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Tag: tucker carlson

  • Dan Bongino’s Podcast Homecoming

    In January, Bongino finally did leave the F.B.I. Trump had told reporters that he thought Bongino “wants to go back to his show”; Bongino soon announced that he would. Appearing, again, with Hannity, Bongino defended his prior contention that some jobs traffic in facts and others in opinions. “I don’t know why this was hard for, again, these full-diaper media morons to understand,” he said. Regardless, he seemed to agree when Hannity proclaimed that “the real Dan Bongino’s back.” This past Monday, Bongino returned, on Rumble, a YouTube competitor that is popular among right-wing content creators, and was palpably in his element—at least, until his stream cut out. “Rumble is under attack, this show is under attack,” he said, after the feed was restored. “This is what these scumbags do.”

    In reality, the gulf between Bongino the free-range opinionator and Bongino the fact-constrained lawman may not have been as wide as all that. His show always claimed to be rooted in reality—its tagline was “Get ready to hear the truth about America, on a show that’s not immune to the facts”—even if that claim itself was not; after Bongino suggested, on “Hannity,” that his opinions weren’t relevant to his F.B.I. work, he criticized members of the media for pushing the Russia “collusion hoax” and said that, if Trump weren’t President, “we may not have a Republic.” (This is without getting into the reports, from inside the Bureau, that Bongino was obsessed with posting on social media, at the expense of pressing operational matters. On his show this week, Bongino responded that social media is integral to the F.B.I.’s work in the digital age, adding that his detractors “can go fuck yourself.”) For all the talk of distinct roles, U-turns, and the “real Dan Bongino,” the most interesting question, to my mind, isn’t whether Bongino changed during his hiatus from right-wing podcasting. It’s whether right-wing podcasting has changed on him.

    As chance and Justice Department foot-dragging would have it, Epstein was very much in the news when Bongino made his comeback, on Monday. He addressed the case, and his role in it, a little over halfway into his show. “Leadership involves frequently being misunderstood, and having to make decisions that’s gonna piss someone off,” he said. “I wanted to see the files, folks. I said, ‘Don’t let it go.’ I meant it. We got elected. We looked at it. The file was not—what was in there was not what we thought would be in there.” Two of Bongino’s competitors got into the latest dump of Epstein files much more directly (depending on your definition of “direct”). Candace Owens—whose podcast was, by at least one metric, the fastest-growing right-wing offering as of late last year, and has recently been home to increasingly baroque theorizing about the assassination of Charlie Kirk—opened her show on Monday by derisively asking, “Are we still talking about the Epstein files?” She then proceeded to do so via an extended disquisition involving Sigmund Freud, his “B’nai B’rith Freemason boys,” and child-abuse rituals. Later, Nick Fuentes described Epstein as “first and foremost, a Jew,” then scoffed at Owens for getting distracted by the occult. He also called her a “Johnny-come-lately antisemite.”

    In recent months—amid the leadership vacuum left by Kirk’s killing, and particularly since the former Fox host Tucker Carlson made the inflammatory decision to record a podcast with Fuentes—much ink has been spilled on emerging schisms between the most important commentators on the right, some of them around issues such as U.S. support for Israel and the overt tolerance of antisemitism, some of them viciously personal, most of them both. This week, The Hollywood Reporter taxonomized who is fighting with whom, and drew them into the broad camps of “MAGA Moderates” (Mark Levin, Ben Shapiro) and “MAGA MANIACS” (Owens, Carlson, Megyn Kelly). Apparently, the “moderates” can now be said to include Alex Jones, the notorious Sandy Hook truther. Indeed, much of the spilled ink has attested to the rapid radicalization of the MAGA media firmament, especially the growing momentum of Fuentes among young people who once saw Kirk as their lodestar. (Kirk, it should be noted, reportedly loathed Fuentes.) Because MAGA is the sort of world in which a person can host a podcast one day and lead the F.B.I. the next, these ructions would seem to matter for the broader post-Trump direction of the right, at a moment when that question is itself starting to matter. Owens and Fuentes have both been critical of Trump; the latter, in particular, has cast Trump’s Administration as unserious, even a betrayal. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the far-right congresswoman who stepped down in January, has decisively broken with him. Last week, she stated that MAGA was “all a lie.”

    Jon Allsop

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  • Tucker Carlson is Launching His Own Precious Metals Company

    Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson is a fount of the kinds of conspiratorial and inflammatory content that you’d expect to be popular with people who buy gold off late night TV commercials. Now, in a turn of events that just makes sense, Carlson has purchased a company that sells gold.

    Carlson recently partnered with a gold wholesaler to launch a firm called Battalion Metals. Battalion says it is “Bringing Integrity Back to the Precious Metals Industry.” The company’s founder and CEO, Chris Olson, recently appeared on an episode of Carlson’s show. On the same episode, Carlson explained how he had decided to go into business with Olson, calling Battalion “a truly honest gold company” that “gives ordinary people…full transparency and the lowest markups possible.” Olson, who is a veteran, previously worked for Treasure Island Coins, a coin and bullion business owned by his father, Battalion’s website states.

    In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Carlson seemed to imply to the Journal that the instability of the modern era encouraged him to invest in something of lasting value. “We’re clearly watching the end of the postwar order, and a lot of things we took for granted as secure, no longer are,” the media figure told the newspaper.

    Gold typically rises in value during periods of economic or political turbulence and uncertainty. We seem to be living through one of those periods currently, as gold has been doing particularly well this year, and, according to Goldman Sachs, prices are expected to rise next year as well.

    In a quote posted to Battalion’s website, Carlson says: “When you realize the central banks are a scam, you buy gold. But what do you do when you realize that a lot of big gold companies are a scam? You buy from Battalion.”

    “Most people feel it on a gut level. They sense something is off about the economy and the money they’re told to trust,” Olson says, in a quote on Battalion’s website. “When customers come to us, they’re looking for a way out – a way to recover sovereignty – and they turn to gold because it represents stability and truth.”

    Gizmodo reached out to the Tucker Carlson Network and Battalion Metals for more information about the recent partnership involving Carlson.

    Carlson has managed to be immensely successful at building a particular brand and courting a certain kind of audience. As of June, Carlson’s podcast was ranked #5 on YouTube’s weekly podcast rankings, CNN previously reported. As of last week, it was #10—slightly behind Kill Tony and the top ranking show, The Joe Rogan Experience. Carlson’s most loyal listeners seem like they could accurately be characterized as deeply individualistic, with a desire for self-reliance and autonomy. In that sense, selling those same people the specter of financial self-reliance (which gold always seems to afford) just makes good business sense.

    Lucas Ropek

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  • Trump foes are dreaming. There’s no MAGA split over Epstein or Israel | Opinion

    President Donald Trump and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, shown in February in the Oval Office, were steadfast allies.

    President Donald Trump and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, shown in February in the Oval Office, were steadfast allies.

    AFP via Getty Images

    One of the hallmarks of the Trump era has been the uncommon loyalty he has been able to command among Republican ranks, after decades of intraparty bickering that often hampered conservative success and gave Democrats the opportunity to take full advantage of their comparative unity.

    But with the midterm election year of 2026 on the near horizon, there is appreciable political buzz about dissension within the MAGA ranks, some of it ramped up to narratives that portray President Donald Trump as a flailing, endangered lame duck.

    Let’s be clear: From the wayward Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene to the unending circular food fight over commentator Tucker Carlson and antisemitism, this is a season of sideshows designed to distract Trump from his policy goals and give the media culture something to discuss other than his successes.

    Some may ask, what successes? Don’t we have an affordability crisis and a healthcare funding mess? Those issues have sound answers, which the administration would be crafting with greater impact if the news were not filled each day with hand-wringing over Jeffrey Epstein and breathless overanalysis of Carlson’s latest podcast guest.

    Nothing irks Trump more than obstacles that arise in the path of his agenda. He would love to be spending his days reminding us of a repaired border, energetic job creation and a series of wars averted. When troublemakers create distractions from within his expected community of allies, he will sometimes hone his elbows to maximum sharpness.

    Marjorie Taylor Greene’s rebranding: a break with Trump

    Few members of Congress have backed Trump with more reliability than Greene. But she has sacrificed that support on the altar of a curious rebranding scheme that involves slamming Trump on liberal media outlets while apologizing for the tactics she has brought to previous conservative fights.

    There is no blanket requirement for Republicans to fuse themselves without exception to every line item of the Trump playbook. But she had to know that cozying up to CNN and “The View” with a grievance list from health care policy to shutdown strategy to deportations could jeopardize her status in his good graces.

    Following the brash reaction from him that the world knew would come, she now paints herself as some aggrieved victim of a mean old president treating her horribly, complete with the always reliable tactic of blaming him for inappropriately harsh blowback from random citizens not fond of her change of tone.

    President Donald Trump hugs Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Georgia, after addressing a joint session of Congress March 4 at the U.S. Capitol.
    President Donald Trump hugs Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Georgia, after addressing a joint session of Congress March 4 at the U.S. Capitol. Andrew Harnik Getty Images

    Much of the grief MTG has given to Trump and other Republicans involved hesitancy toward the cause of the moment — the full release of the Epstein files. The Trump team did itself no favors floating the promise of such a release as catnip on the campaign trail, aimed straight at the conspiracy brigades who just know that big, famous, powerful names lurk within some file folder and that any hesitation toward complete unredacted release is evidence of complicity in a protection racket.

    With resounding congressional votes Tuesday to release the files, it is worth noting the sound basis for seeking more disclosures than we have seen so far. There may well be names of bad actors who richly deserve consequences they have been spared for years. But there are also reasons why a complete document dump is fraught with hazards.

    There is no “client list,” no handy tabloid-ready litany of big names ripe for the reputational fall craved by most cheerleaders for unfettered release. The files are scattered across dizzying volumes of protected grand jury testimony, ongoing civil cases, victim-privacy protections and even some foreign intelligence concerns. Unloading reams of raw discovery would trigger a blizzard of lawsuits, handing defense attorneys a decade of delay tactics. It could even reveal sources and methods that legitimate intelligence agencies are still using to pursue trafficking networks. Does that help the cause?

    Democrats have a much worse antisemitism problem

    For any MAGA critics who grow weary of ginning up an Epstein-based downfall for Trump, there is always the daily game of trying to manufacture an antisemitism crisis that might remotely approach the stains recently endured by Democrats.

    From “River to the Sea”-style anti-Israel hostility to ambivalence over the Oct. 7 attacks to the ascendancy of an outright Islamist as mayor of New York, the party is grappling with the foul air of bigotry that has spilled out from college campuses to the halls of Congress. It had to be a relief to see Carlson welcome an outright Jew-hater such as Nick Fuentes for a back-rub interview that repelled many of the fans Carlson carried over from cable news. That spectacle launched a myth of equivalency, as if our two major parties are struggling similarly.

    President Donald Trump greets, from left, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., conservative commentator Tucker Carlson, and Tulsi Gabbard on stage during his campaign rally at Gas South Arena in Duluth, Georgia, on Oct. 23, 2024. Kennedy now runs the Department of Health and Human Services. Gabbard is now director of National Intelligence.
    President Donald Trump greets, from left, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., conservative commentator Tucker Carlson, and Tulsi Gabbard on stage during his campaign rally at Gas South Arena in Duluth, Georgia, on Oct. 23, 2024. Kennedy now runs the Department of Health and Human Services. Gabbard is now director of National Intelligence. Arvin Temkar Atlanta Journal-Constitution/TNS

    That won’t fly. While there is a sad appetite in some circles of young conservatives for anti-Israel content, it is limited and it has an easy explanation. These are kids whose news diets are filled with reckless TikTok propaganda identifying Israel’s self-defense as “genocide” and America as a partner to global evil. The bridge to venomous antisemitism is a short walk for malleable young minds, even if they contain other worthwhile beliefs.

    But no festival of podcast bro posturing rises to a brushfire that could damage the MAGA brand. Trump is the most pro-Israel president in American history, crafting peace through strength in the Middle East while making clear the strategic and moral necessity of maintaining that alliance.

    The gleeful anticipation of infighting that will fracture Trump support is an empty exercise in wishful thinking, whether the hopes hang on an antisemitism squabble or continuing obsession with the Epstein files. Both are areas that deserve thoughtful consideration by thoughtful people on all sides. But there are not enough voices of discontent in the Trump base to cause him any lasting damage and not enough ammo available for his critics to extend for much longer their dreams of his collapse.

    Mark Davis hosts a morning radio show in Dallas-Fort Worth on 660-AM and at 660amtheanswer.com. Follow him on X: @markdavis.

    Mark Davis
    Mark Davis

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  • The Message Trump Sends by Endorsing Tucker Carlson

    Trump and his dangerous friend.
    Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    The president of the United States had a busy weekend. When he wasn’t golfing at Mar-a-Lago, excommunicating Marjorie Taylor Greene from the MAGA movement, or executing a bizarre U-turn on the Epstein files, Donald Trump chose to plunge into shark-infested ideological waters by defending Tucker Carlson’s right to interview any damn antisemitic white supremacist he felt like interviewing, as the New York Times reported:

    In late October, Mr. Carlson, a top surrogate for Mr. Trump’s re-election campaign who was given a prime-time speaking slot at the Republican National Convention last year, interviewed Mr. Fuentes on his podcast. During their discussion, Mr. Carlson attacked Republicans who closely backed Israel, calling them “Christian Zionists” who had been “seized by this brain virus.”

    On Sunday, Mr. Trump, speaking of Mr. Carlson as he traveled back to the White House after spending the weekend golfing at Mar-a-Lago, said, “You can’t tell him who to interview.” The president then insisted that he “didn’t know much about” Mr. Fuentes, whom he previously dined with at Mar-a-Lago in 2022, an episode that also caused a furor.

    If Mr. Carlson wanted to interview Mr. Fuentes, then “get the word out,” Mr. Trump said. “People have to decide. Ultimately people have to decide.”

    Arguments over Carlson’s friendly interview with Nick Fuentes sharply divided Trump’s allies on social media, all but blew up the influential Heritage Foundation, and embarrassed Republican pols, including longtime Carlson buddy J.D. Vance. Fuentes has long been a figure at the far-right fringes of MAGA-land who arouses particular anger among Jews, Israel-loving conservative Evangelicals, and assorted normies shocked to find they are in a coalition with this happily racist dude. It was a fraught subject for Trump to address, as Axios explains:

    Trump’s defense of Carlson interviewing a man labeled a white supremacist by the Justice Department puts him at odds with Republicans like Texas Sen. Ted Cruz who have condemned Carlson.

    More broadly, it underscores MAGA’s divided approach toward tolerating racism, sexism and antisemitism on the far right …

    Trump on Sunday finally waded into the Republican warfare after weeks of critics blasting Carlson for hosting the Holocaust denier on his podcast.

    Fuentes quickly tweeted out, “Thank you, Mr. President!” As well he should: It’s hard for anyone to exclude Fuentes from the MAGA movement when its founder and unquestioned leader appears to think he is one of those “very fine people on both sides” he talked about after Fuentes joined white rioters in Charlottesville back in 2017. And in Fuentes’s wake are the so-called Groypers, a nasty breed of young transgressive activists who alternate between white-supremacist views and plain nihilism. Conservative culture warrior Rob Dreher recently quoted an estimate that “between 30 and 40% of Republican staffers in Washington under the age of 30 are followers of Fuentes.” He’s a big deal and perhaps the wave of a nightmare future.

    The broader message Trump is sending to Republicans and conservatives generally should be familiar by now. While most politicians carefully balance the interests of swing and base voters in plotting their strategies, Trump always chooses the base, which he believes will have an advantage in a political environment he has worked hard to polarize. And in his ongoing conversations with his base, he has a “no enemies to the right” policy so long as the craziest of the crazies are personally loyal to him. He always offers consolation prizes to supporters who are offended by the extremists in his ranks. Jewish Republicans and their Christian allies, for example, have Trump’s unquestioned support for Israel’s war in Gaza, his reflexive Islamophobia, and his bullying of college campuses with pro-Palestinian protesters. So if they have to share a political blanket with antisemites and even neo-Nazis, it’s all in the family, and political power covers a multitude of sins.

    Ed Kilgore

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  • JD Vance goes after “scumbags” attacking his staff

    U.S. Vice President JD Vance has criticized “scumbags” for attacking his staff after a self-proclaimed journalist questioned whether his deputy press secretary was “a vile bigot.”

    Sloan Rachmuth had posted about Buckley Carlson, Vance’s deputy press secretary and the son of former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, claiming “racism and antisemitism is a Carlson family trait” amid the ongoing fallout from Tucker Carlson’s interview with Nick Fuentes. Vance said he had “zero tolerance for scumbags attacking my staff,” in response.

    Rachmuth told Newsweek: “I’m pleased to say that I have received an overwhelming amount of support from members of the conservative movement and the Republican Party. Christian and Jewish leaders have reached out to me for support as well.” She added that she hadn’t heard from anyone in the Carlson family since she posted her tweets.

    Newsweek reached out to Vance and Buckley Carlson to comment on this story outside of normal business hours.

    Why It Matters

    The social media spat came after Tucker Carlson stoked controversy in October for interviewing far-right commentator Fuentes, a Holocaust denier and extremist who has praised Adolf Hitler. It shows controversy from that interview is ongoing and is affecting other figures in American politics.

    Meanwhile, American politics has become increasingly polarized in recent years with the rise of social media sparking conversations about the line between free speech and allowing unbridled discourse, including hate speech.

    What To Know

    Writing on X, Rachmuth, an investigative journalist with 48,000 followers on the platform, said: “Today, we learned that Tucker Carlson’s brother idolizes Nick Fuentes. Racism and antisemitism is a Carlson family trait. Is Tucker’s son Buckley, who serves as JD Vance’s top aide also a vile bigot? America deserves to know how deep the Carlson’s family ethnic and religious hatred runs.” She did not expand or offer evidence to support this view.

    In response, Vance wrote on X: “Sloan Rachmuth is a ‘journalist’ who has decided to obsessively attack a staffer in his 20s because she doesn’t like the views of his father. Every time I see a public attack on Buckley it’s a complete lie. And yes, I notice ever person with an agenda who unfairly attacks a good guy who does a great job for me.”

    He continued: “Sloan describes herself as a defender of ‘Judeo-Christian Values.’ Is it a ‘Judeo-Christian value’ to lie about someone you don’t know? Not in any church I ever spent time in!”

    In another post, he said: “I have an extraordinary tolerance for disagreements and criticisms from the various people in our coalition. But I am a very loyal person, and I have zero tolerance for scumbags attacking my staff. And yes, *everyone* who I’ve seen attack Buckley with lies is a scumbag.”

    Rachmuth wrote back: “Mr. Vice President, that ‘someone I don’t know’ is one of your top advisors [sic] being paid with taxpayer funds. It’s not the guy who trims your shrubs or cuts your hair. And YES, defending Judeo-Christian values entails speaking out against the antisemitism that’s tearing our nation apart. It also involves questioning those at the highest level of government about their hires, and speaking truth to power when needed. Sir, shall I remain quiet while Jews like me are being targeted by massive media platforms, and while our country is being destroyed by hate?? Or can I continue to ask questions and fight against injustices without being unfairly questioned about my loyalty to my country? I look forward to hearing back from you.”

    What People Are Saying

    President Donald Trump told reporters in November: “You can’t tell [Tucker Carlson] who to interview—if he wants to interview Nick Fuentes, I don’t know much about him, but if he wants to do it…you know people have to decide, ultimately the people have to decide.”

    Nick Fuentes shared a video clip of this quote with the caption: “Thank you Mr. President!”

    Conservative commentator Ben Shapiro referenced the term “groypers,” used to describe Fuentes’ supporters, when he said in a post on X: “No to the groypers. No to cowards like Tucker Carlson, who normalize their trash. No to those who champion them. No to demoralization. No to bigotry and anti-meritocratic horses***. No to anti-Americanism. No.”

    What Happens Next

    The fallout from the Fuentes interview looks set to continue.

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  • ADL launches initiative to track Mamdani’s policies



    ADL launches initiative to track Mamdani’s policies – CBS News










































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    The Anti-Defamation League has launched an initiative to monitor New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s policies and appointments to help protect Jewish New Yorkers. ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt joins “The Takeout” to discuss.

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  • Opinion | The New Right’s New Antisemites

    Kevin Roberts of the Heritage Foundation flounders in the Tucker Carlson-Nick Fuentes fever swamps.

    The Editorial Board

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  • Tucker Carlson wonders how Laura Loomer got a Pentagon gig, and MTG has a savage answer | The Mary Sue

    Tucker Carlson demonstrates his Resting Idiot Face.

    The Republican party continues to divide, and it doesn’t seem like it’s going to be stopping or slowing down any time soon. If anything, the animosity between MAGA Republicans and regular Republicans seem to herald the collapse of something soon.

    On the Tucker Carlson show last week, Carlson asked, “ How does Laura Loomer get to be a Pentagon advisor?” Marjorie Taylor Greene, his guest for the show, replied, “I don’t know…this is a woman that can’t even legally buy a gun because she had such serious mental problems.”

    I reluctantly have to agree: How did she get to be a Pentagon advisor? Nothing in her resume looks like even a remote fit. However, given how the rest of the government staffing has gone under President Donald Trump’s recent term, it isn’t much of a surprise.

    What is a surprise is how quickly these party members have been to turn on each other. If they didn’t control our government it would almost be impressive.

    We also cannot ignore Greene’s comment. No, we are not endorsing her–or it–because we agree. A broken clock is right twice a day and all that. But do you understand how much you’ve had to do to get somebody like Greene to say something like this about you publicly, without being a Democrat?

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Image of Rachel Tolleson

    Rachel Tolleson

    Rachel (she/her) is a freelancer at The Mary Sue. She has been freelancing since 2013 in various forms, but has been an entertainment freelancer since 2016. When not writing her thoughts on film and television, she can also be found writing screenplays, fiction, and poetry. She currently lives in Brooklyn with her cats Carla and Thorin Oakenshield but is a Midwesterner at heart. She is also a tried and true emo kid and the epitome of “it was never a phase, Mom,” but with a dual affinity for dad rock. If she’s not rewatching Breaking Bad or Better Call Saul she’s probably rewatching Our Flag Means Death.

    Rachel Tolleson

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  • Inside Charlie Kirk’s Medal of Freedom event

    President Trump posthumously awarded Charlie Kirk with the nation’s highest civilian honor Tuesday, the Presidential Medal of Freedom. In the White House Rose Garden, the president presented the award to Kirk’s wife, Erika Kirk, on what would have been Kirk’s 32nd birthday. Eric Cortellessa, senior political correspondent for TIME, joins CBS News to discuss.

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  • Turning Point, moving forward without Charlie Kirk, makes first return to Utah since his killing

    Turning Point USA’s college tour will return to Utah on Tuesday for its first event in the state since its founder, Charlie Kirk, was assassinated on a college campus earlier this month.The stop, at Utah State University in Logan, is about two hours north of Utah Valley University, where Kirk was killed Sept. 10 by a gunman who fired a single shot through the crowd while Kirk was speaking.The assassination of a top ally of President Donald Trump and one of the most significant figures in his Make America Great Again movement has galvanized conservatives, who have vowed to carry on Kirk’s mission of encouraging young voters to embrace conservatism and moving American politics further right. Kirk himself has been celebrated as a “martyr” by many on the right, and Turning Point USA, the youth organization he founded, has seen a surge of interest across the nation, with tens of thousands of requests to launch new chapters in high schools and on college campuses.Tuesday’s event, which was scheduled before Kirk’s death, will showcase how Turning Point is finding its path forward without its charismatic leader, who headlined many of its events and was instrumental in drawing crowds and attention.The college tour is now being headlined by some of the biggest conservative names, including Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly and Glenn Beck. Tuesday’s event will feature conservative podcast host Alex Clark and a panel with Sen. Mike Lee, Rep. Andy Biggs, former Rep. Jason Chaffetz and Gov. Spencer Cox.And it will further a pledge his widow, Erika Kirk, made to continue the campus tour and the work of the organization he founded. She now oversees Turning Point along with a stable of her late husband’s former aides and friends.‘Nothing is changing’Erika Kirk has sought to assure her husband’s followers that she intends to continue to run the operation as her late husband intended, closely following plans he laid out to her and to staff.“We’re not going anywhere. We have the blueprints. We have our marching orders,” she said during an appearance on his podcast last week.That will include, she said, continuing to tape the daily podcast.“My husband’s voice will live on. The show will go on,” she said, announcing plans for a rotating cast of hosts. She said they intended to lean heavily on old clips of her husband, including answering callers’ questions.“We have decades’ worth of my husband’s voice. We have unused material from speeches that he’s had that no one has heard yet,” she said.Erika Kirk, however, made clear that she does not intend to appear on the podcast often, and so far seems to be assuming a more behind-the-scenes role than her husband.Mikey McCoy, Kirk’s former chief of staff, said Erika Kirk is in daily contact with members of the Trump administration, and has described her as “very strategic” and different from her husband.The events have served as tributes to KirkThe events so far have served as tributes to the late Kirk, with a focus on prayer, as well as the question-and-answer sessions that he was known for.At Virginia Tech last week, the state’s Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin, urged the crowd to carry Kirk’s legacy forward.“The question that has been asked over and over again is: Who will be the next Charlie? And as I look out in this room and I see thousands of you, I want to repeat the best answer that I have heard: You will be the next Charlie,” he said. “All of you.”He also praised Erika Kirk as an “extraordinary” leader.“Over the course of the last two weeks, Erika Kirk has demonstrated that she not only has the courage of a lion, but she has the heart of a saint. We have grieved with her and her family. We have prayed for her and her family,” he said. “Is there anyone better to lead Turning Point going forward than Erika Kirk?”He then turned the stage over to Kelly, who said Charlie Kirk had asked her to join the tour several months ago. She said she knew appearing onstage carried risk, but felt it was important to be there “to send a message that we will not be silenced by an assassin’s bullet, by a heckler’s veto, by a left-wing, woke professor or anyone who tries to silence us from saying what we really believe,” she said to loud cheers.At another event at the University of Minnesota last week, conservative commentator Michael Knowles gave a solo speech in lieu of the two-man conversation with Kirk that was originally planned. Then he continued Kirk’s tradition of responding to questions from the audience, which ranged from one man quibbling about Catholic doctrine to another arguing that the root of societal problems stems from letting women vote. (To the latter, he responded that women aren’t to blame because “men need to lead women.”)As Knowles spoke, a spotlight shined on a chair left empty for Kirk.Knowles said Kirk was instrumental in keeping together disparate conservative factions, and he worries about the MAGA movement fracturing without Kirk doing the day-to-day work to build bridges between warring groups.“Charlie was the unifying figure for the movement. It’s simply a fact,” he said. “There is no replacing him in that regard.”“The biggest threat right now is that without that single figure that we were all friends with, who could really hold it together, things could spin off in different directions,” Knowles said. “We have to make sure that doesn’t happen.”

    Turning Point USA’s college tour will return to Utah on Tuesday for its first event in the state since its founder, Charlie Kirk, was assassinated on a college campus earlier this month.

    The stop, at Utah State University in Logan, is about two hours north of Utah Valley University, where Kirk was killed Sept. 10 by a gunman who fired a single shot through the crowd while Kirk was speaking.

    The assassination of a top ally of President Donald Trump and one of the most significant figures in his Make America Great Again movement has galvanized conservatives, who have vowed to carry on Kirk’s mission of encouraging young voters to embrace conservatism and moving American politics further right. Kirk himself has been celebrated as a “martyr” by many on the right, and Turning Point USA, the youth organization he founded, has seen a surge of interest across the nation, with tens of thousands of requests to launch new chapters in high schools and on college campuses.

    Tuesday’s event, which was scheduled before Kirk’s death, will showcase how Turning Point is finding its path forward without its charismatic leader, who headlined many of its events and was instrumental in drawing crowds and attention.

    The college tour is now being headlined by some of the biggest conservative names, including Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly and Glenn Beck. Tuesday’s event will feature conservative podcast host Alex Clark and a panel with Sen. Mike Lee, Rep. Andy Biggs, former Rep. Jason Chaffetz and Gov. Spencer Cox.

    And it will further a pledge his widow, Erika Kirk, made to continue the campus tour and the work of the organization he founded. She now oversees Turning Point along with a stable of her late husband’s former aides and friends.

    ‘Nothing is changing’

    Erika Kirk has sought to assure her husband’s followers that she intends to continue to run the operation as her late husband intended, closely following plans he laid out to her and to staff.

    “We’re not going anywhere. We have the blueprints. We have our marching orders,” she said during an appearance on his podcast last week.

    That will include, she said, continuing to tape the daily podcast.

    “My husband’s voice will live on. The show will go on,” she said, announcing plans for a rotating cast of hosts. She said they intended to lean heavily on old clips of her husband, including answering callers’ questions.

    “We have decades’ worth of my husband’s voice. We have unused material from speeches that he’s had that no one has heard yet,” she said.

    Erika Kirk, however, made clear that she does not intend to appear on the podcast often, and so far seems to be assuming a more behind-the-scenes role than her husband.

    Mikey McCoy, Kirk’s former chief of staff, said Erika Kirk is in daily contact with members of the Trump administration, and has described her as “very strategic” and different from her husband.

    The events have served as tributes to Kirk

    The events so far have served as tributes to the late Kirk, with a focus on prayer, as well as the question-and-answer sessions that he was known for.

    At Virginia Tech last week, the state’s Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin, urged the crowd to carry Kirk’s legacy forward.

    “The question that has been asked over and over again is: Who will be the next Charlie? And as I look out in this room and I see thousands of you, I want to repeat the best answer that I have heard: You will be the next Charlie,” he said. “All of you.”

    He also praised Erika Kirk as an “extraordinary” leader.

    “Over the course of the last two weeks, Erika Kirk has demonstrated that she not only has the courage of a lion, but she has the heart of a saint. We have grieved with her and her family. We have prayed for her and her family,” he said. “Is there anyone better to lead Turning Point going forward than Erika Kirk?”

    He then turned the stage over to Kelly, who said Charlie Kirk had asked her to join the tour several months ago. She said she knew appearing onstage carried risk, but felt it was important to be there “to send a message that we will not be silenced by an assassin’s bullet, by a heckler’s veto, by a left-wing, woke professor or anyone who tries to silence us from saying what we really believe,” she said to loud cheers.

    At another event at the University of Minnesota last week, conservative commentator Michael Knowles gave a solo speech in lieu of the two-man conversation with Kirk that was originally planned. Then he continued Kirk’s tradition of responding to questions from the audience, which ranged from one man quibbling about Catholic doctrine to another arguing that the root of societal problems stems from letting women vote. (To the latter, he responded that women aren’t to blame because “men need to lead women.”)

    As Knowles spoke, a spotlight shined on a chair left empty for Kirk.

    Knowles said Kirk was instrumental in keeping together disparate conservative factions, and he worries about the MAGA movement fracturing without Kirk doing the day-to-day work to build bridges between warring groups.

    “Charlie was the unifying figure for the movement. It’s simply a fact,” he said. “There is no replacing him in that regard.”

    “The biggest threat right now is that without that single figure that we were all friends with, who could really hold it together, things could spin off in different directions,” Knowles said. “We have to make sure that doesn’t happen.”

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  • The FCC’s Involvement in Canceling Jimmy Kimmel Was ‘Unbelievably Dangerous,’ Ted Cruz Says

    Sen. Ted Cruz (R–Texas) is happy that ABC decided to indefinitely suspend Jimmy Kimmel’s talk show. But like Fox News political analyst Brit Hume, Cruz is not happy about the role that Brendan Carr, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), played in that decision. By threatening TV stations that carried Jimmy Kimmel Livewith fines and license revocation, Cruz warned in his podcast on Friday, Carr set a dangerous precedent that could invite similar treatment of conservative speech under a future administration.

    “I hate what Jimmy Kimmel said,” Cruz declared, referring to the September 15 monologue in which the late-night comedian erroneously suggested that Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old man accused of assassinating conservative activist Charlie Kirk at a college in Utah five days earlier, was part of the MAGA movement. “I am thrilled that he was fired. But let me tell you: If the government gets in the business of saying, ‘We don’t like what you, the media, have said; we’re going to ban you from the airwaves if you don’t say what we like,’ that will end up bad for conservatives.”

    In an interview with right-wing podcaster Benny Johnson on Wednesday, Carr warned that there are “actions we can take on licensed broadcasters” that dared to air Kimmel’s show, including “fines or license revocations.” He added that “we can do this the easy way or the hard way.” Either “these companies can find ways to change conduct and take action, frankly, on Kimmel,” he said, “or there’s going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.”

    Hours later, Nexstar, which owns 32 ABC affiliate stations, announced that it would preempt Jimmy Kimmel Live! “for the foreseeable future beginning with tonight’s show.” Sinclair, which owns 38 ABC affiliates, likewise said it would “indefinitely preempt” Jimmy Kimmel Live! beginning that night. ABC, which produces the programming aired by those affiliates and owns eight of the network’s stations, fell in line the same night, saying it would “indefinitely” suspend the show.

    Cruz likened Carr to a mafioso. “He says, ‘We can do this the easy way, or we can do this the hard way,'” the senator noted. “And I got to say, that’s right out of Goodfellas. That’s right out of a mafioso coming into a bar [and] going, ‘Nice bar you have here. It’d be a shame if something happened to it.'”

    In fact, Carr’s threat was more explicit than that. “This sort of status quo is obviously not acceptable,” he declared, saying it was “past time” for “these licensed broadcasters” to say, “Listen, we are going to preempt, we are not going to run, Kimmel anymore until you straighten this out, because we licensed broadcaster[s] are running the possibility of fines or license revocations from the FCC if we continue to run content that ends up being a pattern of news distortion.”

    That rationale for punishing stations that carried Kimmel’s show was absurd on its face. The policy to which Carr alluded applies to a “broadcast news report” that was “deliberately intended to mislead viewers or listeners” about “a significant event.” While Kimmel’s remarks were certainly misinformed, it is doubtful that he intended to “mislead viewers.” It seems more plausible that he committed to a partisan narrative without bothering to ask whether it was supported by the facts, an example of carelessness rather than deliberate deceit. But whatever you think of Kimmel’s intent, a comedian’s monologue is not, by any stretch of the imagination, a “broadcast news report.”

    By abusing his power to exert pressure on ABC and its affiliates, Cruz said, Carr was setting an example that Democrats are apt to copy. “Going down this road, there will come a time when a Democrat…wins the White House,” the senator said, and “they will silence us. They will use this power, and they will use it ruthlessly. And that is dangerous.”

    Although “it might feel good right now to threaten Jimmy Kimmel,” Cruz said, “when it is used to silence every conservative in America, we will regret it….It is unbelievably dangerous for government to put itself in the position of saying, ‘We’re going to decide what speech we like and what we don’t, and we’re going to threaten to take you off air if we don’t like what you’re saying.'”

    Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.) agreed that Carr’s involvement in kiboshing Kimmel was “absolutely inappropriate.” The FCC’s chairman “has got no business weighing in on this,” Paul said on Sunday’s edition of Meet the Press. “If you’re losing money, you can be fired. But the government’s got no business in it. And the FCC was wrong to weigh in. And I’ll fight any attempt by the government to get involved with speech.”

    Conservative podcaster Tucker Carlson perceives a similar danger in Attorney General Pam Bondi’s response to online commentary that celebrated Kirk’s murder or justified violence against conservatives more generally. “We will absolutely target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech,” Bondi said last week, erroneously asserting a constitutional distinction between “free speech” and “hate speech.” She later claimed she had in mind “threats of violence that individuals incite against others.” But the speech that offended Bondi generally would not meet the First Amendment test that the Supreme Court established in the 1969 case Brandenburg v. Ohio, which requires advocacy that is both “directed” at inciting “imminent lawless action” and “likely” to have that effect.

    “This is the attorney general of the United States, the chief law enforcement officer of the United States, telling you that there is this other category…called hate speech,” Carlson remarked on his show last Wednesday. “And of course, the implication is that’s a crime. There’s no sentence that Charlie Kirk would have objected to more than that.”

    With good reason, Carlson said: “You hope that a year from now, the turmoil we’re seeing in the aftermath of his murder won’t be leveraged to bring hate speech laws to this country. And trust me, if it is, if that does happen, there is never a more justified moment for civil disobedience than that, ever. And there never will be. Because if they can tell you what to say, they’re telling you what to think.”

    It is encouraging that at least some of President Donald Trump’s allies recognize that freedom of speech is unreliable unless it protects their political opponents. But Trump himself seems oblivious to that point. When asked about Cruz’s criticism of Carr on Friday, Trump described the FCC chairman as “a great American patriot,” adding, “I disagree with Ted Cruz on that.”

    Of course he does. For years, Trump has been eager to wield the FCC’s powers against broadcasters who air programming that offends him. During Trump’s first administration, he averred that “network news has become so partisan, distorted and fake that licenses must be challenged and, if appropriate, revoked.” FCC Chairman Ajit Pai rejected that suggestion in no uncertain terms. “I believe in the First Amendment,” he said. “The FCC under my leadership will stand for the First Amendment, and under the law the FCC does not have the authority to revoke a license of a broadcast station based on the content of a particular newscast.”

    Trump’s views on the subject have not changed. Last week, he cheered Kimmel’s suspension as “Great News for America” and urged NBC to fire Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers, two other late-night comedians who are often critical of him. “Do it NBC!!!” he demanded. In case there was any doubt that Trump was not merely offering advice as a businessman or TV critic, he signed that Truth Social missive “President DJT” and later clarified the underlying threat. “You have a network and you have evening shows, and all they do is hit Trump,” he complained to reporters. “It’s all they do….They’re licensed. They’re not allowed to do that.” When network newscasts “take a great story” and “make it bad,” he averred, “that’s really illegal.”

    The difference this time around is that the FCC’s Trump-appointed chairman, an avowed free speech champion, has no constitutional compunction about using his powers to bully broadcasters into submission. “They give me only bad publicity or press,” Trump said on Thursday. “I mean, they’re getting a license. I would think maybe their license should be taken away. It will be up to Brendan Carr.”

    Jacob Sullum

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  • Stephen Miller, Susie Wiles, Tucker Carlson speak at Charlie Kirk memorial service

    White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and conservative commentator Tucker Carlson share their thoughts about Charlie Kirk at his memorial service in Arizona.

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  • ‘He Was Murdered’: Elon Musk Jumps Into Controversy Over OpenAI Whistleblower

    Tucker Carlson published a new interview with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman on Wednesday in which the two men discussed some pretty dark topics. Altman also talked about his beef with Elon Musk, and it wasn’t long before the Tesla CEO chimed in on X with his own thoughts, definitively claiming that a whistleblower at OpenAI “was murdered,” in a tweet Thursday.

    During the episode, Carlson and Altman talk about Suchir Balaji, a researcher at OpenAI who died on Nov. 26, 2024. Balaji had accused OpenAI of violating U.S. copyright law a few weeks prior to his death. And while it was ruled a suicide, his mother said he was murdered.

    Carlson had Balaji’s mother, Poornima Ramarao, on his podcast back in January and insisted that the 26-year-old whistleblower was murdered during his conversation with Altman.

    “So you’ve had complaints from one programmer who said you guys were basically stealing people’s stuff and not paying them. And then he wound up murdered. What was that?” Carlson said.

    “Also, a great tragedy, he committed suicide,” Altman said.

    Carlson pressed Altman, asking if he really thought Balaji killed himself. Altman replied, “I really do.”

    “This was like a friend of mine, this was like a guy that—not a close friend, but this was someone that worked at OpenAI for a very long time,” Altman continued. “I spent… I mean, I was really shaken by this tragedy. I spent a lot of time trying to read everything I could, as I’m sure you and others did, too, about what happened. It looks like a suicide to me.”

    “Why does it look like a suicide?” Carlson asked.

    “It was a gun he had purchased. It was the—this is like gruesome to talk about, but I read the whole medical record. Does it not look like one to you?” Altman said.

    Carlson said he definitely thinks it was murder, saying there were signs of a struggle, “surveillance wires had been cut,” among other evidence he believes proves there was foul play. Carlson also told Altman that Balaji’s mother “believes he was murdered on your orders.”

    Altman asked Carlson if he believed that, and Carlson tried to avoid answering before saying, “I believe that it’s worth looking into.” Carlson insisted, “I’m not accusing you at all,” after Altman started to say something about being accused and was cut off.

    “You understand how this sounds like an accusation…” Altman says.

    “Of course. And I, I mean, I certainly… let me just be clear once again, not accusing you of any wrongdoing, but I think it’s worth finding out what happened,” Carlson replied. “And I don’t understand why the city of San Francisco has refused to investigate it beyond just calling it a suicide.”

    Altman said that “his memory and his family deserve to be treated with a level of respect and grief that I don’t quite feel here.” Carlson shot back that he was asking at the behest of his family.

    Carlson pivoted to talking about Elon Musk and his attacks on Altman, asking what the “core” of their dispute might be about. Altman talked about how he’s grateful to Musk for helping him start OpenAI. The two men were co-founders before Musk was pushed out of the organization.

    “There are things about him that are incredible, and I’m grateful for a lot of things he’s done. There’s a lot of things about him that I think are traits I don’t admire,” Altman said.

    As Altman puts it, Musk has tried to “slow us down” ever since he got pushed out, filing lawsuits and claiming that OpenAI is betraying its original mission.

    When they weren’t talking about Musk, suicide, and murder, things still got very heavy. Carlson spent much of the interview either intentionally hyping the scariness of AI or being genuinely fearful of what it’s capable of.

    “It doesn’t seem quite like a machine. It seems like it has the spark of life to it,” Carlson asked, claiming that it has some kind of “autonomy or spirit within it.”

    Carlson repeatedly asked Altman about his religious beliefs. Altman said that he’s Jewish, which wasn’t enough for Carlson, who kept probing about whether he believed in God.

    “I asked because it seems like the technology that you’re creating or shepherding into existence will have more power than people… on this current trajectory,” Carlson said.

    The former Fox News host badgered Altman about where he gets his “moral framework” if not from a higher power.

    “I mean, like everybody else, I think the environment I was brought up in probably is the biggest thing. Like my family, my community, my school, my religion, probably that,” Altman said.

    It’s actually a bit baffling that Altman agreed to do this interview, given the way that Carlson discusses AI and tech leaders on his show. Carlson often talks about them as godless freaks who are trying to build their own god in the machine. And Altman seemed at times blindsided by the questions about topics like suicide, where Carlson clearly tried to portray Altman as cold and out of touch with the morality of everyday people.

    “The beauty of a religion is it admits it’s a religion, and it tells you what it stands for,” Carlson told Altman. “The unsettling part of this technology—not just your company, but others—is that I don’t know what it stands for, but it does stand for something. And unless it admits that and tells us what it stands for, then it guides us in a kind of stealthy way toward a conclusion we may not even know we’re reaching.”

    Matt Novak

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  • Tucker Carlson Spent Halloween with His Favorite “Demonic Force”

    Tucker Carlson Spent Halloween with His Favorite “Demonic Force”

    Tucker Carlson, the first Fox News host who referred to GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump as “a demonic force” in 2021, kept things on brand this Halloween. That night, as costumed ghosts and ghouls roamed the streets in search of treats, Carlson was onstage with the man he also called “a destroyer.” And that’s not the only demon in Carlson’s DMs this week, as the YouTuber also claimed that a demon crawled into bed with him as he slept.

    The mystery of how Tucker Carlson so swiftly descended from his perch as the right-wing cable channel’s biggest star has been the source of endless contemplation. Is it because he sent tests that were too racist even for the channel’s upper management? Was it because Fox Corp. chair Rupert Murdoch found Carlson’s advocacy for prayer off-putting? Or perhaps Carlson just wasn’t praying enough, if his recent claims that a demon physically attacked him were true.

    The news that the Lord allegedly turned his back on Carlson broke this week upon the release of a trailer from the upcoming film Christianities? In a teaser posted to YouTube, Carlson is asked by interviewer John Heers if he believes that “the presence of evil is kickstarting people to wonder about the good.”

    The question seemed like a wonderful opening for Carlson to explore the questions of evil posed by Trump, a man who just last week claimed that God chose him to lead our nation. After all, when anyone thinks of evil, they likely picture people who commit acts of treason, rape, and bigotry or who are just super into Hitler! Would this be the moment that Carlson, who in 2021 texted his then-producer Alex Pfeiffer to say Trump is “a demonic force, a destroyer,” would join other conservative patriots to publicly denounce the man he’d so happily denounced in private?

    If he had, that sure would have been a stunner! But somehow, the truth is even more jaw-dropping. Instead, Carlson responded that he had “direct experience” with evil a year and a half ago, when “in my bed at night. I got attacked while I was asleep with my wife and four dogs and mauled, physically mauled.”

    Occam’s Razor would have us assume that the culprit here was one of those four dogs. After all, those dogs were rumored to be powerful enough to deny former presidential candidate Ron DeSantis Carson’s primary-run endorsement. Sure, Carlson denied that rumor, but ask anyone who sleeps with their pets (this correspondent included): you are almost guaranteed to wake up with a scratch or a bump, between canine dreams of chasing bunnies and that early morning demand for food.

    But Carlson went straight to Hell with his assumptions, saying that he was attacked “by a demon — or something unseen that left claw marks on my sides.”

    “I was totally confused,” Carlson says. “I woke up, and I couldn’t breathe, and I thought I was going to suffocate, and I walked around outside, and then I walked in, and my wife and dogs had not woken up, and they’re very light sleepers.”

    “And then I had these terrible pains on my rib cage and on my shoulder, and I was just in my boxer shorts and I went and flipped on the light in the bathroom, and I had four claw marks on either side underneath my arms and on my left shoulder. And they’re bleeding.” The claws came from a demon, he grew to believe, prompting him to spend “a year and a half reading [the Bible], and then I started rereading it, and it was a, just a transformative experience for me.”

    That transformation didn’t come up on Halloween, when Carlson welcomed Trump on a Glendale, Arizona stop on his Tucker Carlson LiveTour. According to the Arizona Republic, the former president’s appearance was fairly sedate. Carlson threw “softball questions at Trump, who for about 90 minutes covered years of familiar material in rambling stories.”

    “He peppered his comments with a casual viciousness,” the paper notes. Trump’s most noteworthy remarks that night—that he wanted to put fellow Republican Liz Cheney “with a rifle standing there with nine barrels shooting at her. OK? Let’s see how she feels about it. You know, when the guns are trained on her face,” went unquestioned by Carlson, who earlier this week also endorsed vaguely sexualized inter-family spanking.

    The entire situation suggests that Heers might be onto something with the whole “presence of evil” thing after all—he just might be asking the wrong people about where the Devil truly resides.

    Eve Batey

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  • Trump rally at MSG sees numerous speakers slur Latinos, Harris, political opponents with racist remarks | amNewYork

    Trump rally at MSG sees numerous speakers slur Latinos, Harris, political opponents with racist remarks | amNewYork

    During Donald Trump’s rally at Madison Square Garden on Oct. 27, 2024, podcast host and comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who referred to Puerto Rico as “a floating island of garbage” — a line that drew some groans from the crowd — and crudely claimed Latinos “enjoy making babies.” 

    REUTERS/Andrew Kelly