Matt Gagnon discussed the recent Israel-Iran conflict, highlighting a video where DJT used an F-bomb, which he couldn’t play due to censorship. Gagnon praised DJT’s candidness, contrasting it with the scripted responses of traditional politicians like Obama and Biden. He argued that voters prefer authentic, unfiltered politicians. Gagnon also touched on the Supreme Court’s decision allowing the Trump administration to swiftly deport immigrants to countries with no previous ties, criticizing Biden’s incompetent foreign policy communication. He explained the long-standing practice of deporting immigrants to third countries and the Supreme Court’s ruling, which granted officials flexibility in executing mass deportations.
Matt is joined by security analyst Josh Filler. Josh is an attorney and former New York City, White House, and Department of Homeland Security official, bringing deep national security experience to the conversation.
The question would instruct the Legislature to develop a bill by 2028 that would establish a health care system that ensures all Maine residents can choose comprehensive, publicly funded health care, or stay with private care.
A skyscraper-scaling daredevil told police that he and his girlfriend climbed the Empire State Building's antenna and unfurled a banner about love and peace because he wanted to "do something special" for their engagement, prosecutors said Thursday at the couple's arraignment on felony reckless endangerment, burglary and other charges.
The satirical news site The Onion isn't waiting to take possession of Infowars to launch a parody of Alex Jones ' conspiracy platform. More than a year after first trying to buy Infowars, The Onion on Thursday will debut a send-up under its own website with plans to give some of the revenue to families of the victims in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.
U.S. employers slowed hiring last month and added only 57,000 jobs, less than half the previous month's total and a sign companies still have a cautious economic outlook.
One of the stars of the American firmament once advised citizens of all stripes how to express their love of country. Mark Twain's long-ago words capture how Americans are stepping out this week to wish their nation a happy milestone birthday.
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