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Tag: Oklahoma

  • Video Shows GOP Education Official Bolt From Reporter After Announcing His Resignation

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    Ryan Walters seems to have little interest in clarifying to his constituents his headline-making decision to resign as Oklahoma’s state superintendent of schools.

    Walters, who frequently attacked teachers unions and accused educators of being child abusers during his three-year tenure, announced his resignation Wednesday on KOKH, an Oklahoma City-based Fox News affiliate.

    His next gig, he said, will be leading the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a right-wing nonprofit organization aimed at assisting “educators in their mission to develop free, moral, and upright American citizens,” according to its website.

    Walters’ announcement was broadcast to a national cable audience via Fox News. But when KOKH journalist Wendy Suares attempted to ask Walters questions in the moments after his segment wrapped, he gave her the silent treatment and opted instead to bolt out of the studio.

    In a Thursday post on X, formerly Twitter, Suares said KOKH had agreed to let Walters film his announcement from the studio on the condition that the station would secure him for an interview afterward.

    Watch a clip of Suares attempting to interview Walters below.

    “We had several questions for [Walters] as he left our studio. We still do,” she wrote in a follow-up post.

    As of Friday afternoon, Suares’ footage had been viewed more than 400,000 times on X. Many viewers praised Suares for her journalistic skills while blasting Walters as a “skunk” and a “coward.”

    “First, much respect for your toughness and persistence. Second, that man is gutless,” one person wrote.

    Added another: “I’ve been saying this for years, Ryan Walters was after himself. Never about Oklahoma schools. Now everyone can see that!”

    As such comments suggest, news of Walters’ departure was applauded by Oklahomans across the political spectrum.

    Ryan Walters is set to lead the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a right-wing nonprofit organization aimed at assisting “educators in their mission to develop free, moral, and upright American citizens.”

    Attorney General Gentner Drummond, a Republican who is running for Oklahoma governor in 2026, called out Walters for inciting “a stream of never-ending scandal and political drama” since entering office.

    “Even worse, test scores and reading proficiency are at historic lows,” he wrote in a statement. “It’s time for a State Superintendent of Public Instruction who will actually focus on quality instruction in our public schools. … Our families, our students and our teachers deserve so much more.”

    Oklahoma Democratic Party Chair John Waldron shared those sentiments, telling local CBS affiliate News 9 he’s happy to see Walters go.

    “Under his watch, we’ve fallen to 50th in education,” he said. “I’ve watched Superintendent Walters use his office as a bully pulpit for his own personal ambition.”

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  • Who is Ryan Walters? Look back on five of his biggest actions as Oklahoma’s top educator

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    Over the last two years, Oklahoma state schools Superintendent Ryan Walters has attracted national attention to the state several times while serving as the state’s top education official.

    Since his election in late 2022, Walters has launched initiatives like enabling the Bible to be in Oklahoma classrooms in Oklahoma public schools, or his most recent effort to establish Turning Point USA chapters in every high school in Oklahoma.

    During much of Walters’ tenure, many people formed polarized opinions on his actions. The same programs he pushed sparked discourse on all sides of the political spectrum.

    Now, the superintendent has announced plans to leave the role and accept a job as CEO of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a new professional organization that touts itself as “an alternative to union membership” for teachers. It is a part of the Freedom Foundation, a far-right anti-labor union think tank.

    Here’s a rundown of some of his most notable moments since he entered the office in January 2023.

    Tulsa school district accreditation, August 2023

    State School Superintendent Ryan Walters entered a dispute with former Superintendent of Tulsa Public Schools Deborah Gist.

    In a July meeting, Walters, alongside Gov. Kevin Stitt, said that the district “has failed the students,” criticizing the district’s closing during the COVID-19 panic and Walters noting the school faced “significant and severe issues” and was “plagued by scandal.”

    “They’ve been one of the worst performing schools in the state of Oklahoma,” Walters said at a state Board of Education meeting in 2023 after threatening to remove the district’s accreditation.

    Ryan Walters, Oklahoma State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Tulsa Public Schools Superintendent Deborah Gist. Photos by The Oklahoman and Tulsa World

    Lawmakers alleged that the targeting was due to the system having the “most African American kids” as well as the fact that OKCPS was led by a man while TPS was led by a woman.

    “Look at the district leadership of Oklahoma City and Tulsa, what’s different? I don’t think you can ignore that either,” Tulsa mayor Monroe Nichols said while serving as a representative for the city.

    When Gist resigned in August 2023, there were mixed reactions of outrage and optimism that the schools would improve.

    In 2025, a 60-page audit report was released by Oklahoma Auditor and Inspector Cindy Byrd that reviewed financial irregularities in Tulsa schools. Auditors investigated financial records from 2015 to 2023, and found $25 million was spent without proper bidding, and $824,503 in fraud by a former administrator.

    Banned books in Oklahoma, February 2024

    Walters attempted to remove “The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini and “The Glass Castle” by Jeannette Walls from the school library in Edmond. Walters, himself, called both books pornographic in nature and criticized the district for choosing to “peddle porn.”

    State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters at the February meeting of the Oklahoma state school board, Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024.

    State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters at the February meeting of the Oklahoma state school board, Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024.

    The books, both award-winning best-sellers, were adapted into movies yet still received criticism for their depictions of sexual violence, addiction and profanity.

    When Walters asked the school to remove the books, citing a review from OSBE’s Library Media Advisory Committee, the district pushed back, filing a lawsuit against the state with the Oklahoma Supreme Court.

    Though Walters attempted to pull rank, saying his election allowed him to “go in and clean up schools,” the Oklahoma Supreme Court ultimately ruled that neither Walters nor the board and department of education has the authority to establish policies concerning books. Instead, it is to be decided on a district level by their board systems.

    Bibles in public schools, May 2024

    In May 2024, a request was issued by the Oklahoma state Department of Education to purchase 55,000 Bibles with the intention of being in all classrooms in Oklahoma public schools.

    A stack of books, including bibles is placed near State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters’ seat during an Oklahoma school board meeting at the Oklahoma Capitol in Oklahoma City, on Thursday, June 27, 2024.

    A stack of books, including bibles is placed near State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters’ seat during an Oklahoma school board meeting at the Oklahoma Capitol in Oklahoma City, on Thursday, June 27, 2024.

    Walters said the proposal came after Oklahomans told him they believe the book should be in the schools as part of American history.

    “That is absolutely something that I will continue to fight, till every kid understands that the history of America includes the Bible, includes biblical principles,” Walters said in 2024. “I mean, my goodness, you would have to walk around with a blindfold throughout American history to not see that.”

    After making bids for the Bibles, vendors had to meet a few qualifications, which ended up only leading to the God Bless the U.S.A. Bible, which was often referred to as the Trump Bible. With a $60 price tag, this would equal $3.3 million expended on all the Bibles.

    In the end, just more than 500 Bibles were purchased for AP Government classes across the state.

    “We have the Bible, the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights — these are foundational documents in our nation’s history,” he said in 2024. Each of those documents is also reprinted in the “God Bless the U.S.A.” Bible.

    New social studies standards, Dec. 2024

    Swiftly after proposing that the Bible be in schools, Walters promised to overhaul social studies teaching standards for classrooms.

    State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters speaks during a press conference following a State Board of Education meeting in Oklahoma City, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024.

    State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters speaks during a press conference following a State Board of Education meeting in Oklahoma City, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024.

    The standards were touted as “among the strongest in the country: pro-America, pro-American exceptionalism, and strengthen civics and constitutional studies across every grade.”

    The new standards, Walters said at the time, would be developed by a new “Executive Review Committee” to ensure “that social studies reflect accuracy and not political slanted viewpoints.”

    Now, 9 months later, recent developments state the overhaul has been put on pause by the Oklahoma Supreme Court as the court considers a lawsuit challenging the social studies standards.

    Thus, the standards, which took effect for the current school year, cannot be taught, and no money can be spent to implement them in Oklahoma schools, effectively stopping that process.

    ‘Anti-woke test’ for teachers, July 2025

    Ryan Walter's wants teaching applicants to take "woke" test.

    Ryan Walter’s wants teaching applicants to take “woke” test.

    Since July, Walters has been on a mission to ensure that “radical leftist ideology” from states like California and New York remains out of Oklahoma by threatening to hold their teaching certificate if they are unable to pass the new assessment.

    To do so, he worked alongside PragerU to formulate a “woke test,” which was later rebranded to “Teacher Qualification Test” on PragerU’s website. The test was published in an ad in the New York Times.

    Beneath the questions, the ad addresses PragerU’s support for the test:

    “How would you assess a teacher who took this test and failed it? Would you want that person teaching your children? The answer for Oklahoma is no. We suspect (or, at least, hope) your answer would be the same. Oklahoma will require teachers from New York and California to pass this test before being hired. Oklahoma, it seems to us, has the right to expect its teacher to be both competent and consonant with its values.”

    William C. Wertz, Alexia Aston, Molly Young, Murray Evans, The Oklahoman contributed to this report.

    This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Who is Ryan Walters? Look back on his years as Oklahoma Superintendent

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  • City council member resigns after going viral on Libs of TikTok for vile comment made to Trump supporter

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    Bree Danyele Montoya, a city councilmember representing Norman, Oklahoma‘s Ward 3, resigned effective immediately on Tuesday after a Facebook comment she wrote telling a Trump supporter to harm herself resurfaced and went viral when shared by Libs of TikTok.

    The resignation followed months of inaction from the city council, critics say, until the exchange gained national traction online. The city of Norman has since emphasized that while elected officials speak for themselves, it “does not support actions or behaviors that may encourage harm.”

    “In various capacities, I have served this community since 2008, and I am ready to pursue other interests. Effective immediately, I am resigning as councilmember for Ward 3. Thank you, Ward 3!” Montoya said at the meeting.

    The recipient of Montoya’s comments, constituent Audra Abbott, told FOX affiliate KOKH she was shocked when she realized who had written them. 

    “I saw that she was a city council member within moments of her posting it, and I was like, wow, I can’t believe that an elected official would talk like that online,” she said.

    DEARBORN MAYOR REFUSES TO APOLOGIZE FOR TELLING CHRISTIAN MINISTER HE WAS ‘NOT WELCOME HERE’

    Norman City Councilmember Bree Montoya resigned Sept. 23 after a Facebook comment telling a Trump supporter to harm herself resurfaced. (City of Norman)

    Abbott added, “If it hadn’t went viral with Libs of TikTok picking it up, I don’t think that anything would have happened at all.”

    Chaya Raichik, who runs Libs of TikTok, told Fox News Digital, “With a rising trend of violent left-wing extremists targeting conservatives, it is our duty to hold elected officials, such as Oklahoma City Councilor Bree Montoya, accountable for violent rhetoric, regardless of their status or position.” 

    Raichik also said, “While the fake news media refuses to acknowledge the truth of the rising epidemic of far-left violence, Libs of TikTok will continue to expose elected leaders who promote violence, demonize ICE, or issue threatening statements against the American people.”

    NYC MAYORAL CANDIDATE ZOHRAN MAMDANI DEFENDS PAST TWEETS, SAYS CUOMO ATTACKING ‘MYTHICAL VERSION’ OF HIM

    Bree Montoya speaking at Norman City Council before resignation

    Bree Montoya delivers her resignation remarks during a Sept. 23 Norman City Council meeting. (City of Norman)

    In an email to Fox News Digital, Norman Chief Communications Officer Tiffany Martinez Vrska said, “The City of Norman as a municipal corporation does not support actions or behaviors that may encourage harm; carrying out municipal functions that provide or support public service remains the focus of the corporation.” 

    She added that elected officials speak only for themselves when making personal remarks. Officials pointed to resources explaining Norman’s council–manager government structure and how the Ward 3 vacancy will be filled in the coming weeks.

    The online clash dates back to June, when Montoya and Abbott argued on Facebook about the size of a “No Kings” protest. Montoya called Abbott “uneducated” and escalated by telling her to harm herself. 

    Bree Montoya holds papers while resigning from Norman City Council

    Bree Montoya announces her resignation from the Norman City Council. (City of Norman)

    Screenshots of the exchange spread in local Facebook groups during the summer before Libs of TikTok recently amplified them on social media. Abbott and others say Norman officials ignored the controversy until the post gained traction online. Montoya was first elected in 2023, re-elected in February 2025, sworn in again July 1, and resigned less than three months later.

    At the Sept. 23 meeting, Mayor Stephen Tyler Holman addressed the incident.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “As your mayor, I want to affirm our commitment to upholding the rights guaranteed under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. The right to free speech is fundamental to our democracy, and it is our responsibility to ensure that every citizen has the opportunity to express their opinions and be heard,” the mayor said.

    “While we honor the right to free speech, we must also maintain an environment that is respectful, orderly and conducive to productive discussion,” Holman added. “My goal is to ensure that every voice in this room can be heard while maintaining the integrity and decorum of our meetings. I ask for your cooperation and mutual respect as we continue to work together for the betterment of Norman.”

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  • Oklahoma advocates & educators celebrate state superintendent Ryan Walters’s resignation as ‘pivotal moment’

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    Ryan Walters, Oklahoma’s embattled state superintendent of public instruction, announced his resignation on Wednesday evening after a tenure defined by political theater, culture war mandates, and hostility toward marginalized students. His departure was made public not in Oklahoma City but on Fox News, where Walters declared he would become CEO of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a conservative nonprofit dedicated to fighting teachers’ unions nationwide.

    Related: Oklahoma superintendent and Libs of TikTok celebrate bullying gay principal out of job for drag persona

    “We’re going to destroy the teachers’ unions,” Walters said on air. “We have seen the teachers’ unions use money and power to corrupt our schools, to undermine our schools. We will build an army of teachers to defeat the teachers’ unions once and for all.”

    For many in Oklahoma, the news marked both relief and exasperation. Walters leaves behind a state education system that slid further down national rankings, faced lawsuits over unconstitutional directives, and endured a steady stream of scandals. But he also carries his divisive agenda to a broader stage, raising alarms among advocates who warn his politics could further inflame national debates over public education.

    Advocates: “A pivotal moment”

    For many advocacy groups, Walters’ resignation was a watershed.

    “Oklahomans for Equality recognizes the resignation of State Superintendent Ryan Walters as a pivotal moment for our state,” Hailey Briggs, the group’s executive director, told The Advocate. “Under his tenure, many of Oklahoma’s most marginalized students, including 2SLGBTQIA+ youth, and the educators who support them faced harmful rhetoric and policies that threatened safe and affirming learning environments.”

    Related: Ryan Walters wants Turning Point chapters in Oklahoma high schools — or will he resign before it happens?

    GLAAD was equally blunt. “Ryan Walters’s record shows profound failure for Oklahoma’s public school students, faculty, and families, including failing to keep students safe,” a spokesperson told The Advocate. “2SLGBTQIA+ students in Oklahoma deserve leaders who will recognize them and their basic needs to be themselves and be safe, which are essential to everyone’s ability to learn and thrive. The Walters era will be defined by his failures, a permanent record that will follow him wherever he goes.”

    The Human Rights Campaign echoed the criticism and cheered the extreme politician’s exit. “I’m excited for Oklahoma’s parents, who no longer have to deal with Walters’s gross politicization of their children’s education,” HRC communications director Laurel Powell told The Advocate. “I sincerely hope their next superintendent is more focused on educational outcomes than culture wars.”

    Teachers’ unions respond

    Walters’ new role — leading a group aimed squarely at weakening teachers’ unions — drew fierce reaction from labor leaders.

    “Today is a good day for Oklahoma’s kids,” Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, told The Advocate. “It’s no surprise that Mr. Walters, after failing on the job, is leaving the state. Any educator worth their salt understands it’s impossible to educate students if you don’t support teachers. Walters didn’t do that in Oklahoma and now, at a time we need to bring the country together, he’s trying to export his divisive rhetoric nationally.”

    Related: Outrage after Oklahoma education superintendent reframes Nex Benedict’s death without naming the teen

    Weingarten, a frequent target of those on the right, including Walters, dismissed his new allies, including the Freedom Foundation, which she said has “nothing to do with either education or freedom.” “Teachers are more unionized than any other profession, and the Freedom Foundation’s post-Janus campaign to convince teachers to drop their union has been a dismal failure,” she said. “Schools are about helping kids develop the passion and purpose to pave pathways to a better life — and that means working together, not going to war, a lesson Walters appears not to have learned.”

    A tenure of extremes

    Elected in 2022 after serving as the appointed state education secretary, Walters quickly emerged as one of the country’s most polarizing figures. He aligned himself closely with Donald Trump, lauded Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, and openly sought to use Oklahoma schools as a proving ground for his far-right vision.

    Related: Education Secretary Linda McMahon snubs Oklahoma’s extremist superintendent of schools

    In June 2024, Walters ordered that every Oklahoma public school teach the Bible and the Ten Commandments, a directive that critics said trampled constitutional limits on religion in public institutions. He later pushed social studies standards that echoed Trump’s false claims of mass voter fraud in the 2020 election, and this week, he announced that every Oklahoma high school would be required to host a Turning Point USA chapter, after Kirk’s assassination.

    Walters sought to require out-of-state teachers from places like California and New York to pass ideological screening tests against “woke indoctrination.” He harassed educators who defended LGBTQ+ students, promoted book bans, and appeared with far-right anti-government extremist group Moms for Liberty at state expense.

    Perhaps most controversially, Walters appointed Chaya Raichik, the Brooklyn-based creator of the Libs of TikTok social media account dedicated to harassing liberals and LGBTQ+ people, to Oklahoma’s Library Media Advisory Committee. Raichik had no educational background, no ties to Oklahoma, and no children in the state’s schools. Her online campaigns have been linked to threats against schools and libraries across the country, which experts describe as examples of stochastic terrorism. Critics said Walters had effectively invited a professional provocateur into the official policymaking process.

    Walters was briefly floated as a potential second Trump term cabinet pick for secretary of education and considered running for governor, but his polarizing record earned him condemnation from both Democrats and Republicans.

    Fallout from Nex Benedict’s death

    Walters’ policies became especially explosive after the death of 16-year-old Nex Benedict in February 2024. Benedict, a transgender and Two Spirit teenager of Choctaw heritage, was beaten in a high school bathroom and later died by suicide. The tragedy drew national attention, with advocates linking Benedict’s vulnerability to the hostile climate Walters fostered.

    Related: After Nex Benedict’s death, Oklahoma’s Ryan Walters: Just two genders, as God intended

    In the aftermath, Walters denied the existence and history of Two Spirit people, even though they are a well-documented part of Indigenous traditions in Oklahoma. Tribal leaders and LGBTQ+ advocates viewed his denial as erasure that compounded the harm facing Native youth.

    GLAAD notes that 35 percent of transgender students nationwide report being assaulted in bathrooms that do not align with their gender identity — a statistic worsened, they argued, by Walters’ rhetoric portraying transgender youth as threats rather than children needing protection.

    A record of scandal

    Investigations and lawsuits plagued Walters’ office. He clashed with school boards over censorship and television broadcasts, was accused of mishandling pandemic relief funds, some of which were spent on appliances and video game consoles, and presided over plummeting reading proficiency scores.

    Walters was unpopular within his own party. Attorney General Gentner Drummond, a Republican now running for governor in 2026, said Walters’ tenure had been “an embarrassment to our state.” “Ever since Gov. Stitt appointed Ryan Walters to serve as Secretary of Education, we have witnessed a stream of never-ending scandal and political drama,” Drummond said in a statement. “Even worse, test scores and reading proficiency are at historic lows. It’s time for a State Superintendent of Public Instruction who will actually focus on quality instruction in our public schools.”

    What comes next

    Walters’ resignation spares him what was expected to be a bruising re-election campaign in 2026.

    Related: Ryan Walters’s latest gambit fails as critics outnumber supporters at Oklahoma education meeting

    For Oklahoma, though, the immediate question is who will replace him — and whether the state can begin to recover from the tumult. “This change in leadership is an opportunity to recommit to inclusion, respect, and quality education,” Briggs said. “We urge state leaders to listen to educators, families, and young people, and to build classrooms where every child feels safe and supported and where educators are trusted and equipped to do their work.”

    This article originally appeared on Advocate: Oklahoma advocates & educators celebrate state superintendent Ryan Walters’s resignation as ‘pivotal moment’

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  • GOP Education Official Quits After Years Of Scandals And Controversies

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    Ryan Walters, the Oklahoma superintendent of public instruction, is resigning after three controversial years in the role to lead a right-wing group he said will “destroy the teachers unions.”

    Walters, who was elected in November 2022 and began serving the following January, spent his entire tenure making headlines for his attacks on teachers unions, including baselessly smearing educators as child abusers.

    It appears Walters is ready to take his grudge against teachers to a national stage by becoming CEO of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, which bills itself as an “alternative” to teachers unions.

    “We’re going to destroy the teachers unions,” Walters said Wednesday night on Fox News, as he announced his resignation and new role. “We’ve seen [them] use money and power to corrupt our schools.”

    He did not mention his resignation at the Oklahoma State Department of Education’s monthly meeting on Thursday. Instead, he used his opening remarks to speak about Charlie Kirk, the CEO of Turning Point USA who was fatally shot in Utah earlier this month, and gave the floor over to a TPUSA employee.

    Walters announced on Tuesday that every high school in Oklahoma would have a TPUSA chapter on campus. Kirk toured college campuses through his work with the organization, and often spread racist and misogynistic rhetoric to his young audiences.

    When a local reporter asked on Tuesday what would happen to schools that decline to establish a chapter, he threatened to revoke their accreditation. “They would be in danger of not being a school district if they decided to reject a club that is here to promote civic engagement,” he said.

    It’s unclear whether the plan to establish Turning Point USA chapters at high schools will move forward after Walters leaves office.

    The Oklahoma schools chief has been embroiled in a string of controversies and scandals.

    Walters has spent the past three years claiming without evidence that Oklahoma public schools are awash in sexually explicit material. He appointed right-wing influencer Chaya Raichik to a library advisory committee in January 2024, despite her lack of experience. Raichik gained notoriety through her Libs of Tik Tok account on X (formerly Twitter), where she posts videos of teachers who advocate for LGBTQ+ rights.

    After Donald Trump won the 2024 election, Walters proposed a rule for Oklahoma schools that would require districts to collect citizenship data, a measure that could have caused immigrant parents to pull their children from school. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1982 that all children, regardless of immigration status, are entitled to enroll in a public school, but Walters’ proposal was in line with Trump’s hard-line immigration policies.

    The Christian right has been attempting to inject religion into the public school system, and Walters has been at the forefront of the movement. In June 2024, Walters ordered Oklahoma public schools to use the Bible in instruction, even though the U.S. Constitution prohibits the government from favoring one religion over another. He also attempted to purchase Bibles for schools that would enrich Trump ally Lee Greenwood, but was subsequently sued and blocked from implementing the policy.

    Some organizations are celebrating his departure from Oklahoma schools.

    “This is a win for Oklahomans. They’re better off without Walters,” Rachel Laser, the CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a nonprofit legal organization dedicated to keeping the government secular, said in a statement. “At every turn Ryan Walters abused the power of his government office as he attempted to impose his personal religious beliefs on Oklahoma school children.”

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  • GOP Education Official Warns Schools Will Be ‘In Danger’ If They Refuse Chapter Of Charlie Kirk Org

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    Oklahoma State Superintendent of Schools Ryan Walters announced plans on Tuesday to establish chapters of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s right-wing organization, Turning Point USA, in every high school in his state, threatening to revoke school credentials if they don’t comply.

    “Radical leftist teachers’ unions have dominated classrooms for far too long, and we are taking them back,” Walters wrote on X, announcing a partnership with the conservative activist group.

    I am very excited to announce a partnership with @TPUSA to establish chapters in ALL Oklahoma high schools. Radical leftist teachers’ unions have dominated classrooms for far too long, and we are taking them back. pic.twitter.com/3sihJX3sUv

    — Ryan Walters (@RyanWalters_) September 23, 2025

    Walters’ announcement comes after Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, took over the organization following his fatal shooting at Utah Valley University. It’s unclear if the widowed Kirk will continue to echo her husband’s thinking against immigrants, Muslims and the LGBTQ+ community or will move the organization further to the right.

    “We have seen the outpouring from parents, teachers, and students that want to be engaged in a meaningful work going on at Turning Point,” Walters said. “They want their young people to be engaged in a process that understands free speech, open engagement, dialog about American greatness, a dialog around American values.”

    As of this afternoon, in the past 6 days, TPUSA has received 54,000+ requests from high school and college students nationwide to start a chapter or get involved with an existing chapter.

    This is just the beginning. @tpusastudents

    — Turning Point USA (@TPUSA) September 16, 2025

    In an interview with local Fox affiliate KOKH-TV, he warns there will be repercussions for schools that refuse to have a Turning Point USA chapter.

    “I mean, we would go after their accreditation. We would go after their certificates. So yeah, they would be in danger of not being a school district if they decided to reject a club that is here to promote civic engagement,” Walters said. “Absolutely, they would be violating the law. They would be violating the rules set forth to them by our agency. So yeah, everything would be on the table in that scenario.”

    This is not the first move Walters has made to push the Oklahoma school system to the right. Last year, he appointed Chaya Raichik, the creator of the right-wing social media account Libs of TikTok, to the state’s library media advisory board.

    “Chaya is on the front lines showing the world exactly what the radical left is all about — lowering standards, porn in schools, and pushing woke indoctrination on our kids,” Walters said at the time.

    The GOP school official was recently investigated by the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office after two members of the state’s board of education claimed they saw images of naked women on a TV screen in his office. No charges were filed, and Walters called the accusations a “witch hunt.”

    During his tenure, Walters pushed a more right-wing agenda for the school systems, saying he would allow ICE into public schools and mandate them to incorporate the Bible into their lesson plans for grades five through 12.

    Ryan Walters, Oklahoma State Superintendent announced plans to establish Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA chapters in high schools.

    “What we’re going to continue to do is make sure that our kids understand American greatness, engage in civic dialog and have that open discussion,” Walters said Tuesday. “We will continue to do all that we can to make sure Oklahoma students have the best education possible.”

    Oklahoma ranks close to last in public education nationwide, according to an analysis from the U.S. News and World Report, and scored below average in reading, writing and math on the Nation’s Report Card.

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  • Oklahoma GOP officials keep protecting their own, even when they plead guilty to heinous crimes

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    Members of the Oklahoma Legislature listen as Gov. Kevin Stitt gives his State of the State Address in the House chamber of the state Capitol on Feb. 3, 2025. (Photo by Kyle Phillips/For Oklahoma Voice)

    Editor’s note: Parts of this column contain graphic depictions of domestic violence.

    It’s become clear two systems of justice exist in Oklahoma : one that caters to the good ol’ boys, and another for everyone else.

    The good ol’ boy network features Republican officials shielding each other from the types of scrutiny that would get an everyday person skewered in the court of public opinion, fired from their job or thrown in jail.

    Let’s take the case of state Rep. Ty Burns, R-Pawnee. For months, people at the highest levels of government kept silent about the fact that he was accused of not one, but two, separate and horrific attacks on his own family. 

    In April, Burns used his pickup to chase a vehicle carrying two of his family members, according to court documents. He ran them into a ditch, injuring both occupants. In a second incident, Burns tried to gouge out his wife’s eye the Pawnee County Sheriff’s Office learned while investigating the roadway assaults. His wife’s injuries forced her to miss a week of work, according to court records.

    To their credit, the Pawnee County Sheriff’s Office appears to have swiftly investigated both attacks, collecting recorded interviews and a video depicting Burns’ terrifying chase. The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation was called in, as was a child welfare specialist from the Department of Human Services.

    But then, things were hushed up. The OSBI didn’t file the findings of their investigation with the court until Aug. 27. Burns was never arrested or charged with a crime for over four months.

    Pawnee County District Attorney Mike Fisher himself recused from the matter, according to the Attorney General’s Office. Attorney General Gentner Drummond suddenly decided to step in. At some point, Burns hired his Republican colleague, state Rep. Chris Kannady, an attorney who is listed on his state House bio as “counselor to the Speaker,” to represent him. Kannady is also a donor to Drummond’s gubernatorial campaign. Burns hasn’t donated to Drummond, but either directly or via his campaign, he has donated to over two dozen seated House lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, according to ethics filings.

    Meanwhile, Burns got to go about his life in state government as if nothing happened — for months. 

    He continued voting on legislation, including House Bill 1273, which is now law. It shortens the time some people convicted in domestic abuse cases have to spend time in classes to curb their behavior from 52 weeks to 26.

    In his veto message, attempting to block the passage of the law, Gov. Kevin Stitt wrote it “will make it easier for abusers to sidestep meaningful consequences and avoid jail time with less effort. This isn’t meaningful reform — it’s a concession to abusers, and it puts victims at greater risk.”

    By that late May vote, Burns knew he was under criminal investigation. But rather than recusing himself because of a clear conflict of interest, he was one of the 89 House lawmakers who voted to overturn Stitt’s veto.

    They were successful, and no one said a word about Burns’ case as they weakened consequences for abusers.

    In August, Drummond’s office finally got around to prosecuting the matter, disclosing in a press release after-the-fact that Burns had pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges of domestic abuse and assault. In a highly unusual move, Burns was allowed to plead guilty the same day he was charged, sparing him months of deserved public scrutiny during continued court appearances.

    Burns received a one-year suspended sentence, and then was allowed to use House media resources — funded by you and me — to put out a statement justifying the plea, in which he noted he’s begun a 52-week batterers intervention program — you know, that same program he championed shortening for other abusers beginning Nov. 1.

    Fellow Republicans Drummond and House Speaker Kyle Hilbert, meanwhile, gave Burns the equivalent of a metaphorical pat on the back following his plea, both condemning his violence, but praising him for taking responsibility.

    Neither man demanded that he resign. And while state law doesn’t actually require a lawmaker to resign unless they’re convicted of a felony, it doesn’t mean they shouldn’t.

    Elected officials should be held to a higher standard because if recent history is any judge, we know they’re not willing to hold each other to one.

    Former House Rep. Dean Davis, R-Broken Arrow, whose campaign Burns donated to, was censured and briefly removed from all committees by the state House following a 2023 arrest for public intoxication in Oklahoma City. Body cam footage showed Dean, who later pleaded no contest to the charge, arguing with officers and saying he was immune from prosecution because he was a lawmaker. 

    But he was allowed to be immediately reinstated to those committees when he publicly apologized. Voters later booted him themselves.

    And Drummond tossed out a case against former House Majority Whip Terry O’Donnell, R-Catoosa, that involved allegations that he ran a bill allowing his wife to be appointed as a state tag agent. Drummond said at the time that the reason he dismissed the case wasn’t because he thought O’Donnell was blameless, but because he believed he was unfairly “targeted.”

    Republican lawmakers though had no problem targeting former state Rep. Mauree Turner, the nation’s first nonbinary legislator, after a protester went to the Democrat’s office following an altercation with the state’s Highway Patrol. Turner, who is also Black and Muslim, was never charged with a crime, but that didn’t stop Republican legislators from censuring and stripping Turner of all committees for an imaginary House made up charge of “harboring a fugitive.” Republicans said Turner would be reinstated after apologizing. Turner never did, and later said the vote was a symbolic reminder to marginalized Oklahomans that they don’t belong.  

    In Burns’ case, it wasn’t until Stitt and state Republican Party Chair Charity Linch demanded he resign that the 46-year-old actually did so. But that resignation won’t be effective until next month.

    Burns said he still wants to complete an interim study at the Capitol on post traumatic stress disorders and doesn’t plan to step down until that’s done. And apparently his good ol’ buddies are going to allow him that final gesture of respect.

    He doesn’t deserve that.

    Lawmakers should not reward people who try to gouge out their spouse’s eyes or run people  off the road.

    GOP chair Linch wrote in a statement that “the ‘good old boy’ system concealing nefarious behavior should no longer be tolerated in Oklahoma.”

    Maybe the good ol’ boys can live up to that apparent Republican ideal next time one of their buddies breaks the law.

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  • Oklahoma House speaker silent on possible action against lawmaker convicted of domestic abuse

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    After a state representative admitted in court to injuring his wife and assaulting his teenage daughter, Republican leaders are not saying whether they will sanction the lawmaker.

    Oklahoma Republican House Speaker Kyle Hilbert has been silent about potential disciplinary actions against Rep. Ty Burns, a four-term Republican representative from Pawnee. At least two fellow Republicans, including Gov. Kevin Stitt, have called on Burns to resign.

    The case against Burns was kept secret until Thursday, Aug. 28, after he had pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor count of domestic abuse and two misdemeanor counts of assault.

    Oklahoma law does not require state lawmakers to step down from office if found guilty of a misdemeanor offense. If elected state officials are found guilty of a felony, they are suspended from office under state law.

    More: Lawmaker’s daughter feared he would kill her as he tried to run van off road, filing says

    The events that sparked the investigation into Burns occurred in April, four months before the public was made aware that he was under police investigation. Police said Burns ran a van with his 16-year-old daughter inside off the road. As they were investigating that incident, officers learned that he also had tried to gouge out his wife’s eye in November 2024.

    Three House Republicans told The Oklahoman on Friday, Aug. 29, they did not know about the case until it was brought to light through a news release from the Oklahoma attorney general’s office.

    Burns was active at the state Capitol six days after police wrote in a court filing that he ran a van carrying his daughter and the girl’s grandmother off the road. According to that affidavit, the teen called her mother and said, “He is going to hurt us. Mama make him stop. Please he is going to kill us.”

    It’s unusual that the public was unaware of the case against Burns until after the case was decided, said former Oklahoma Attorney General Drew Edmondson, a Democrat.

    One lawmaker who spoke with The Oklahoman, Rep. Jim Shaw, joined Stitt on Friday in calling on Burns to resign.

    Rep. Ty Burns is pictured May 28 at the afternoon session of the House of Representatives during the last week of the Oklahoma Legislature at the Capitol.

    “These are not allegations,” said the Republican from Chandler. “These are admissions of guilt, of violent crimes that should not be tolerated at all.”

    Stitt said being an elected official is a commitment to the public, and Burns should “demand full-time attention to rehabilitation and reconciliation.”

    Burns has stepped down from his role as chairman of the House Appropriations and Budget Finance Subcommittee. Hilbert, a Republican from Bristow, has not said whether he will pursue further action.

    Jennifer Monies, a spokesperson for Hilbert, said that she would not have answers to The Oklahoman’s questions about any potential sanctions by Friday afternoon.

    More: Oklahoma state troopers cannot abandon metro areas, AG Drummond says

    On Thursday, Hilbert said, “There is no place in society for domestic violence of any kind. I appreciate Rep. Burns taking ownership for his actions and seeking treatment.”

    Burns received a one-year suspended sentence and was ordered to complete a year-long batterer’s intervention program. The sentence was recommended by prosecutors in the Oklahoma attorney general’s office, which took over the case after Pawnee County District Attorney Mike Fisher recused himself.

    Leslie Berger, a spokesperson for Attorney General Gentner Drummond, said the sentence is common for this type of first offense. She said prosecutors believed misdemeanor domestic abuse was the criminal act most supported by the available evidence, but she did not add further specifics.

    Drummond later wrote in a post on social media Friday that his office had no “legitimate justification” to pursue felony charges against Burns. He said Burns had received “the strongest punishment possible for a first-time offender with a clean record.”

    Under Oklahoma law, assault can be punished by a sentence by imprisonment in a county jail for up to 30 days, a fine of up to $500, or both. Someone guilty of domestic abuse can be imprisoned for up to a year, charged with a fine of no more than $5,000, or both. For any subsequent offenses, the person faces being sent to state prison for up to four years, a fine of up to $5,000, or both.

    Several lawmakers say they were unaware of situation

    Rep. Ken Luttrell, R-Ponca City, said he expected Burns to continue being involved in the House Republican caucus moving forward. He added that he was not aware of the investigation into Burns and could not think of a similar situation involving another lawmaker during his 10 years at the Capitol.

    “He’s well-regarded up in this area,” Luttrell said of Burns.

    Rep. Molly Jenkins, R-Coyle, said she also hadn’t heard about the situation and questioned whether Burns should remain in office. She called on Hilbert to consider whether further action was necessary.

    “It’s not enough for the speaker to say, ‘We’re just so happy that he’s admitted he’s at fault,’” Jenkins said. “No. This goes beyond that. He’s a public servant, and he didn’t perform like one. I can’t imagine what would have happened to me if I were in that situation, because I’m not in leadership.”

    Like Jenkins, House Democrats were unaware of the situation until Aug. 28, said House Minority Leader Cyndi Munson, D-Oklahoma City. She and her caucus joined Senate Minority Leader Julia Kirt, D-Oklahoma City, in calling for Burns’ resignation.

    “We were all shocked and horrified when news of the investigation broke yesterday,” Munson said. “It is deeply upsetting for everyone who understands the severity and danger of domestic violence situations.”

    This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Oklahoma House speaker quiet amid calls for Rep. Ty Burns to resign

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  • These 3 Oklahoma schools made the Forbes Top Colleges list for 2025-26: See rankings

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    While U.S. News and World Report crowned the top four Oklahoma colleges, Forbes is coming in with their own list of the best schools in the nation.

    The 2025-26 Top Colleges list includes 500 universities and colleges that Forbes considers producing “successful, high-earning, and influential graduates from all economic backgrounds” with low student debt, according to an article that accompanied this year’s list. The rankings also reflect factors like enrollment and outcomes for low-income students.

    “Schools ranked highly on our list if their students returned after the first year, graduated on time, secured high salaries after graduation and left college with little student debt,” the article stated.

    The Massachusetts Institute of Technology reclaimed the top spot on Forbes’ list, second place on U.S. News’ list; meanwhile, three of Oklahoma’s schools made it to the top half of the list.

    See how Oklahoma colleges and universities fared on Forbes’ latest rankings.

    Oklahoma schools on the Forbes ‘America’s Top Colleges’ list

    Only three of Oklahoma’s colleges and universities made the top 500 schools list for Forbes. While the University of Oklahoma took the top spot, the other two schools were similar to the U.S. News list.

    The Sooners scored 96th on the 2026 Top Colleges list nationwide, with high marks in colleges in the South (22nd) and Research University (77).

    Sitting at 96th, this puts the University of Oklahoma in conversation with schools like Indiana University, Bloomington (94), Babson College (95) and California State University, Long Beach (97).

    The top colleges in Oklahoma, according to Forbes, are:

    Oklahoma State and Tulsa both come in just shy of the 250 halfway mark of the list. This puts the Cowboys just below Oberlin College in Ohio and schools like Bentley University, Saint Louis University and Whitman College between the two northern Oklahoma schools.

    Both schools still got distinctions in other categories.

    OSU was ranked the 44th best school in the South and 138th for research universities. While Tulsa scored 46th in the South, 140th in research and 119th in Private colleges.

    See the full rankings online at forbes.com/top-colleges

    This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Forbes named these 3 Oklahoma schools the among nation’s best: See list

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  • Popular ice cream recalled for nut allergy risk—check your carton now

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    Popular ice cream recalled for nut allergy risk—check your carton now

    Updated: 10:19 AM PDT Aug 24, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    Blue Bell has issued a recall after a packaging mix-up resulted in the wrong flavor being placed in the wrong container—specifically, Moo-llennium Crunch ice cream being packed inside Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough half-gallon cartons. The problem: Moo-llennium Crunch contains tree nuts (almonds, walnuts, pecans) that aren’t declared on that Cookie Dough carton, which is a serious hazard for anyone with allergies.If you’re looking at a Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough half gallon with a Moo-llennium Crunch lid and the code 061027524 is stamped on top, you’ve got a problem. An employee caught the error while restocking, and the company promptly removed the affected product. No illnesses have been reported.The mix-up reached retailers across parts of 16 states, including Texas, Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Kansas, Kentucky, New Mexico, and portions of Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Illinois, and Virginia. Undeclared tree nuts can trigger severe reactions in people with allergies, and shoppers rely on labels to make informed choices. If your carton matches the description, don’t eat it. Return it to the store for a refund or toss it if returning isn’t possible.A few more notes for the detail-oriented: the affected ice cream was produced at Blue Bell’s Brenham, Texas, plant. The recall targets the specific half-gallon described above—not the entire Cookie Dough line—and Blue Bell says no other incorrect packaging has been found to date.One code check, one quick swap, and you’re back to stress-free scoops. If you have questions, Blue Bell’s consumer relations team can assist you during business hours. However, the fastest solution is to bring the matching carton back and trade it in.

    Blue Bell has issued a recall after a packaging mix-up resulted in the wrong flavor being placed in the wrong container—specifically, Moo-llennium Crunch ice cream being packed inside Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough half-gallon cartons. The problem: Moo-llennium Crunch contains tree nuts (almonds, walnuts, pecans) that aren’t declared on that Cookie Dough carton, which is a serious hazard for anyone with allergies.

    If you’re looking at a Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough half gallon with a Moo-llennium Crunch lid and the code 061027524 is stamped on top, you’ve got a problem. An employee caught the error while restocking, and the company promptly removed the affected product. No illnesses have been reported.

    blue bell chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream

    The mix-up reached retailers across parts of 16 states, including Texas, Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Kansas, Kentucky, New Mexico, and portions of Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Illinois, and Virginia.

    Undeclared tree nuts can trigger severe reactions in people with allergies, and shoppers rely on labels to make informed choices. If your carton matches the description, don’t eat it. Return it to the store for a refund or toss it if returning isn’t possible.

    A few more notes for the detail-oriented: the affected ice cream was produced at Blue Bell’s Brenham, Texas, plant. The recall targets the specific half-gallon described above—not the entire Cookie Dough line—and Blue Bell says no other incorrect packaging has been found to date.

    One code check, one quick swap, and you’re back to stress-free scoops. If you have questions, Blue Bell’s consumer relations team can assist you during business hours. However, the fastest solution is to bring the matching carton back and trade it in.

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  • Wildfires rage in Oklahoma, severe weather expected in central U.S.

    Wildfires rage in Oklahoma, severe weather expected in central U.S.

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    Wildfires rage in Oklahoma, severe weather expected in central U.S. – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Wildfires are blazing in Oklahoma as warnings of severe weather spread in Kansas and other parts of the central U.S. CBS News’ Rob Marciano has the latest on strong winds that could create severe conditions.

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  • Listeria recall grows to 12 million pounds of meat and poultry, some of it sent to US schools

    Listeria recall grows to 12 million pounds of meat and poultry, some of it sent to US schools

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    A nationwide recall of meat and poultry products potentially contaminated with listeria has expanded to nearly 12 million pounds and now includes ready-to-eat meals sent to U.S. schools, restaurants and major retailers, federal officials said.

    The updated recall includes prepared salads, burritos and other foods sold at stores including Costco, Trader Joe’s, Target, Walmart and Kroger. The meat used in those products was processed at a Durant, Oklahoma, manufacturing plant operated by BrucePac. The Woodburn, Oregon-based company sells precooked meat and poultry to industrial, foodservice and retail companies across the country.

    Routine testing found potentially dangerous listeria bacteria in samples of BrucePac chicken, officials with the U.S. Agriculture Department said. No illnesses have been confirmed in connection with the recall, USDA officials said. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has not launched an outbreak investigation, a spokesperson said.

    The recall, issued on Oct. 9, includes foods produced between May 31 and Oct. 8. The USDA has posted a 342-page list of hundreds of potentially affected foods, including chicken wraps sold at Trader Joe’s, chicken burritos sold at Costco and many types of salads sold at stores such as Target and Walmart. The foods were also sent to school districts and restaurants across the country.

    The recalled foods can be identified by establishment numbers “51205 or P-51205” inside or under the USDA mark of inspection. Consumers can search on the USDA recall site to find potentially affected products. Such foods should be thrown away or returned to stores for refunds, officials said.

    Eating foods contaminated with listeria can cause potentially serious illness. About 1,600 people are infected with listeria bacteria each year in the U.S. and about 260 die, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Listeria infections typically cause fever, muscle aches and tiredness and may cause stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance and convulsions. Symptoms can occur quickly or to up to 10 weeks after eating contaminated food. The infections are especially dangerous for older people, those with weakened immune systems or who are pregnant.

    The same type of bacteria is responsible for an outbreak tied to Boar’s Head deli meat that has killed at least 10 people since May.

    ___

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • Oklahoma school official Ryan Walters hit with lawsuit over Trump Bible mandate scheme

    Oklahoma school official Ryan Walters hit with lawsuit over Trump Bible mandate scheme

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    Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters has been hit with a lawsuit after mandating that all Oklahoma public schools carry the Bible in what initially started as a scheme to spend taxpayer dollars on Trump Bibles.

    Walters plans to spend as much as $3 million in taxpayer dollars to furnish Oklahoma’s already struggling public school system with Bibles and force its teaching. It’s not the first time he has attempted to dictate the state’s school curriculum. Last year, he tried to force teachers to refrain from using the word “race” when teaching The Tusla Race Massacre to students. Earlier this year, he tried to overstep his authority to ban the books The Glass Castle and Kite Runner from Edmond’s High School. He claimed the books were “pornographic” because they mentioned topics relating to sex and abuse. By his line of reasoning, the Bible would also be pornographic, given it is filled with instances of incest, rape, and prostitution.

    Yet, he now wants to force every public school to carry Bibles and spend taxpayer dollars meant for other purposes on the initiative. Not only is he clearly violating the separation of church and state, but the whole thing started as a scheme to line Donald Trump’s pockets.

    Lawsuit calls out Ryan Walters’ Trump Bible scheme

    On October 17, Oklahoma teachers and parents filed a lawsuit with the Oklahoma Supreme Court urging the court to stop Walters’ unconstitutional Bible initiative. Several of the plaintiffs identify as Christians themselves but believe they should have “sole responsibility to decide how and when” their children learn about the Bible. Additionally, the lawsuit points out how the mandate was initially developed as a scheme to put Trump Bibles in schools.

    Initially, the mandate included particular guidelines for the Bibles that could be put in the schools. It demanded that they only be the King James Version and include copies of the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence, and the Pledge of Allegiance. Not many Bibles meet these requirements, except one: Trump Bibles. Trump started selling the $59.99 Bibles earlier this year as one of his many merchandise initiatives. It includes all the historical documents listed in the Bible mandate and is the King James version. Thus, the mandate left no choice but for the state to choose Trump Bibles as its supplier.

    It didn’t take long for individuals to figure out what Walters was doing and call him out for his scheme to allocate taxpayer dollars to support Trump. The state eventually backed down and removed the oddly specific requirements, but the lawsuit ensures parents and officials won’t forget the initial purpose of the entire mandate. The uncovering of the scheme should’ve been enough to immediately strike down the mandate. Additionally, the lawsuit argues that Walters is once again overstepping boundaries, stating he doesn’t even have the authority to force public schools to use the Bible as instructional material.

    The latest suit is the second one brought forward in response to Walters’ mandate. A man named Joseph Price also filed a lawsuit arguing the mandate violated the U.S. and Oklahoma Constitutions since it is equivalent to the government endorsing or promoting one religion and religious doctrine in public schools. There have already been prior landmark court cases in which the Supreme Court barred a school from holding mandatory Bible reading or requiring copies of the Ten Commandments. Unfortunately, this hasn’t stopped officials who believe they’re above the law and Constitution from continually trying to bring the Bible and religious indoctrination back to public schools.


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    Rachel Ulatowski

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  • Suspicious packages sent to election officials in at least 6 states

    Suspicious packages sent to election officials in at least 6 states

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    Suspicious packages were sent to election officials in at least six states on Monday, but there were no reports that any of the packages contained hazardous material.

    Powder-containing packages were sent to secretaries of state and state election offices in Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Tennessee, Wyoming and Oklahoma, officials in those states confirmed. The FBI and U.S. Postal Service were investigating. It marked the second time in the past year that suspicious packages were mailed to election officials in multiple state offices.

    The latest scare comes as early voting has begun in several states less than two months ahead of the high-stakes elections for president, Senate, Congress and key statehouse offices around the nation, causing disruption in what is already a tense voting season.

    Several of the states reported a white powder substance found in envelopes sent to election officials. In most cases, the material was found to be harmless. Oklahoma officials said the material sent to the election office there contained flour. Wyoming officials have not yet said if the material sent there was hazardous.

    The packages forced an evacuation in Iowa. Hazmat crews in several states quickly determined the material was harmless.

    “We have specific protocols in place for situations such as this,” Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate said in a statement after the evacuation of the six-story Lucas State Office Building in Des Moines. “We immediately reported the incident per our protocols.”

    A state office building in Topeka, Kansas, was also evacuated due to suspicious mail sent to both the secretary of state and attorney general, Kansas Highway Patrol spokesperson April M. McCollum said in a statement.

    Topeka Fire Department crews found several pieces of mail with an unknown substance on them, though a field test found no hazardous materials, spokesperson Rosie Nichols said. Several employees in both offices had been exposed to it and had their health monitored, she said.

    In Oklahoma, the State Election Board received a suspicious envelope in the mail containing a multi-page document and a white, powdery substance, agency spokesperson Misha Mohr said in an email to The Associated Press. The Oklahoma Highway Patrol, which oversees security for the Capitol, secured the envelope. Testing determined the substance was flour, Mohr said.

    State workers in an office building next to the Wyoming Capitol in Cheyenne were sent home for the day pending testing of a white substance mailed to the secretary of state’s office.

    Suspicious letters were sent to election offices and government buildings in at least six states last November, including the same building in Kansas that received suspicious mail Monday. While some of the letters contained fentanyl, even the suspicious mail that was not toxic delayed the counting of ballots in some local elections.

    One of the targeted offices was in Fulton County, Georgia, the largest voting jurisdiction in one of the nation’s most important swing states. Four county election offices in Washington state had to be evacuated as election workers were processing ballots cast, delaying vote-counting.

    The letters caused election workers around the country to stock up the overdose reversal medication naloxone.

    Election offices across the United States have taken steps to increase the security of their buildings and boost protections for workers amid an onslaught of harassment and threats following the 2020 election and the false claims that it was rigged.

    ___

    Salter reported from O’Fallon, Missouri. Volmert reported from Lansing, Michigan. Mead Gruver in Cheyenne, Wyoming; Jonathan Mattise in Nashville, Tennessee; Summer Ballentine in Columbia, Missouri; Sean Murphy in Oklahoma City and John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas, contributed to this report.

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  • An Apple Store in Oklahoma City is close to approving an union agreement for its workers

    An Apple Store in Oklahoma City is close to approving an union agreement for its workers

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    Talks between Apple and the union for the Apple Store in Oklahoma City have produced a tentative agreement that includes new benefits and protections for its staff. The Penn Square Mall Apple Store in Oklahoma City announced they’ve reached a “tentative labor agreement” with Apple and the Communication Workers of America (CWA), according to a released statement.

    Terms are still being negotiated between both parties but the benefits for the store’s employees would be significant. The three-year agreement reached between the CWA and Apple would give employees a wage increase of up to 11.5 percent. An Apple spokesperson said by email that if the contract is ratified, employees would receive a 4 percent raise in the first year of employment and 3 percent in the second and third year each “based on employee performance.”

    The agreement would also offer employees guaranteed paid time off and health and other benefits, allow employees to have a say in scheduling and the establishment of a “safer and more democratic workplace” through a grievance submission process with committees overseeing safety, health and working relations. An Apple spokesperson also noted the scheduling options “were provided to all other US stores in 2022.”

    The Oklahoma City Apple Store had been working to form a union becoming the second Apple Store in the US to unionize. Employees passed a strike authorization vote in August that passed with unanimous support and started a picket in front of the store ahead of bargaining sessions in early September. Workers will vote to ratify the tentative agreement on September 22.

    CWA District 6 Vice President Derrick Osobase called the agreement achievement “a historic day for our members who have now secured a contract at the world’s most profitable company.”

    The Apple Store in the Towson Town Center in became the first location to unionize. Members approved the union in 2022 with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM). A store in the Cumberland Mall in tried to form a union in 2022 with the CWA but workers called it off accusing Apple of committing “repeated violations of the National Labor Relations Act.”

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    Danny Gallagher

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  • After deaths of as many as 70 horses, owner of Oklahoma rodeo company suspects feed was tainted

    After deaths of as many as 70 horses, owner of Oklahoma rodeo company suspects feed was tainted

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    Rhett Beutler, the co-owner of a nearly century-old Oklahoma company that supplies stock for rodeos, says he suspects tainted feed is to blame after as many as 70 horses died a week ago. 

    Beutler, co-owner of Beutler and Son Rodeo Co. near Elk City, told KFOR-TV that the horses died shortly after being fed.

    “We didn’t know what was going on, we just got the feed and started feeding it like always,” Beutler told KFOR-TV. “Then all of a sudden looked up and there was horses just falling over, dying.”

    The feed originated in Kansas, according to a statement from the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, which has collected a sample of the feed to analyze in two state-certified laboratories. The agency said in a statement that it is also working with the Kansas Department of Agriculture to investigate.

    Beutler and Son officials did not immediately return messages seeking comment Friday.

    “All them horses are kind of like my kids; I’ve raised them from time they were born,” Beutler told KOKH-TV, “Once you lose one, that’s one too many.”

    The Oklahoma Department of Agriculture said an inspector visited the Beutler and Son site on August 26.

    “We have initiated an investigation which includes labeling procedures, operating procedures and a review of their records to ensure the appropriate protocols were followed” in producing and shipping the feed to Oklahoma, said Kansas agriculture spokesperson Jamie Stewart.

    While the source of the issue hasn’t been identified, an equine specialist told KFOR that it’s possible a mill that also produces cattle feed could have included Monensin, an additive that is used to control parasites and which is given often to cattle. It’s deadly to horses, however.

    “It affects their heart and so it causes necrosis of the heart tissue, essentially and so in essence, they kind of have heart attacks and so it tends to be pretty rapid onset,” said Kris Hiney, equine extension specialist for Oklahoma State University.

    Feed company not identified

    The company that provided the feed has not been identified because of the ongoing investigation, Stewart said.

    Dr. Gregg VeneKlasen, of the Timber Creek Veterinary Hospital, the Beutlers’ veterinarian, declined to comment on the deaths other than to call it a “tragedy.”

    Beutler and Son was founded in 1929 as Beutler Brothers near Elk City, about 105 miles (169 kilometers) west of Oklahoma City, and provides stock for rodeos, including the National Finals Rodeo.

    The company is providing the majority of stock for the Elk City Rodeo starting Friday night, according to Elk City Rodeo board member Randy Hargis, who said the events include bareback horse riding, saddle bronc riding, bull riding and steer wrestling.

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  • No. 17 Oklahoma State opens with two-time defending FCS champ South Dakota State

    No. 17 Oklahoma State opens with two-time defending FCS champ South Dakota State

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    South Dakota State at No. 17 Oklahoma State, Saturday, 2 p.m. ET (ESPN+)

    BetMGM College Football Odds: Oklahoma State by 9 1/2.

    Series record: First meeting.

    WHAT’S AT STAKE?

    Two teams with high expectations meet for the first time. Coach Jimmy Rogers hopes to lead South Dakota State to a third straight Championship Subdivision title and his Jackrabbits haven’t lost a game in nearly two years. Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy is entering his 20th season with the Cowboys. They return all but one starter from a team that won 10 games last season. The Cowboys are expected to contend for a Big 12 title and a spot in the expanded 12-team College Football Playoff. The Cowboys are loaded with talent on both sides of the ball while the Jackrabbits return just three starters on offense and five starters on defense.

    KEY MATCHUP

    Oklahoma State RB Ollie Gordon vs. South Dakota State linebacker Adam Bock. Gordon ran for 1,732 yards and 21 touchdowns last season and won the Doak Walker Award as the nation’s top running back. Bock, an FCS All-American with 344 career tackles, anchors a stingy defense that limited opponents to 88.1 yards rushing per game in 2022 and 89.6 yards in 2023.

    PLAYERS TO WATCH

    Oklahoma State: WR Brennan Presley, a preseason All-Big 12 pick, caught 101 passes for 991 yards and six touchdowns last season. Look for QB Alan Bowman to target Presley and fellow wideout Rashod Owens (63 receptions, 895 yards, five scores) early and often if the Jackrabbits bottle up Gordon.

    South Dakota State: QB Mark Gronowski threw for 3,058 yards and accounted for 37 total touchdowns to win the Walter Payton Award as the top FCS player. The 6-foot-3, 230-pound senior is 37-3 as a starter and led FCS quarterbacks in passing efficiency (179.67).

    FACTS & FIGURES

    FCS No. 1 South Dakota State has won 29 straight games and two national titles since losing to Iowa by four points in the 2022 season opener. … The Jackrabbits averaged 37 points and 450 yards per game last season. … South Dakota State’s defense limited opponents to 9.3 points and 257 total yards per game last season. … The Cowboys return seven offensive linemen with a combined 200 career starts, including preseason All-Big 12 picks Dalton Cooper (49 career starts) and Joe Michalski (23 career starts).

    ___

    Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

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  • Trio bound man with tape and forced him to jump off bridge into traffic, OK cops say

    Trio bound man with tape and forced him to jump off bridge into traffic, OK cops say

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    Three people are accused of kidnapping a man and forcing him to jump off a bridge into traffic, Oklahoma officials say.

    Three people are accused of kidnapping a man and forcing him to jump off a bridge into traffic, Oklahoma officials say.

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    Three people are accused of kidnapping a man, tying him up and forcing him to jump off a bridge into traffic, Oklahoma officials say.

    Deputies responded to the scene in Okmulgee County after a caller reported seeing “someone jumping into traffic” along Highway 266, the sheriff’s office said in a July 26 Facebook post. The incident happened near the Deep Fork River bridge, which is close to the town of Grayson — a roughly 100-mile drive east from Oklahoma City.

    Deputies said the man was “badly injured” and needed “immediate medical attention.” They also noticed he had been bound with duct tape, suggesting the decision to jump wasn’t one made willingly, according to the sheriff’s office.

    “Further investigation revealed the victim in this case had been abducted and forced off the bridge after being bound with duct tape,” the sheriff’s office said.

    After speaking with witnesses, deputies arrested three people, Sean Lunney, Brianna Nohmer and Jaysen Lawson, according to officials. Deputies also found a gun that they believe was used in the kidnapping.

    Nohmer, 18, was booked into the Okmulgee County Detention Center on charges of assault with intent to kill and kidnapping, jail records show. Lawson, 21, is charged with attempted murder, kidnapping and assault and battery with a deadly weapon. The oldest, 31-year-old Lunney, is also charged with kidnapping, plus aggravated assault and battery and pointing a firearm, records show.

    Investigators didn’t say what may have motivated the abduction.

    “This case is an ongoing investigation and no other information will be released at this time,” the sheriff’s office said.

    Mitchell Willetts is a real-time news reporter covering the central U.S. for McClatchy. He is a University of Oklahoma graduate and outdoors enthusiast living in Texas.

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  • Guide to College Football’s Nonsensical 2024 Power Five Realignment

    Guide to College Football’s Nonsensical 2024 Power Five Realignment

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    Living here in the great state of Texas, we know as well as anybody about the craziness and chaos that have unfolded in collegiate sports realignment. The phenomenon is largely driven by football, because that sport is what paves the money trail for everybody else.

    There had been some small shifts in conference membership in the ’80s and ’90s and even the early 2000s, when the Big East as a football conference essentially disintegrated, making the Power Six a Power Five. In the early 2010s is when realignment began to land in our backyard in Texas, most notably with the Texas A&M Aggies moving to the SEC from the Big XII.

    Then, after roughly a decade of realignment peace, Texas and Oklahoma dropped a grenade on the college football world, choosing to move from the Big XII to the SEC, a move that was made official on Monday. It was this move that essentially injected college football conference geographical knowledge with meth. A year after Texas and Oklahoma announced their decision, USC and UCLA chose to move to the Big Ten, where the closest team geographically to both was Nebraska. Repeat, NEBRASKA!

    After that it was chaos. The entire Pac-12 went scurrying for life rafts in other conferences, geographical sense be damned!

    So here we are, with a total of 15 FBS schools changing conferences this summer, including several in the Power Four. Oh what’s that you say? You thought it was the Power FIVE? Yeah, it WAS, until the Pac-12 exodus left Oregon State and Washington State as two college sports orphans. Hard to call the Pac-TWO a “power conference.”  To help you keep track of all the moves, here is a primer on the changes that will go into effect this season:

    BIG TEN (18 teams)
    Illinois
    Indiana
    Iowa
    Maryland
    Michigan
    Michigan State
    Minnesota
    Nebraska
    Northwestern
    Ohio State
    Penn State
    Purdue
    Rutgers
    UCLA
    USC
    Oregon
    Washington
    Wisconsin

    SEC (16 teams)
    Alabama
    Arkansas
    Auburn
    Florida
    Georgia
    Kentucky
    LSU
    Mississippi State
    Missouri
    Ole Miss
    Oklahoma
    South Carolina
    Tennessee
    Texas
    Texas A&M
    Vanderbilt

    Big XII (16 teams)
    Arizona
    Arizona State
    Baylor
    BYU
    Cincinnati
    Colorado
    Houston
    Iowa State
    Kansas
    Kansas State
    Oklahoma State
    TCU
    Texas Tech
    UCF
    Utah
    West Virginia

    ACC (17 football teams)
    ACC
    Boston College
    Cal
    Clemson
    Duke
    Florida State
    Georgia Tech
    Louisville
    Miami
    NC State
    North Carolina
    Pitt
    SMU
    Stanford
    Syracuse
    Virginia
    Virginia Tech
    Wake Forest
    (Notre Dame is a non-football member)

    There is so much silly, insane, and somewhat exhilarating stuff going on here. Just a few thoughts on this new conference structure, in which the most ratchet Magic 8-Ball could not have generated a sillier outcome with some of this stuff.

    SILLY: West Coast schools in the Big Ten
    The nice thing about the pre-realignment universe was not only the conferences making geographic sense, but they each had their own culture and feel, that admittedly reflected the geographic. The Big Ten was cold weather, in the trenches, tough guy football. The Pac-12 was laid back, high flying, offensive fireworks. So UCLA and USC (and Oregon and Washington) make no sense culturally, not to mention the fact that all of their non-football sports have to travel to places like Minnesota and Rutgers for road games. Silly.

    INSANE: The ACC, which has the word “Atlantic” in the name!
    Okay, it’s bad enough that the Big Ten has West Coast schools as conference members now, and sure, the Big Ten now has 18 schools, but there is nothing dumber, nor more insane in realignment, than a conference with the word “Atlantic” in its name having SMU, Stanford, and Cal as members. Cal and Stanford literally are minutes from the PACIFIC F-ING OCEAN! I’d bet big money on the ACC disintegrating sometime in the next five years.

    EXHILARATING: Coach Prime is in the Big XII!
    Okay, now for the good, for those of us in Texas. In 2024, the Big XII actually picks up one of the biggest stories from 2023. Coach Prime, the Hall of Famer Deion Sanders, and the Colorado Buffaloes were THE story in college football for the first month of the 2023 season, largely because of the brash persona and a couple big upset wins. The season did not end well, as the Buffs wound up going 4-8, but they still enter the 2024 season with some buzz, with Shedeur Sanders, son of Deion, a top Heisman candidate and likely top 10 pick in the 2025 NFL Draft.

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

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  • Mind-boggling plans approved for mega-skyscraper with ‘UNLIMITED’ height

    Mind-boggling plans approved for mega-skyscraper with ‘UNLIMITED’ height

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    MIND-BOGGLING plans for the tallest skyscraper in the US with “unlimited” height have been approved.

    The mega-structure will tower over One World Trade Center but developers don’t intend on going “crazy”.

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    The Legends Tower will commence construction this coming FallCredit: SWNS

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    The project will boast entertainment, dining and retail spaces

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    The project will boast entertainment, dining and retail spacesCredit: SWNS
    The Boardwalk at Bricktown complex includes three smaller towers as well

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    The Boardwalk at Bricktown complex includes three smaller towers as wellCredit: SWNS

    The Legends Tower aims for the stars in a surprisingly unassuming state of Oklahoma.

    In the early planning stages, the mammoth project had the tower reaching 1,750 ft – just 26 ft behind the One World Trade Center.

    But the Oklahoma’s City Council has recently given the green light for the skyscraper to be built at an “unlimited” height.

    Councilwoman Nikki Nice said before a vote on the massive project last week: “People have asked me often, what do you think about this development?

    “I mean, sky is the limit, no pun intended.”

    AO Architects, helping the project alongside Matteson Capital, announced that the construction is scheduled to break ground in Fall.

    A spokesperson for AO told People: “AO and Matteson Capital eagerly anticipate the commencement of construction on the first buildings this Fall, and subsequent groundbreaking on the Legends Tower, poised to be the tallest building in the U.S.” 

    But despite no height restrictions, the developers have no intentions of going overboard.

    The Legends Tower is slated to rise above Oklahoma City’s usually nondescript skyline at 1,907ft, spanning across 126 floors.

    Bruce Greenfield, studio partner, told Dezeen: “You’re gonna see it from all over the city. We didn’t want it to be crazy or gaudy.

    Saudi unveils plans for 900ft spiky desert skyscrapers on the Red Sea in latest NEOM mega-project ‘built on blood-

    “We just wanted a nice graceful curve of the buildings and a distinguished top.”

    The whopping height will still place the Legends on a pedestal of the biggest skyscraper in US and pay homage to its home state.

    “The symbolic height honors the year that Oklahoma was admitted as the 46th state of the United States,” Matteson Capital said in a statement.

    The grandiose structure is part of the Boardwalk at Bricktown complex which also consists of three other towers – each about 345 ft tall.

    The $1billion project will span a vast two million square ft and boast 1,776 residential units, two luxury Hyatt hotels and 110,000 square ft of entertainment, retail and dining spaces.

    The top of the tower will also offer a breathtaking view of the entire city landscape from its restaurant and a bar.

    And an observation deck will be installed for the same purpose, according to Matteson Capital.

    When completed, The Legends Tower will become the sixth tallest building in the world.

    TOP-5 TALLEST BUILDINGS IN THE WORLD

    The Bricktown Tower will join the ranks of the highest skyscrapers in the world. Here’s the top-5:

    1. Burj Khalifa, UAE

    At 2,717 ft tall, the structure in Dubai has been the tallest since 2009. It broke multiple world records, including world’s largest light and sound show staged on a single building.

    2. Merdeka 118, Malaysia

    Located in the capital Kuala Lumpur, this building is a megatall skyscraper spanning 2,227 ft height. It is also the tallest building in Southeast Asia and Malaysia. The spire of the building was finally completed in 2022.

    3. Shanghai Tower, China

    Synonymous to the name, it is located in Shanghai and is the tallest building in China at 2,073 ft. It is also the tallest and largest LEED platinum certified building in the world since 2015. The LEED is awarded to green structures that are environmentally sustainable.

    4. Abraj Al-Bait Clock Tower, Saudi Arabia

    A government-owned complex of seven skyscraper hotels in Mecca is aimed at catering the pilgrims and its tallest tower stands at 1,972 ft. It is also the sixth-tallest freestanding structure in the world.

    5. Ping An International Finance Centre, China

    At 1,966 ft tall, this skyscraper was completed in 2017 and is the second tallest building in China. It is also the second largest skyscraper in the world by floor area and holds the record for having the highest observation deck in a building.

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    Aiya Zhussupova

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