Trump Admin To Probe Federal Subsidies Pushing Kids On Screens At School

The Trump administration is looking for ways to crack down on the enormous amount of screen time children are exposed to in school — a phenomenon that has been subsidized heavily by the federal government for years.

Every other week, it seems, Americans hear about more negative, often long-term effects of children being placed in front of smart phones or other screens, ranging from stunted learning and depression, to weight gain and body dysmorphia.

Arielle Roth, the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information, and Administrator of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), told The Federalist in an interview that her office is going to look into how the government has been exacerbating the problem through policies that push more in-school instruction and homework toward children spending countless hours on screens.

“Much of policy makers’ focus has been on banning cell phones in schools, and while that’s important, it only scratches the surface of what parents are worried about. When you talk to most parents, their concern isn’t just cell phones — it’s that their children are on school laptops and devices for large portions of the school day, starting at very young ages,” Roth said. “I think we should be asking about what’s driving these trends. That includes looking at how federal programs and funding streams may be accelerating excessive screen use in the classroom.”

Roth, as head of NTIA, is the chief advisor to the president on telecommunications policy. (Read more from “Trump Admin To Probe Federal Subsidies Pushing Kids On Screens At School” HERE)

Photo credit: Flickr

Kash Patel Reacts to Embarrassing FBI Raid Jacket Tale

FBI Director Kash Patel ridiculed a Dem congressman who mocked him for allegedly refusing to disembark from a plane in Utah the day after Charlie Kirk’s assassination until he was given a raid jacket and then ended up wearing a women’s one.

Without confirming or denying the alleged incident, Patel fired back Monday at California Rep. Eric Swalwell for making fun of him and pointed out the congressman’s past interactions with a suspected Chinese spy.

“I was looking for a Youth Large… Domestic terrorism arrests are UP 30% this year — impressive, considering I spent zero days dating a Chinese spy named Fang Fang, where should I send your women’s medium for date night?” Patel fired back at Swalwell on X.

Swalwell, one of the most famous congressional thorns in President Trump’s side, had past ties to Fang Fang, also known as Christine Fang, who is suspected of having been a Chinese spy.

She participated in fundraising for Swalwell in 2014, but he cut off ties with her the next year after being briefed about concerns of Chinese infiltration, according to Axios. (Read more from “Kash Patel Reacts to Embarrassing FBI Raid Jacket Tale” HERE)

Photo credit: Gage Skidmore via Flickr

‘Humans Get Tired’: It May Not Be People Reading Your College Applications Anymore At Top Schools

Prominent universities are now using artificial intelligence (AI) and other tech to review applications and rate essays submitted by prospective students, and the trend is growing.

Schools like Virginia Tech are integrating AI into their admissions process in order “to provide applicants with admissions decisions more quickly,” using the tool to score students’ essays. But at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), some students may find themselves in a video interview with an AI Chatbot, according to the Associated Press.

“Humans get tired; some days are better than others,” Juan Espinoza, vice provost for enrollment management at Virginia Tech, told the AP. “The AI does not get tired. It doesn’t get grumpy. It doesn’t have a bad day. The AI is consistent.”

Virginia Tech insists AI is only used as a second pair of eyes to score students’ essays and does not make admissions decisions alone. Previously, essays were rated by two people to ensure accuracy and impartiality; now, AI replaces one human, and a second person is brought in only if the scores dispensed by the first person and AI differ by more than two points.

Caltech admissions director Ashley Pallie said the AI interview tool is “a gauge of authenticity.” (Read more from “‘Humans Get Tired’: It May Not Be People Reading Your College Applications Anymore At Top Schools” HERE)

Photo credit: Flickr

NASA Telescope Unveils Remarkable Never-Before-Seen Views Of Our Galaxy

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has revealed stunning, unprecedented details of the Red Spider Nebula using its Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam).

This new image, for the first time, fully reveals the Red Spider Nebula’s outstretched lobes — the dramatic structures that create the spider’s “legs” — according to NASA.

Launched in 2021 as the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, the James Webb Space Telescope is now the planet’s premier space science observatory, capable of detecting infrared radiation across the universe.

In the James Webb image, the sprawling lobes appear in striking blue tones, traced by the glow of light from H₂ molecules — pairs of hydrogen atoms that are bonded.

“These lobes are shown to be closed, bubble-like structures that each extend about 3 light-years,” notes NASA, and that gas streaming outward from the nebula’s core has filled vast bubbles throughout thousands of years. (Read more from “NASA Telescope Unveils Remarkable Never-Before-Seen Views Of Our Galaxy” HERE)

Photo credit: Flickr

Terrifying Report: FDA Internal Email Raises Alarm Over Child Deaths Linked to COVID-19 Vaccines

An internal letter from a senior official at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has prompted renewed scrutiny of the government’s COVID-19 vaccination strategy for children — especially during the height of federal mandates.

Millions of Americans, including school-aged children, were strongly encouraged — and in some cases required — to receive the first-ever mRNA COVID-19 vaccines if they wished to keep their jobs, continue in-person schooling, dine in public, or visit vulnerable loved ones.

For much of the pandemic, federal health officials and major media outlets insisted the vaccines were “safe and effective,” pushing back aggressively against concerns about potential risks. Critics of the rapidly developed vaccines were often labeled misinformed or censored on major platforms.

However, according to reporting from multiple outlets — including the Washington Post — a recently disclosed FDA email indicates that federal scientists have identified a number of child deaths possibly linked to the vaccine.

Dr. Vinay Prasad, the FDA’s Chief Medical Officer and director at the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, briefed staff on Friday that career analysts in the Office of Biostatistics and Pharmacovigilance reviewed 96 pediatric deaths between 2021 and 2024.

Their conclusion: at least 10 of those deaths were likely, probable, or possibly related to post-vaccination events.

Prasad called the findings “a profound revelation,” writing that the current count is “certainly an underestimate” due to underreporting and the difficulty of establishing definitive attribution in complex medical cases.

“This safety signal has far-reaching implications for Americans, the U.S. pandemic response, and the agency itself,” he said in the correspondence.

Despite early international data showing a significantly heightened myocarditis risk in teenage boys and young adult men following mRNA vaccination, Prasad said U.S. authorities were slow to adjust guidance:

“They did not quickly attempt mitigation strategies such as spacing doses apart, lowering doses, [or] omitting doses among those with prior COVID-19.”

Myocarditis — inflammation of the heart muscle — can cause chest pain, cardiac arrest, and in severe cases, death.

Prasad further argued that by delaying acknowledgment of these concerns until after authorizing shots for boys 12 to 15, federal officials may have subjected lower-risk children to avoidable harm.

The Biden administration approved Pfizer’s vaccine for children ages 5–11 in November 2021 and expanded access to children under 5 in 2022. At the time, President Biden maintained the vaccines were “safe, highly effective,” and would give parents “peace of mind.”

Prasad’s letter paints a different picture in hindsight:

“Healthy young children who faced tremendously low risk of death were coerced…to receive a vaccine that could result in death.”

The FDA has not yet publicly clarified how it will communicate these findings to families, nor how the revelations may influence ongoing vaccine recommendations for children.

While the investigation continues, the internal report intensifies a national reckoning: whether pandemic-era mandates and messaging sufficiently weighed risks for healthy minors at extremely low danger from the virus itself.

Suspect in National Guard Shooting Was Part of CIA-Backed Unit That Hunted Down Taliban Commanders

More information is being uncovered about Rahmanullah Lakanwal, the 29-year-old Afghan who allegedly shot two National Guard members in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday.

Lakanwal was a member of a secret military operation backed by the CIA to hunt down Taliban commanders, according to multiple reports. The members of the “Zero Units” were highly vetted and praised by those who knew about them.

One of the guardsmen has since died, and the other is in critical condition. Both are members of the West Virginia National Guard.

Refugee advocates say that many Zero Units members have fallen into despair over their inability to gain work permits in the U.S. after fleeing from Afghanistan when it was retaken by the Taliban. Former intelligence and military officials say Lakanwal would have undergone significant vetting to be accepted into a Zero Unit operation.

CIA Director John Ratcliffe confirmed Lakanwal’s CIA connection. “In the wake of the disastrous Biden withdrawal from Afghanistan, the Biden administration justified bringing the alleged shooter to the United States in September 2021 due to his prior work with the U.S. government, including CIA, as a member of a partner force in Kandahar, which ended shortly following the chaotic evacuation,” he said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

(Read more from “Suspect in National Guard Shooting Was Part of CIA-Backed Unit That Hunted Down Taliban Commanders” HERE)

Kristi Noem Pushes Sweeping Travel Ban After Meeting With Trump: ‘We Don’t Want Them’

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced Monday that, following a meeting with President Donald Trump, she is recommending a sweeping travel ban on every country she claims is sending dangerous immigrants to the United States.

Noem made the announcement in a fiery post on X, denouncing certain immigrants as “killers” and “leeches.”

“I just met with the President. I am recommending a full travel ban on every d— country that’s been flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies,” Noem said.

She slammed certain immigrants as threats to public safety and accused them of draining resources meant for Americans.

“Our forefathers built this nation on blood, sweat, and the unyielding love of freedom—not for foreign invaders to slaughter our heroes, suck dry our hard-earned tax dollars, or snatch the benefits owed to AMERICANS,” she said.

“WE DON’T WANT THEM. NOT ONE.” (Read more from “Kristi Noem Pushes Sweeping Travel Ban After Meeting With Trump: ‘We Don’t Want Them’” HERE)

Photo credit: Flickr

The Middle Class Can’t Keep Up With Persistent Inflation Forever

It seems unlikely that one issue — indeed, one chart — could define the politics of the last several years and even the last decade. Yet the pattern seems clear.

A recent Wall Street Journal article explained how the middle class feels increasingly squeezed by post-pandemic price hikes. Quotes from families seeking the light at the end of the tunnel show how American households feel stuck in an ever-growing vise by prices rising faster than their incomes can keep up.

A fascinating graphic in the article, taken from University of Michigan consumer survey data polling the middle class, shows how families’ perception of their personal financial situation has deteriorated:

Photo credit: Wall Street Journal

The trendlines in the graphic show the strength of the economy in President Trump’s first term, when majorities said they felt better off personally, and only about 15-20 percent of households felt worse off in the years before the pandemic. They explain why Trump won his victory over Kamala Harris last fall; roughly two times as many people felt worse off than better off after four years of “Bidenflation.” And they also provide a clear reason for Republicans’ electoral losses this November, because the middle class’s mood has changed little since the 2024 election.

So how can conservatives respond? Trying to claim inflation doesn’t exist won’t cut it because people see price increases with their own eyes. I see it every week when I go to the grocery store: A pack of raisins previously priced at $2.99 now goes for $3.29 (a 10 percent bump); the toilet paper that was $5.99 now retails for $7.29 (a 22 percent jump); the package of bratwursts that used to cost $3.50 now goes for $5.00 (a 43 percent increase). I consider myself luckier than most, having paid off my mortgage years ago, but the weekly shop still feels painful. (Read more from “The Middle Class Can’t Keep Up With Persistent Inflation Forever” HERE)

Photo credit: Gage Skidmore via Flickr

Portland’s Woke ‘Tree’ Lighting Ceremony Sparks Outrage: ‘They Can’t Even Say Christmas Tree’

Portland has sparked outrage after stripping its Christmas tree of its name, referring to it only as “the tree” during its lighting ceremony.

As thousands gathered in Pioneer Courthouse Square for the Oregon city’s 41st annual tree-lighting on Friday night, leaders and speakers avoided mentioning “Christmas” at any point — including in the ceremony itself and the event’s ads.

The festive occasion was kicked off with a woman from the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs thanking everyone in the crowd for coming out on Native American Heritage Day.

She introduced two younger members of the tribe, who referred to the celebration only as “the tree lighting,” before handing the microphone to another featured speaker.

Draped in a Palestinian flag, the woman used her stage time to lead the crowd in a “Free Palestine” chant.

“This is the perfect time to bring this up. There are a lot of genocides going on,” she said only moments into the tree-lighting ceremony. (Read more from “Portland’s Woke ‘Tree’ Lighting Ceremony Sparks Outrage: ‘They Can’t Even Say Christmas Tree’” HERE)

Northeast Set to Be Blasted by ‘Most Extreme Cold on Earth’ Before Christmas

The northeastern US is set to be blasted with some of the most extreme cold on Earth before Christmas, according to a shocking new forecast.

“My thinking is that the cold the first week of December is the appetizer and the main course will be in mid-December,” MIT climatologist Judah Cohen told USA Today.

Photo credit: NOAA

“The most expansive region of most likely extreme cold on Earth stretches from the Canadian Plains to the U.S. East Coast in the 3rd week of December,” Cohen said, citing findings from his weather modeling computer.

That deadly cold air will come from the movement of the polar vortex dipping low and bringing cold arctic air over the States.

Exactly how frigid the temperatures is not yet clear, but Cohen expects them to dip below what is being felt this week. (Read more from “Northeast Set to Be Blasted by ‘Most Extreme Cold on Earth’ Before Christmas” HERE)

Photo credit: Flickr