Author: adler

  • Harmeet Dhillon on DOJ Suing Multiple States and DC Over Access to Voter Rolls: “We Have Found at Least 350,000 Dead People Currently On the Voter Rolls” (VIDEO)

    Harmeet Dhillon on DOJ Suing Multiple States and DC Over Access to Voter Rolls: “We Have Found at Least 350,000 Dead People Currently On the Voter Rolls” (VIDEO)

    US Assistant AG for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon was on “Sunday Morning Futures” with host Maria Bartiromo to discuss the DOJ suing 29 states and DC over access to voter rolls.
    Bartiromo and Dhillon also discussed the Russia Collusion Hoax and why it appears that no one is ever held accountable for it.
    “Our audience knows exactly what happened with the Russia Collusion story. No one has been held accountable. Why not?” Bartiromo asked.
    “I heard Kash’s remarks. I agree with them. And you know, your folks need to understand that when we start these investigations, it takes time. We have to interview a lot of witnesses. We don’t want to do what the other side did, which is just jump to conclusions. And so we are building strong cases,” Dhillon said.
    “Some of the judges out there, particularly judges appointed more recently, have been, you know, doing their own form of lawfare by simply denying the Trump administration’s valid cases in court,” Dhillon continued.
    “I can assure you that you know, the whole Department of Justice is very committed to this, and acting Attorney General Todd Blanche is continuing the work started under the Attorney General Pam Bondi,” Dhillon explained.
    “If the Republicans lose seats in the House, will these investigations get derailed?” Bartiromo asked.
    “We are going to continue our work regardless. I mean, the President has a four-year mandate. The elections are not going to affect the dedication of the lawyers at the Department of Justice to see this through,” Dhillon said.
    “We have a duty to do that, and frankly, if we don’t do it, the American people are going to lose confidence in our elections,” Dhillon continued.
    “I know you have been trying to go state by state to clean up voter rolls. What are you doing in that regard?” Bartiromo asked.
    “I requested the voter rolls from all states and the District of Columbia. About a third of the states have voluntarily complied with us or reached settlements with us,” Dhillon said.
    “I’m suing 29 states and the District of Columbia for their refusal to give us the voter rolls to which the Attorney General or the acting Attorney General is entitled under the Civil Rights Act of 1960,” Dhillon said.
    “For the ones that we have run so far, 60 million records that we have run, we have found at least 350,000 dead people currently on the voter rolls in those jurisdictions, and we have referred approximately 25,000 people with no citizenship records to Homeland Security,” Dhillon explained.
    Watch:

    EXCLUSIVE: @HarmeetKDhillon on Sunday Morning Futures
    “We found at least 350,000 dead people currently on voter rolls.”
    Dhillon says DOJ is suing 29 states + D.C. over voter roll access — and signals more action ahead on election integrity.
    More with @MariaBartiromo pic.twitter.com/Zu6FAGnU2V
    — SundayMorningFutures (@SundayFutures) April 19, 2026

    The post Harmeet Dhillon on DOJ Suing Multiple States and DC Over Access to Voter Rolls: “We Have Found at Least 350,000 Dead People Currently On the Voter Rolls” (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

  • Former Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron on His Run for GOP US Senate Seat – (VIDEO)

    Former Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron on His Run for GOP US Senate Seat – (VIDEO)

    Former Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron talked about his run for the US Senate on “Fox News Sunday” with host Shannon Bream. He is running to secure the seat that is held by retiring Senator Mitch McConnell.
    “On May 19th, Kentucky voters will choose their top Republican contender to replace retiring Senator Mitch McConnell,” Bream said.
    “Joining me now is another candidate vying for the soon-to-be-vacated Senate seat, former Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron,” Bream said.
    “Let’s work through some of the criticism of your particular race, your position,” Bream said of critics running against Cameron.
    “These are all tactics that have been tried in the past,” Cameron said.
    “They are laughable. I’ve got over 100 law enforcement officials that have endorsed this campaign,” Cameron said.
    “I spent my time as Attorney General suing the Biden administration because of the porous southern border and weak policies from the Biden administration. So, everyone that I know discounts these ads as obviously something that is desperate from another camp in this race,” Cameron continued.
    “As I travel our 120 counties, people are very focused upon a candidate that is focused on them, and not the mudslinging,” Cameron explained.
    “The President has not endorsed in this GOP primary. How much of a difference would it make, and why do you think he hasn’t so far?” Bream asked.
    “I’ve been grateful for President Trump’s support in my last two races and of course I spent 2024 as a surrogate for President Trump,” Cameron continued.
    “What I know about President Trump is he wants to see a candidate earn it, and work hard to get across our 120 counties,” Cameron said.
    Bream asked Cameron about a piece written about him in the Courier-Journal that was critical of his Republican candidacy.
    “I’m assuming you’ve read it. What was your response?” Bream asked.
    “Well, Shannon, this is not the first time I’ve been attacked because I’m a black Republican. I said at the 2020 RNC Convention that I am my own man, and I speak with a voice that is forceful and speaks about conservative ideology, and I’m gonna continue to do that regardless of what people may say about me,” Cameron said.
    “I tell people all the time that we don’t need a country that is built on diversity, equity and inclusion. We need a country that is built on merit, excellence, intelligence and integrity,” Cameron explained.
    Watch:

    WATCH: @DanielCameronKY, former Kentucky Attorney General and GOP candidate for U.S. Senate, joined us to make the case for his candidacy for the seat held by Mitch McConnell. pic.twitter.com/t05U2x46gL
    — Fox News Sunday (@FoxNewsSunday) April 19, 2026

    The post Former Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron on His Run for GOP US Senate Seat – (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

  • FBI Director Kash Patel Says He Will Sue The Atlantic Over Latest Hit Piece (VIDEO)

    FBI Director Kash Patel Says He Will Sue The Atlantic Over Latest Hit Piece (VIDEO)

    FBI Director Kash Patel has said he will sue The Atlantic magazine over their latest hit piece.
    During an interview with Fox News host Maria Bartiromo on Sunday morning, Patel was asked about the recent article that claimed that he has ”alarmed colleagues with episodes of excessive drinking and unexplained absences.”

    Memo to the fake news – the only time I’ll ever actually be concerned about the hit piece lies you write about me will be when you stop. Keep talking, it means I’m doing exactly what I should be doing. And no amount of BS you write will ever deter this FBI from making America…
    — FBI Director Kash Patel (@FBIDirectorKash) April 18, 2026

    Here is a transcript of the exchange:
    PATEL: Maria, I’m happy to announce on your show that we’re not going to take this laying down. You want to attack my character? Come at me. Bring it on. I’ll see you in court.”
    BARTIROMO: So you’re going to sue them?”
    PATEL: Absolutely, it’s coming tomorrow.”
    BARTIROMO: Tomorrow, you will be dropping a lawsuit against The Atlantic magazine?”
    PATEL: Yes I will, for defamation Because you know what, Maria? We have to fight back against the fake news. Its one of the many things President Trump is so successful at and leading out on.
    I won’t tolerate their attacks on me because they are indirect attacks on the men and women of the FBI that we have cleaned up.
    If the fake news mafia wants to, you know, ring their drum beat as loud as they can, they’re never going to stop me from completing the mission that President Trump asked me to do, which is safeguarding America. And we are doing it better than ever before.
    Watch the clip below:

    NEW: FBI Director Kash Patel tells Maria Bartiromo that he is suing The Atlantic for defamation.
    “You want to attack my character? Come at me, bring it on. I’ll see you in court.” pic.twitter.com/I6rBlwh5Kr
    — Fox News (@FoxNews) April 19, 2026

    In the same interview, Patel also said that “arrests are coming” against those who tried to stage a “de facto coup” against President Trump.
    ”They not only have personally attacked the presidency of the United States and President Trump, but they tried to thwart our elections and rig the entire system,” he said.
    “We’ve got all the evidence. I can announce on your show that we’ve got all the information we need,” he continued.
    “We’re working with our prosecutors at the Department of Justice and their Attorney General, Todd Blanche, and we are going to be making arrests, and it’s coming, and I promise you, it’s coming soon.”
    WATCH: FBI Director Kash Patel Says ‘Arrests Are Coming Soon’ for Deep State Coup Plotters Who Tried to Rig Elections Against Trump, ‘Comey Is Not the Only One’
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  • Humanoid Robot Smashes Human Half Marathon Record in Beijing — Nearly 3x Faster Than Last Year! (VIDEO)

    Humanoid Robot Smashes Human Half Marathon Record in Beijing — Nearly 3x Faster Than Last Year! (VIDEO)

    The Honor HUmanoid robot competing in the Beijing half marathon.
    A humanoid robot has set a new world record for the half-marathon in Beijing, marking a major escalation in the capabilities of artificial intelligence and robotics.
    The robot, developed by Chinese firm Honor, completed the 21-kilometer race in 50 minutes and 26 seconds.
    That is well ahead of the human world record of roughly 57 minutes, set earlier this year by Uganda’s Jacob Kiplimo.
    Watch the clip below:

    A humanoid robot won a half-marathon in Beijing in 50 minutes and 26 seconds, finishing faster than Ugandan runner Jacob Kiplimo’s world record.
    Read more: https://t.co/9dAhROVvPn pic.twitter.com/MkqJOKUxwS
    — CNN (@CNN) April 19, 2026

    The race was part of a robot competition held alongside a human event.
    Around 40 percent of the machines ran autonomously, while others were remotely controlled.

    This Chinese humanoid robot just shattered the world record for a half marathon, finishing in 50 min 26 sec.
    This video shows its crash just meters before the finish line where it had to be picked up by a team of humans. The robot is from Honor, the smartphone maker and Huawei… pic.twitter.com/HflDC0rInX
    — Kyle Chan (@kyleichan) April 19, 2026

    The result represents a dramatic jump in performance.
    In the same event last year, the fastest robot took more than two hours and 40 minutes to finish.
    Several machines struggled during the race, with some falling or colliding with barriers, but the winning robot completed the course cleanly at a pace that would beat elite human runners.

    Chinese humanoid robots have taken part in a half-marathon race in Beijing, and they’ve whizzed past mere humans.
    Developed by Chinese smartphone brand ‘Honor’, “Lightning” was crowned champion, finishing the race in 50 minutes and 26 seconds. pic.twitter.com/NXjwadOuy8
    — Sky News (@SkyNews) April 19, 2026

    The robot was designed with long, athlete-like legs and equipped with an advanced liquid-cooling system to maintain performance over long distances.
    China has been investing heavily in humanoid robotics, with state planning documents identifying the sector as a strategic priority through the end of the decade.
    Major U.S. companies are also racing to build humanoid robots. Firms such as Boston Dynamics have already moved their Atlas robot from prototype to early industrial deployment.
    Meanwhile, Elon Musk’s Tesla is developing its Optimus robot for mass production, with plans to scale output and eventually sell the machines commercially.

    Tesla Optimus learning Kung Fu pic.twitter.com/ziEuiiKWn7
    — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) October 4, 2025

    The post Humanoid Robot Smashes Human Half Marathon Record in Beijing — Nearly 3x Faster Than Last Year! (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

  • Zohran Mamdani Robs Taxpayers to Fund Tax Consumers

    Zohran Mamdani Robs Taxpayers to Fund Tax Consumers

    New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani has announced a new tax on luxury apartments, which he will use to fund free programs for those who do almost no work.
     
    New York’s socialist mayor, Zohran Mamdani, announced this week that he is making good on his campaign promise to tax the rich. Like all socialists, Mamdani claims that the rich do not pay their “fair share,” a claim contradicted by the data.
    In effect, wealthy taxpayers pay almost all of the taxes in New York City, while the lower 50% not only pay almost nothing but also receive government benefits. The lower 30% of NYC residents do almost no work. This is supported by Census Bureau data showing that the lowest income quintile in New York City earns a mean household income of just $12,294, equivalent to roughly 14 hours per week at New York’s minimum wage of $16.50, which is already nearly double the federal minimum wage of $7.25.
    According to the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, millionaires paid 44.6% of all personal income tax collected in tax year 2024, while the top 200,000 taxpayers paid 51.9%. Millionaires also accounted for over 75% of all reported capital gains in the state that year. Meanwhile, the bottom 50% of taxpayers paid just 0.2%. According to 2023 data from the NYC Independent Budget Office, the top 1% of city income tax filers paid approximately one-third of all city income tax revenue, with a threshold of at least $906,677 in income.
    “When I ran for mayor, I said I was going to tax the rich. Well, today we’re taxing the rich,” Mamdani declared in a video filmed outside 220 Central Park South, where Citadel CEO Ken Griffin owns a four-floor penthouse purchased for $238 million. On April 15, Mamdani and Governor Kathy Hochul jointly announced a pied-à-terre tax, French for “foot on the ground,” an annual surcharge on one-to-three-family homes, condominiums, and co-ops valued above $5 million whose owners maintain a primary residence outside New York City.
    Mamdani argued that such properties are often left vacant while still benefiting from rising real estate values, calling the arrangement “a fundamentally unfair system that hurts working New Yorkers.”
    Yet the non-resident owners he targets are, by definition, not drawing on city services. The revenue he proposes to extract from them would flow not to working New Yorkers but to welfare programs serving those who don’t work, transferring wealth from tax producers to tax consumers.
    “As mayor, I believe everyone has a role to play in contributing to our city,” Mamdani said, adding that “some, a little bit more than others.”
    In practice, the $500 million he aims to collect would be extracted from a small number of wealthy property owners to fund services consumed by a far larger population that contributes little to the tax base. In Austrian economics, my academic discipline, this is called wealth redistribution. It is a dangerous feature of socialism that begins the slide toward communism and the abolition of private property.
    Mamdani explained that the projected $500 million in annual revenue taken from the wealthy will be directed toward free childcare, street cleaning, and neighborhood safety. But if he wanted safer neighborhoods, he could achieve that goal by arresting and prosecuting criminals, something he opposes.
    According to Manhattan Institute fellow Rafael Mangual, Mamdani won his assembly seat in 2020 as part of a far-left contingent for whom “defund the police” and “abolish jails” were core elements of political identity, not empty slogans. In a candidate questionnaire, he stated that his goal is to have fewer people incarcerated before trial and fewer prosecuted overall, and called violence an “artificial construction,” stating at a 2021 protest that “what violent crime is, is defined by the state.” As the endorsed candidate of the NYC chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, he is tied to a platform seeking to dismantle enforcement of all misdemeanor offenses, end cash bail, cut prosecutors’ budgets, and end imprisonment for parole violations.
    On policing, Mamdani has pledged $1 billion to create a Department of Community Safety dispatching social workers instead of police to certain calls, and has stated he does not foresee hiring more NYPD officers. His first budget canceled his predecessor’s plan to hire 5,000 additional officers, keeping the force at just under 35,000. After a mass shooting in Midtown Manhattan in July 2025, Mamdani walked back his earlier position, saying he was “not running to defund the police,” attributing his prior statements to frustration over George Floyd’s murder. He then named supporters of the Defund the Police movement to his transition team and administration, including his director of appointments.
    In addition to being soft on crime and personal property, he is also weak on economic policy and budget balancing. The $500 million figure amounts to less than 10 percent of the city’s projected budget deficit of $5.4 billion.
    While the tax would penalize successful people to fund expenses that responsible parents normally pay for their children, it still would not be enough to cover the deficit. This is even before Mamdani institutes the rest of his utopian plan for free buses and grocery stores.
    Earlier in April, Mamdani released a Preliminary Citywide Racial Equity Plan framing his agenda as shifting tax burdens from outer-borough homeowners to “more expensive homes in richer and whiter neighborhoods.” The plan also proposed an estate tax threshold of $750,000, which would impose a 50 percent state estate tax on homes above that value, potentially raising the combined federal and state rate to 70 percent.
    Furthermore, the $500 million projection also assumes that wealthy property owners will simply comply. They have several options to avoid the tax entirely. Owners could spend more time in their New York City properties, establishing residency sufficient to escape the surcharge. They could place tenants, real or nominal, in the apartments, since the tax targets unoccupied units. In fact, it would be cheaper to pay someone to live in the apartment than to pay the tax.
    Mamdani has not explained how his administration would determine what constitutes New York City residency, how occupancy would be verified, or how ownership structures, typically layers of LLCs and trusts, would be pierced to establish liability.
    The other option is that the wealth could just leave. And many already have, shrinking NYC’s tax base. New York’s share of the nation’s millionaires plummeted 31% between 2010 and 2022. Had that share remained at 2010 levels, the state and city would have collected more than $13 billion in additional personal income tax revenue in 2022 alone.
    Each of these responses eliminates the tax revenue Mamdani is counting on while doing nothing to close a $5.4 billion deficit. However, a new tax proposal may allow Mamdani to continue taxing people even after they leave New York.
    Legislators in California and New York have proposed “exit taxes” and wealth taxes targeting high-net-worth individuals to offset revenue losses from residents relocating to lower-tax states. These proposals aim to tax individuals based on their worldwide wealth upon departure or continue taxing them for up to ten years after they leave.
    The post Zohran Mamdani Robs Taxpayers to Fund Tax Consumers appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

  • Mark Zuckerberg to Axe 10 Percent of Meta’s Workforce in May as AI Bloodbath Deepens

    Mark Zuckerberg to Axe 10 Percent of Meta’s Workforce in May as AI Bloodbath Deepens

    Mark Zuckerberg during a recent interview with podcaster Theo Von.
    Meta plans to cut about 8,000 jobs next month, roughly 10 pereccent of its workforce, as it ramps up investment in artificial intelligence.
    According to Reuters, the layoffs are expected to begin around May 20, with further cuts likely later this year. The scale and timing of additional reductions have not been finalized.
    The job cuts come as CEO Mark Zuckerberg seeks to embrace the benefits of AI.

    Financial News: Meta to cut 8,000 jobs, 10% of workforce, starting next month pic.twitter.com/AA1MQy5pRH
    — The Calvin Coolidge Project (@TheCalvinCooli1) April 18, 2026

    Meta has reportedly set aside about $135 billion in capital spending this year as it looks to compete with rivals including OpenAI and Anthropic.
    Last month, Reuters reported that Meta could cut more than 20 percent of its workforce this year, potentially affecting around 15,000 employees.
    That would mark the company’s largest round of layoffs since 2022 and 2023, when more than 20,000 jobs were eliminated during its “year of efficiency.”
    A Meta spokesperson previously described the earlier Reuters report as a “speculative report about theoretical approaches.”
    The company had nearly 79,000 employees worldwide at the end of 2025, according to filings.
    In an interview last month, Zuckerberg suggested that AI will somehow force companies to hire more people.
    “I actually think we’re probably going to go hire more customer support people,” he said at the time.

    Mark Zuckerberg just argued that AI will force companies to hire more people.
    Not fewer.
    Three and a half billion people use Meta every day.
    Not one of them has a phone number to call.
    Mark Zuckerberg: “It’s clearly just going to automate jobs and like all these jobs are… pic.twitter.com/9b1CKnIhhs
    — Dustin (@r0ck3t23) March 31, 2026

    The cuts follow similar moves across the tech sector as companies shift toward AI.
    Snap recently eliminated about 1,000 jobs, while financial firm Block said it would cut more than 4,000 roles.
    “Within the next year, I believe the majority of companies will reach the same conclusion and make similar structural changes,” Block CEO Jack Dorsey wrote in an open letter.
    ”I’d rather get there honestly and on our own terms than be forced into it reactively.”

    Jack Dorsey is one of the greatest entrepreneurs of our era, also above average as a person. The AI revolution is here.
    Block is up 25% after news of the mass layoffs.
    Activist investors will demand all tech companies do this. pic.twitter.com/VZrR8yarMe
    — Cernovich (@Cernovich) February 26, 2026

    Meta shares rose about 2 percent in Friday trading following the report.
    The post Mark Zuckerberg to Axe 10 Percent of Meta’s Workforce in May as AI Bloodbath Deepens appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

  • Texas Judge Imposes Media Blackout on Karmelo Anthony Murder Trial: Only 9 Reporters Allowed, No Cameras, No Livestreams — Family Spokesperson Previously Called Case a ‘Fight Against White Supremacy’

    Texas Judge Imposes Media Blackout on Karmelo Anthony Murder Trial: Only 9 Reporters Allowed, No Cameras, No Livestreams — Family Spokesperson Previously Called Case a ‘Fight Against White Supremacy’

    Karmelo Anthony, left, is accused of murder in the stabbing death of Austin Metcalf, right.
    Collin County District Judge John Roach Jr. has issued sweeping new restrictions on media coverage for the upcoming murder trial of Karmelo Anthony, the teenager charged with fatally stabbing 17-year-old Austin Metcalf during a high school track meet last year.
    The order, signed Friday in the 296th District Court, severely limits press access and bans all recording devices.
    Citing the intense public interest and the precedent set by the U.S. Supreme Court in Sheppard v. Maxwell, Judge Roach claimed that excessive media coverage could prejudice the trial.
    Under the new rules, which go into effect for the trial scheduled to begin June 1:

    The courtroom opens at 8:30 a.m. with staggered entry: credentialed media at 8:30 a.m., victims’ and defendant’s families at 8:40 a.m., and the general public at 8:50 a.m. Doors close at 9:00 a.m. with no re-entry until recess.
    Only nine credentialed media members are permitted inside the courtroom at any time. The Collin County Public Information Office will manage all credentials and seating.
    No photography, video, audio recording, livestreaming, or any visual/audio capture is allowed by media or the public.
    No images or recordings of witnesses, prospective jurors, or jurors may be published.
    Media interviews with trial participants are prohibited inside the courtroom and can only occur after the trial ends.
    Strict decorum is required — no reactions, outbursts, talking, signs, or gestures.
    All attendees must clear security screening.
    Trial exhibits will not be released until after the verdict.

    The Collin County Sheriff’s Office will enforce the order, with violations potentially resulting in removal, loss of credentials, or contempt charges.
    As The Gateway Pundit reported last June, shortly after Anthony’s indictment, the family appointed spokesperson, Dominique Alexander of the Next Generation Action Network (NGAN), publicly characterized the upcoming murder trial as a “fight against white supremacy.”
    Alexander stated, “This case is yet another example of what it means to be Black in America, where even our self-defense is questioned, scrutinized, and politicized.”
    He added, “To the racists, the bigots, and those filled with hate who’ve targeted Karmelo, his family, and even myself — you do not intimidate us. We are not backing down.”
    Alexander further said that NGAN would ensure Anthony receives “a fair trial — free from lies, outside interference, and bigotry,” and urged supporters to “stand with us in the fight against white supremacy [and] support the truth and due process.”
    Karmelo Anthony’s Family Spox Characterizes Upcoming Murder Trial as a ‘Fight Against White Supremacy’
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  • Five Shot, Including Three University of Iowa Students, After Massive Late-Night Brawl Erupts into Gunfire in Iowa City, Police Seek Help Identifying Suspects

    Five Shot, Including Three University of Iowa Students, After Massive Late-Night Brawl Erupts into Gunfire in Iowa City, Police Seek Help Identifying Suspects

    Five people were shot and injured early Sunday morning after a large fight in the busy pedestrian mall area near the University of Iowa campus escalated into gunfire.
    The shooting took place around 1:46 a.m. in downtown Iowa City, a popular nightlife district filled with bars and restaurants just blocks from the university.
    Iowa City Police Department officers were responding to reports of a large fight involving multiple men throwing punches when they arrived on scene and immediately heard gunshots.
    Bystanders fled the area as the chaos unfolded.
    Police have identified five victims in total.
    Three of the injured are University of Iowa students. One victim is in critical condition, while the other four are listed in stable condition. All were transported to area hospitals for treatment of gunshot wounds.
    No arrests have been made as of Sunday afternoon.
    The Iowa City Police Department is actively investigating and has released photos of five persons of interest connected to the incident.
    University of Iowa President Barb Wilson issued a statement to the campus community Sunday morning:
    “I am writing to you with a heavy heart. Early today, a shooting in downtown Iowa City injured three University of Iowa students. Iowa City Police are investigating, with the full support of University of Iowa Police. The university is in close communication with local law enforcement and will share more information as we are able. For now, I encourage you to rely on official university communications for updates. This is a difficult moment for our community. We will get through it together by caring for one another and by holding close what it means to be part of this community.”
    Authorities are asking anyone who recognizes the individuals or has video footage or additional information to contact Detective Cade Burma at cburma@iowa-city.org or (319) 356-5275.
    The Iowa City Area Crime Stoppers is also offering a $1,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.
    The post Five Shot, Including Three University of Iowa Students, After Massive Late-Night Brawl Erupts into Gunfire in Iowa City, Police Seek Help Identifying Suspects appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

  • Energy Secretary Chris Wright Weighs in On Strait of Hormuz and Iran – “The President is Using Every Way He Can to Get Leverage Over the Regime to Bring This Conflict to an End” (VIDEO)

    Energy Secretary Chris Wright Weighs in On Strait of Hormuz and Iran – “The President is Using Every Way He Can to Get Leverage Over the Regime to Bring This Conflict to an End” (VIDEO)

    Energy Secretary Chris Wright was on “Fox News Sunday” with host Shannon Bream to talk about the situation with Iran and the Strait of Hormuz.
    President Trump is negotiating with Iran, hoping to work out a deal. He has said he will use overwhelming military force if they refuse to cut a deal.
    “The President has said this morning that if Iran does not reopen the strait, come to the table, sign this deal, that he is going to wipe out every power plant and every bridge in Iran. What do you make of the situation where we are right now?” Bream asked.
    “I think things are actually going quite well for the United States. I think we are not too far away from a deal, but of course, these are the dying gasps of a desperate regime. It’s for decades pursued a nuclear weapon, and they see that effort is going to come to an end,” Wright commented.
    “It sounds very much like they are still in control of the strait. Accurate?” Bream asked.
    “Well, they have missiles that can threat travel through the strait, and people don’t want to take risks. I think everyone understands this situation will be cleared out for good. Why risk an encounter a few days early?” Wright explained.
    “How do you quell those fears that the industry is going to continue to have over actually getting ships moving again, which will actually change the global impacts of what is happening with oil and gas?” Bream asked.
    “That will take time, but probably not too much time. There are negotiations with the Iranians going on despite what you hear in the chatter in public. I think those are actually going well,” Wright said.
    “I think before long, you’ll see an agreement that achieves the United States end, puts an end to the 47 years of terrorism launched from Iran, and probably launches Iran on a better trajectory for its own people as well,” Wright continued.
    “When the President talks about blowing up every power plant, every bridge, how does that complicate things for if the people do have an opportunity to rebuild there and how far it sets back some kind of a recovery for the country?” Bream asked.
    Secretary Wright had an optimistic end to the conflict, especially since President Trump is a skilled negotiator.
    “The President is using every way he can to get leverage over the regime to bring this conflict to an end. He is a creative negotiator. He uses pressure in different ways. He uses uncertainty in different ways,” Wright said.
    “I think that as you have seen over the last 16 months that generally leads to good results. I don’t think we will see any surprises here. I think we will have a nice end to this conflict,” Wright explained.
    Watch:

    WATCH: @SecretaryWright confirms the Energy Department is looking into mystery surrounding scientists missing or dead, “haven’t found anything alarming yet.” pic.twitter.com/q4LKRIb8f7
    — Fox News Sunday (@FoxNewsSunday) April 19, 2026

    The post Energy Secretary Chris Wright Weighs in On Strait of Hormuz and Iran – “The President is Using Every Way He Can to Get Leverage Over the Regime to Bring This Conflict to an End” (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

  • Burma War: Easter Celebration Delayed for Internally Displaced

    Burma War: Easter Celebration Delayed for Internally Displaced

    Through the help of some small donations, the internally displaced persons camp was able to hold an Easter celebration, although a week late. Photo courtesy of Antonio Graceffo.
     
    “God is so good to us,” said Ku Ro-beh, explaining how grateful he and the other inhabitants of the internally displaced persons (IDP) camp were to be able to hold even a modest Easter celebration without being killed. “We worried about airstrikes, but God protected us.”
    This year, following the sham elections in which the military junta leader installed himself as the country’s new president, the Myanmar junta has continued its offensive, killing and displacing civilians across the country. Beyond losing loved ones and sometimes their limbs, civilians are forced to flee, adding to the more than 3.7 million people already displaced within the country. Fleeing to the jungle means farmers lose their fields, crops, and animals.
    The World Food Programme warned that more than 12 million people in Myanmar will face acute hunger in 2026, with a projected one million reaching emergency levels requiring immediate assistance. More than 400,000 young children and mothers suffering from acute malnutrition are surviving on nutrient-deprived diets. Children lose access to education. For the religious, whether Buddhist or Christian, it often means losing access to temples, churches, and holy sites during times of observance.
    Handing out rice packets for Easter dinner. Photo courtesy of Antonio Graceffo.
    Since Easter 2026, the junta has carried out airstrikes across multiple regions. On April 9, six people, including two children, were killed in an assault in Chin State. On April 13, the military conducted airstrikes and drone attacks in Kachin State. A wave of forced recruits sent to attack on foot was repulsed with heavy casualties. This marks another tragedy in the war: the forced recruitment of both males and females. In some cases, ethnic boys as young as twelve have been forced into the junta’s army and then tasked with killing their own people.
    Also on April 13, airstrikes hit a monastery in Sagaing Region, killing two novice monks and injuring eight others, with no active fighting and no resistance forces present. A separate airstrike on a monastic school in Sagaing killed at least five people, including three novice monks, and injured nine others. The attacks involved jet fighters, Mi-35 combat helicopters, paramotors, drones, and Y-12 aircraft targeting civilians.
    The following day, junta troops dumped the bodies of four civilians bearing signs of torture in Kachin State, and troops burned five villages in Mandalay Region in a single day. A military jet destroyed a building at Mutraw Junior College in Karen State, a school that had already relocated twice due to ongoing attacks. Airstrikes on resistance-held territory in Sagaing continued throughout the Thingyan holidays, the Burmese New Year, killing at least one civilian, a 14-year-old girl.
    Amid the ongoing attacks on civilians across the country, residents of some IDP camps in Karenni State had to delay their Easter celebration until a priest was able to visit. The displaced Catholics are separated from their parishes, and each priest is now responsible for a large number of camps, forcing them to travel through the jungle from camp to camp to hold Mass at each one in turn.
    The church in the IDP camp remained unused after being hit by a Burma Army airstrike. However, the camp residents have since rebuilt it and decorated it for Easter. Photo courtesy of Antonio Graceffo.
    Ku Ro-beh, who was displaced with his wife and children four years ago, works as an administrator in a large IDP camp with a population that peaked at around 9,000 people. He explained how, despite the threat of war and lack of resources, he and other community leaders organized an Easter celebration for the camp.
    Just a few years ago, the church in the camp had been hit by an airstrike, and since then people have been careful not to gather in large crowds that could be seen from the air. Another challenge was timing. The Easter celebration had to be held a week late because the priest was tied up in other camps.
    Because there is no way for displaced people to work, there is very little cash available in the camps. In fact, most camps do not even receive regular rations or aid distributions because both the UN and international NGOs refuse to provide aid inside the conflict zone. Instead, the camps depend on resistance governments, which have almost no tax revenue. They also receive a small amount of support either through family connections abroad or through the Church.
    There used to be support from other parts of Burma, but those transfers are closely monitored and prohibited by the junta. A further problem is that after five years of civil war, there is severe donor fatigue, particularly as the economy in the rest of the country has steadily worsened. As a result, the small number of donors from other parts of Burma are themselves facing shortages of everything, including food.
    Preparing pork for 500 people. Photo courtesy of Antonio Graceffo.
    Ku Ro-beh explained that some money was sent through private donations for the Easter celebration. “We prayed,” he said, and in the end they had about $800. “This is the most money we have ever had for a celebration.” The previous year, they managed a loaves-and-fishes miracle, hosting a Christmas dinner with a budget of $500. “The priest came and we had Mass.”
    They also managed to purchase three pigs and two 20 kg baskets of fish. “But for security reasons, we did not make other plans like activities and songs.” They celebrated Mass and ate lunch together. Everyone in the camp was invited, and they wound up feeding about 500 people, about 300 of whom were Catholic, while the rest were Baptist, Buddhist, or animist.
    “We all felt very happy,” said Ku Ro-beh. “This Easter celebration was very important for us because Easter is the most important day for Catholic Christians. For me, I feel God is always with us, even though we suffer this long war.” He concluded, “Listening to God’s words, joining the Mass, and trusting in Him comforted me greatly.”
    Antonio Graceffo regularly reports from the war in Burma.
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