records and the UC Berkeley data appear to match up with as many as seven of them.

    The eighth, Blanca Ochoa Tello, was arrested on July 14 by ICE’s investigative branch in a drug-trafficking investigation, court filings show. But it’s unclear if she appears in the ICE data, as she was arrested in La Plata County and no woman arrested in that county was listed in the data.

    To verify ICE’s July operation claims, The Post examined arrest data in Colorado and Wyoming, which jointly form the Denver area of operations for the agency. The Post also searched for arrests in every other state to identify any arrests that may have occurred in a Colorado area but were errantly listed under other states.

    Federal agents detain a man as he exits a court hearing in immigration court at the Jacob K. Javitz Federal Building on July 30, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    Feds demand higher pace of arrests

    The overall surge in arrests this summer has come as the Trump administration seeks to dramatically increase detentions and, eventually, the pace of deportations. In early July, Congress approved tens of billions of dollars in new funding for ICE as part of the tax bill.

    Nationally, immigration authorities had their most arrest-heavy months this summer, according to data published by researchers at Syracuse University. Immigration officials arrested more than 36,700 people in June, its highest single-month total since June 2019, during Trump’s first term. More than 31,200 were arrested across the country in July.

    The Trump administration has also set out to increase its detention capacity to accommodate the mass-deportation plans.

    As of late July, ICE planned to triple its detention capacity in Colorado, according to documents obtained last month by the Washington Post. That plan includes opening as many as three new facilities and the expansion of Colorado’s sole existing facility in Aurora.

    As of last month, that detention center housed 1,176 people, according to data published by ICE.

    DHS officers watch from the parking lot as protesters gather at the entrance to the ICE Colorado Field Office on Aug. 30, 2025, in Centennial. (Photo By Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post)
    DHS officers watch from the parking lot as protesters gather at the entrance to the ICE Colorado Field Office on Aug. 30, 2025, in Centennial. (Photo By Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post)

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  • Inside an airlift to Gaza. Dropping aid from above and the desperate scramble below

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    The Jordanian air force C-130 Hercules cargo plane banked in a slow arc over the Mediterranean, pointing its nose toward Gaza for its approach — the final stage of the intricate ballet that is dropping aid over the war-ravaged enclave.

    Earlier, in a cavernous hangar at a Royal Jordanian Air Force base, soldiers from Jordan, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, United Arab Emirates and Singapore assembled to prepare the 79 tons of rice, sugar, pasta, tomato paste, dates and other basic foodstuffs set for the day’s drop.

    Despite the sweltering heat, the soldiers stationed at King Abdullah II Air Base worked quickly, the hangar an ants’ nest of activity as they secured 1-ton piles of aid boxes to pallets, wrapped them in protective fabric, then tightened the rigging before using a forklift to hoist a parachute above each one.

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    No less active were the crews of the seven dark-gray C-130s arrayed on the tarmac nearby, their bellies open as loadmasters prepared the planes for their cargo.

    “We have to get a 100% success rate for the drops,” said Phille, a Belgian soldier whose tattoos, muscular build and clean-shaven head belied the gentle way he spoke as he tied a low-velocity parachute to a pallet. He gave his nickname, in line with the Belgian military’s policy.

    “Everyone works in a chain, and knows exactly what they need to do,” he said.

    Despite all that effort, everyone at the base that day knew that the multinational air bridge to Gaza was a wildly inefficient solution to a problem that by rights should never have existed.

    Since March, Israel has kept the enclave under a near-total blockade, justifying the move as necessary to prevent aid from benefiting Hamas. The United Nations, dozens of aid organizations and Western officials have all rejected that claim and accuse Israel of deliberately starving the enclave’s 2.1 million people.

    In May, Israel created, with U.S. assistance, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation and charged it with delivering aid to Gaza. Aid groups and governments have excoriated the GHF’s efforts as paltry, inefficient and haphazard.

    GHF’s distribution methods, denounced as poorly planned and executed, have almost always turned deadly as Gazans trying to secure aid have died in the chaos or come under fire from Israeli forces.

    Health authorities in the Strip say more than 1,800 people have been killed near GHF sites, with rights groups describing the GHF’s methods as “orchestrated killing.” Israel and the U.S. insist the GHF is working.

    In the face of blistering international pressure and daily reports of deaths from starvation — aid groups said last weekend that more than 100 children have died from malnourishment — Israel allowed airdrops to resume last month.

    A number of world governments have signed on for air deliveries, their thinking being that some aid entering Gaza is better than nothing. But humanitarians generally view the drops as a last resort. The U.N. and aid groups say the best option is overland — a tried-and-true method that before the war brought 500 truckloads into the Strip per day from Jordan and Egypt.

    The contrast with air deliveries is stark. A truck carries 25 tons, but planes can handle only a little more than half that amount, and even less in the case of hot weather due to strain on the engines.

    Cost is another issue: Operating a C-130 cargo plane — the most common type of aircraft in the Gaza airlift — amounts to roughly $15,000 per hour of flight. A truck costs a fraction of that. The result is that an average food delivery by truck costs $180 per ton, while airdropping is a whopping $16,000 per ton, according to a U.S. Air Force study from 2016.

    This isn’t aid. It’s chaos

    — Nasra al-Rash, Gaza Strip resident

    Once the 18 pallets were loaded, the C-130 heaved itself into the air, then circled lazily over Amman, the Jordanian capital, while the pilots waited for Israeli authorities to coordinate their entry into Gazan airspace.

    Roughly 30 minutes later, the plane headed southwest toward Tel Aviv — the cue for the crew to secure the pallets to the long steel cables running along the body of the C-130 that would deploy the chutes once dropped. Loadmaster Mohammad clipped a line to the cable, then secured himself and waited for the green light as the plane flew over the Mediterranean and positioned itself for the flight somewhere over central Gaza and lowered its altitude to 1,500 feet.

    “Ten minutes to drop,” the loadmaster said.

    The C-130’s cargo doors yawned open, letting in a rush of sea air before Gaza came into view. Moments later, it emerged as a landscape denuded of all color save brown and gray and the occasional red-rimmed maw of a destroyed brick rooftop. Almost every structure appeared damaged or in ruins.

    It was a sobering sight. Though all of the crewmen had seen it many times — Jordan alone has run more than 150 airdrops since July — they pressed their faces to the windows to glimpse the devastated landscape.

    Dropping the aid is a delicate process. The attached parachutes have no GPS guidance systems, and though the pallets descend at a relatively slow 5 meters per second, their weight — 1 ton in most cases — makes them potentially lethal. This weekend in central Gaza, 14-year-old Muhannad Eid was crushed by an aid pallet as he ran toward it.

    “We have to perform the airdrop as a surprise, so people don’t gather below,” Phille said earlier. “If we see people under the plane, we don’t give the green light.”

    When the signal came, one line of pallets raced down the hold’s railing, their chutes ripping open in a flurry of motion as they fell out of the back, one after another. The sound of the engines increased as the pilot climbed higher and swung his way toward the King Abdullah II Air Base once more.

    The parachutes floated down toward the coastline, not far from a cluster of makeshift tents, grapevines, fig trees and the outer edge of residential buildings.

    Waiting for them on the ground was a group of men and boys. Once they saw the parachutes’ bloom, they sprinted toward the landing site. One of the pallets smashed onto the roof of a building. The rest settled nearby.

    That building was private property, but some of the men rapidly scaled the walls. Two reached the roof, cut the parachute cords and dragged down supplies. They divided them. Minutes later, they each walked away, carrying small shares.

    Not far from there, in al-Amer tent camp, dozens of families — about 50 in total — watched in despair.

    “I’m an old man with 10 children and grandkids. What can these airdrops do for us? The poor, the elderly — they get nothing,” said Mutlaq Qreishi, a 71-year-old man displaced from the al-Zaytoun neighborhood of Gaza City, tears streaking down his face.

    “It’s only the strong ones, the looters,” he added. “Every time I try, I can’t make it. My wife just wants tea, some milk — anything from a can. Look at that pallet — it fell in someone’s yard. People are fighting over it like wild dogs.”

    Nearby was Nasra al-Rash, 48, who was displaced from Gaza City with her three boys and two girls.

    “We’re not even allowed to run for them. Every time they drop food, we get nothing,” she said, a quiet rage in her voice. She added people needed a “fair distribution system,” like the one used by the U.N. and other groups.

    “This isn’t aid,” she said. “It’s chaos. A performance for cameras. I’ve never received a single sack of flour, not one can of food, not a spoonful of sugar. We’re being starved, tortured. Enough.”

    Four more planes appeared above and dropped their loads. Several of the pallets, residents said, landed on tents; others snagged on rooftops.

    Standing near her tent, Hanan Hadhoud, 40, shouted at the sky.

    “This can’t go on. I sent my kids to get something — anything — for us. But the young men, they just push children aside,” she said. Now, when she sees the planes coming, she added, she and her family run from their tents.

    “That’s how we live now.”

    Its cargo dispatched, the plane with the loadmaster Mohammad made good time back to base. Though the distance to Gaza could be covered by air in 15 or so minutes, the trip had taken an hour and 50, at an estimated cost of $200,000 to $250,000.

    Mohammad and the other crewmen secured the loose rigging and packed their equipment before walking to their pickup truck for the ride home. They drove off, giving one last look at the plane as the ground crew scurried around, readying it for the next day’s drop. In the hangar, the ballet started anew.

    Times staff writer Bulos reported from Jordan. Shbeir, a special correspondent, from Gaza.

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    Nabih Bulos, Bilal Shbeir

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  • ‘The Challenge 40: Battle of the Eras’ With Jordan Wiseley

    ‘The Challenge 40: Battle of the Eras’ With Jordan Wiseley

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    Johnny is joined by friend and castmate Jordan Wiseley to discuss being disliked by other castmates, strategy, the toxic effects of social media on the game, and more

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    Johnny Bananas

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  • 5/5: Face the Nation

    5/5: Face the Nation

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    5/5: Face the Nation – CBS News


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    This week on “Face the Nation,” South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem kicks off her book tour after the viral excerpt about shooting a dog to death. Plus, Margaret Brennan speaks to Queen Rania al Abdullah of Jordan.

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  • Congress does not come back with a warrant

    Congress does not come back with a warrant

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    In this week’s The Reason Roundtable, editors Matt Welch, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Nick Gillespie, and Peter Suderman contextualize Iran’s retaliatory strike against Israel before bemoaning the recent vote in Congress on the renewal of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).

    02:20—Iran’s retaliatory strike on Israel

    13:05—House votes to reauthorize Section 702 of FISA.

    29:21—Weekly Listener Question

    42:00—Arizona Supreme Court rules on law that would ban nearly all abortions.

    47:23—This week’s cultural recommendations

    Mentioned in this podcast:

    Iran Attacks Israel,” by Liz Wolfe

    Biden Sends U.S. Forces To Protect Israel’s Borders for the First Time Ever,” by Matthew Petti

    What’s the Root Cause of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict?” by Eli Lake and Jeremy Hammond

    After Hamas Attack, There Are No Good Options in the Middle East,” by Matt Welch, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Nick Gillespie, and Peter Suderman

    The Iranian Coup that Led to 67 Years of Reckless Intervention,” by Nick Gillespie

    Come Back With a Warrant,” by Eric Boehm

    Biden Hints at Freedom for Julian Assange,” by J.D. Tuccille

    Edward Snowden: The Individual Is More Powerful Today Than Ever Before,” by Nick Gillespie

    ‘Selective Surveillance Outrage’ and ‘Situational Libertarianism’ Isn’t Good Enough, Congress!” by Nick Gillespie

    Why We Get the Police State We Deserve—and What We Can Do to Fix That,” by Nick Gillespie

    Supreme Court Says Officials Who Block Critics on Social Media Might Be Violating the First Amendment,” by Jacob Sullum

    Everyone Agrees Government Is a Hot Mess. So Why Does It Keep Getting Bigger Anyway?” by Nick Gillespie

    In Defense of Roe” by Nick Gillespie

    Abortion & Libertarianism: Nick Gillespie, Ronald Bailey, Mollie Hemingway, & Katherine Mangu-Ward

    Trump’s Abortion Stance Is Convenient, but That Does Not Mean He’s Wrong,” by Jacob Sullum

    What Leaving Abortion Up to the States Really Means,” by Elizabeth Nolan Brown

    William F. Buckley, RIP,” by Jacob Sullum

    Radical Squares,” by Nick Gillespie

    FDR: A One-Man Show,” by Chris Elliott

    The Big Guy’s Last Drink,” by Peter Suderman

    The Libertarian Moment, UFC300 edition (Renato Moicano invokes Mises)

    Send your questions to roundtable@reason.com. Be sure to include your social media handle and the correct pronunciation of your name.

    Today’s sponsor:

    • What’s the first thing you’d do if you had an extra hour in your day? A lot of us spend our lives wishing we had more time. The question is, time for what? If time was unlimited, how would you use it? The best way to squeeze that special thing into your schedule is to know what’s important to you, and make it a priority. Therapy can help you find what matters to you, so you can do more of it. If you’re thinking of starting therapy, give BetterHelp a try. It’s entirely online. Designed to be convenient, flexible, and suited to your schedule. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist, and switch therapists any time for no additional charge. Learn to make time for what makes you happy, with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com/roundtable today to get 10 percent off your first month.

    Audio production by Ian Keyser

    Assistant production by Hunt Beaty

    Music: “Angeline,” by The Brothers Steve


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    Matt Welch

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  • Biden Sends U.S. Forces To Protect Israel’s Borders for the First Time Ever

    Biden Sends U.S. Forces To Protect Israel’s Borders for the First Time Ever

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    This weekend’s air raids in the Middle East set a lot of records. Iran carried out its first ever direct attack on Israel from Iranian territory, launching an unprecedentedly large swarm of drones and missiles against Israeli military bases. And for the first time in history, U.S. troops engaged in direct combat in defense of Israeli territory.

    The U.S. military shot down three Iranian ballistic missiles and 70 drones that were en route to Israeli military bases, officials told CNN. American ships and fighter jets were involved in the operation. Videos shared online also purport to show U.S. ground troops in Iraqi Kurdistan firing antiaircraft missiles. The British and French militaries assisted in the operation, and Jordan reportedly shot down Iranian drones over its own airspace.

    Although Israel and its protectors stopped most of the Iranian air raids, Iranian state media has claimed that Israel’s Nevatim Air Base was “damaged severely” and put out of service. Israeli army spokesman Daniel Hagari has denied this, saying that Nevatim was only slightly damaged and “continues to perform its tasks.” No deaths were reported.

    Iran was retaliating for an Israeli attack on the Iranian consulate in Damascus, Syria, on April 1. That attack killed 16 people, including an Iranian general.

    President Joe Biden, after pledging his full support to Israel for months, may have finally tapped the breaks. After Saturday’s air raids, he told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the United States will not support an Israeli counterstrike on Iran, according to Axios, because Israel already “got a win. Take the win.” The New York Times reports that some members of the Israeli war cabinet wanted to attack Iran immediately but that Biden’s call talked them out of it.

    Publicly, Biden condemned the “unprecedented air attack against military facilities in Israel” and promised to “coordinate a united diplomatic response to Iran’s brazen attack.” He confirmed that “we have not seen attacks on our forces or facilities today.”

    Israel’s next move—and America’s—is anyone’s guess.

    Although the United States had not been informed of the consulate attack beforehand, Biden jumped to Israel’s aid afterward. When Iran threatened to retaliate, Biden promised to grant Israel “ironclad” support and to “do all we can to protect Israel’s security.” And he had Gen. Michael Kurilla, head of all U.S. forces in the Middle East, fly to Israel a few days before the Iranian retaliation.

    Iran and Israel have flung violent threats and proxy attacks at each other for decades. While Iran has armed Hamas and other Palestinian rebels, Israel has assassinated Iranian nuclear scientists and bombed Iranian troops in Iraq and Syria with tacit U.S. support.

    The Hamas attacks of October 2023 and the subsequent Israeli invasion of Gaza escalated the conflict across the entire region. Iranian-backed forces in Yemen attacked Israeli shipping, Iranian-backed paramilitaries in Lebanon fired on the Israeli border, and Iranian-backed militias in Iraq broke their truce with the U.S. military.

    Israeli leaders made it clear that they wanted to escalate and that they believed they had an American green light. Biden had to talk down Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant from launching a full-scale attack on Lebanon early in the war. But the U.S. president refused to place any actual limits on how many weapons the United States would send Israel or how Israel could use those weapons.

    Early in the war, Biden showed that he was willing to put American lives on the line in Israel’s defense. Even though his administration insisted that it had “no plans or intentions to put U.S. boots on the ground in combat,” Biden deployed two aircraft carriers to the region as a threat to any other country that might join the war against Israel.

    From Israeli leaders’ perspective, the consulate attack was a win-win situation. Either Tehran would not retaliate, making Iranian leaders look weak, or it would retaliate, forcing Biden to make good on his commitments and bring U.S. power to bear against Iran.

    Iranian leaders chose the second scenario, betting that Biden’s commitment to Israel was not as “ironclad” as he claimed. Explaining Tehran’s reasoning, an Iranian source told the news site Amwaj.media on Thursday that “the U.S. is not ready to go to war with Iran.” But although Biden did come to Israel’s defense, he appears unwilling to push the conflict any further.

    Left out of the conversation entirely were the American people. Congress has not passed a declaration of war against Iran or authorization for the use of military force against Iranian troops. It hasn’t even passed the supplemental aid package to Israel that Biden has been asking for.

    Lawmakers from both parties have called this weekend for Congress to pass the package, although Democrats and Republicans disagreed on whether it should also include aid to Ukraine.

    That wasn’t the only way legislators reacted differently to the air raids. Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R–Tenn.) demanded that Biden “launch aggressive retaliatory strikes on Iran.” Rep. Adam Smith (D–Wash.), on the other hand, called for “calm and restraint.” Without naming Israel or Iran, libertarian-leaning Rep. Thomas Massie (R–Ky.) was more blunt about the stakes than anyone else: “I’m against the next war already.”

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    Matthew Petti

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  • Israel begins to respond to Iran’s drone attack

    Israel begins to respond to Iran’s drone attack

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    Israel begins to respond to Iran’s drone attack – CBS News


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    Air sirens sounded and aerial defense operations were in place in Bethlehem and Jerusalem after Iranian drones were launched Saturday evening toward Israel. U.S. forces in the Middle East have shot down some of the Iranian-launched drones, two U.S. officials told CBS News. Charles Faint, the deputy editorial director for the Modern War Institute at West Point, joins CBS News with more on how Israel could respond to the attacks.

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  • Israel’s allies react to Iran’s drone attack

    Israel’s allies react to Iran’s drone attack

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    Israel’s allies react to Iran’s drone attack – CBS News


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    The U.S., U.K. and other allies are vowing to support Israel in its defense against a drone attack launched by Iran. CBS News contributor Robert Berger and Andrew Boyd, former chief of operations in the CIA’s Counterterrorism Mission Center, break down how Israel and its allies are responding.

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  • Biden touts hostage talks that could yield 6-week cease-fire between Israel and Hamas

    Biden touts hostage talks that could yield 6-week cease-fire between Israel and Hamas

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    Washington — President Biden said Monday the U.S. is working to negotiate a hostage deal between Israel and Hamas that would pause fighting in Gaza for at least six weeks. 

    In White House remarks alongside King Abdullah II of Jordan, Mr. Biden said the deal “would bring an immediate and sustained period of calm to Gaza for at least six weeks, which we could then take the time to build something more enduring.” 

    “Over the past month I’ve had calls with Prime Minister Netanyahu as well as the leaders of Egypt and Qatar to push this forward,” Mr. Biden said. “The key elements of the deal are on the table. There are gaps that remain but I’ve encouraged Israeli leaders to keep working to achieve the deal. The United States will do everything possible to make it happen.” 

    Mr. Biden also said the U.S. did not know how many of the hostages being held by the terrorist group are still alive. 

    “The anguish that their families are enduring, week after week, month after month is unimaginable,” he said. “And it’s a top priority for the United States to bring them home.” 

    The president has dispatched the CIA director, William Burns, to Cairo for further hostage talks this week after Hamas provided a new set of terms to the Qatari government, CBS News reported

    Abdullah has pushed for a cease-fire in Gaza in the aftermath of the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7. After meeting with Mr. Biden at the White House, the Jordanian leader called for a “lasting cease-fire now.” 

    “This war must end,” he said, also calling for immediate and increased humanitarian aid to Gaza. 

    Their meeting comes as Israel ramps up its offensive in Rafah, a crowded city in southern Gaza near Egypt’s border. Israel says Rafah is Hamas’s last remaining stronghold, but more than one million displaced Palestinians are estimated to have taken refuge there after fleeing fighting elsewhere in Gaza. 

    Mr. Biden spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the weekend, telling him that Israel “should not proceed” with an invasion of Rafah unless it had a “credible” plan for ensuring the safety of the people sheltering there. 

    Mr. Biden reiterated that in his remarks from the White House. 

    “Many people there have been displaced, displaced multiple times, fleeing the violence to the north, and now they’re packed into Rafah, exposed and vulnerable. They need to be protected,” Mr. Biden said. “We’ve also been clear from the start, we oppose any forced displacement of Palestinians from Gaza.” 

    Abdullah condemned Israel’s military operation, saying “it is certain to produce another humanitarian catastrophe.” 

    “We cannot afford an Israeli attack on Rafah,” Abdullah said. “The situation is already unbearable for over a million people who have been pushed into Rafah since the war started. We cannot stand by and let this continue.” 

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  • 2/7: CBS Evening News

    2/7: CBS Evening News

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    2/7: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    Senior Kataib Hezbollah leader killed in Baghdad in U.S. drone strike; Law enforcement cracking down on Super Bowl counterfeits

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  • U.S. strikes Iraq and Syria after deadly drone attack in Jordan

    U.S. strikes Iraq and Syria after deadly drone attack in Jordan

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    U.S. strikes Iraq and Syria after deadly drone attack in Jordan – CBS News


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    The Pentagon confirmed that the United States launched retaliatory strikes that hit more than 85 targets in Iraq and Syria yesterday, less than a week after a drone attack in Jordan killed three U.S. troops. Those bodies were returned to the U.S. on Friday. CBS News’ Christina Ruffini has more from the White House.

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