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Major League Baseball faces backlash for its stance on Christians writing Bible verses on Pride caps
Ecuador's President Visits Pentagon to Coordinate Operations Against Narco-Terrorism
Ecuador's President Daniel Noboa met with Secretary of War Pete Hegseth at the Pentagon to discuss the mutual fight against narco-terrorism.
The post Ecuador’s President Visits Pentagon to Coordinate Operations Against Narco-Terrorism appeared first on Breitbart.
Country stars Ella Langley and Cody Johnson team up for cover of famous Reba McEntire song
United Airlines debuts ‘Stars and Stripes’ Boeing fleet, celebrating veterans and America’s 250th
'Insanity': Jason Whitlock blasts doctor who wrote an article condemning Austin Metcalf's dad as the villain
As reactions to Karmelo Anthony’s murder conviction continue to flood social media, BlazeTV host Jason Whitlock says the most shocking behavior isn't happening in the form of riots — it's happening on the internet.
“There has been a different form of rioting that I did not predict or see coming. … People are rioting and looting their brains online. People are saying crazy things in defense of Karmelo Anthony,” Whitlock says.
“They’re saying really ridiculous things defending Karmelo Anthony because they’re defending this demonic culture that black people have adopted — black people have been baited into. And now, in order to defend our racial idolatry, we have to defend some of the dumbest, most repulsive behavior on the planet,” he says, before pulling up an article one woman wrote that represents this “repulsive behavior.”
The article, by Dr. Stacey Patton, is called “Dear Jeff Metcalf: Your Son Is Dead Because You Failed to Teach Him That Black Boys Have Boundaries.”
Whitlock calls the article “insanity.”
“A lot of these things that we’re seeing are black women making the most ridiculous arguments in the history of the planet justifying the murder,” he says, before showing another example.
“Here’s two black women sitting around talking about the lies that black people should tell to get on those juries so that we can free Karmelo Anthony,” he says.
“If they say, ‘Can you be fair?’ Don’t say, ‘No, I’m not going to put a black man in jail.’ Don’t say that, OK? ‘Cause if that’s what you gonna say, you could have stayed home. You have to go and be like, ‘No, I will hear the evidence. I can be fair.’ Don’t say, ‘I hate white people and I don’t care what he did.’ Don’t do that,” one woman said on the “Gin and Juice Podcast.”
“That’s what people were doing in this case, OK? And then everybody’s like in an uproar because there’s no black people on the jury when damn near half of the black people who could have been on the jury canceled themselves out, you know?” she continued.
“‘Hey, go be dishonest. Go help a kid that murdered someone get away with murder,’” Whitlock mocks, explaining that women like this are a “force for nihilism and wickedness and deception.”
“They’re doing this out in front of everybody. This isn't a private conversation. They’re unrepentant about their wickedness. And that’s the culture that they’ve created. And that’s why their kids, boys and girls, are unrepentant about their wickedness,” he adds.
Want more from Jason Whitlock?To enjoy more fearless conversations at the crossroads of culture, faith, sports, and comedy with Jason Whitlock, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
California co-eds killed after being swept out to sea by dangerous waves while sleeping
New York women flock to convents — for the cheap rent: 'Nuns are awesome'
Amid sky-high prices for just a single room in New York City, living among nuns is becoming increasingly popular.
Average rent prices in the city have already jumped by almost $150 in 2026, sitting at just under $3,700 per month for June.
'It was the cheapest place I found in Manhattan.'
Rent could get as high as $4,000 by the end of August, trends on Zillow show, a long way from where studio apartments or even two-bedrooms were in 2021: $2,000 and $2,600, respectively.
Get thee to a nunneryIn the face of these prices, New Yorkers are reportedly filling up residences run by nuns, who offer cheaper prices but require tenants to adhere to a stricter set of rules — a polar opposite of New York City free-for-alls Americans saw during the NBA Finals, for example.
The Wall Street Journal reported on five different nunneries in New York that offer housing at a third of the price, or less, of the average NYC apartment. St. Agnes Residence on the Upper West Side starts at about $950; Centro Maria in the Bronx charges about $800; and St. Mary’s Residence on E 72nd St. is around $1,200 per month.
One former renter at Sacred Heart Residence in Chelsea, named Katie, paid $1,650 for her spot.
"Nuns are awesome," Katie told the outlet. "They be chilling."
Hannah remarked that the Menno House, a 10-person residence in Gramercy Park, had its smallest room listed for $580/month.
"It was the cheapest place I found in Manhattan," she said.
Cheap rent is not all the nuns are offering, either.
RELATED: 'One nation under God': Christians to march through DC as part of 2,000-mile Eucharistic procession
- YouTube
Daily habitsAt Centro Maria, five nuns live with 21 residents in a four-story building. The benefits of this show up in the form of a daily morning breakfast for the residents cooked by the nuns, including pancakes, eggs, sausage, fruit, and more.
The nuns not only clean the building, they host parties for residents to intermingle and even have karaoke in the dining room.
There are rules, of course, offering some stability to residents in the crazy city. Some had a reported curfew of 11 p.m. or midnight, while women's residences bar male visitors from bedrooms, as well as alcohol.
"I love living with the girls. They keep me young," said a Sister Rita. But as loving as the nuns can be, they are also strict, and they're not hiding it.
RELATED: Washington Nationals under fire after anti-Christian public relations disaster EXPOSED (UPDATE)
Eric Thayer-Pool/Getty Images
Sister smackdownOne convent has a display board in the lobby that lists who is home and who is out; the nuns say they lie awake until everyone is home.
"I don't go to bed if I don't know where someone is," Sister Maria says. If a girl is late for her curfew — which she has likely informed her nuns of ahead of time, possibly out of fear — Sister Maria lies down and waits. The nun said she typically thinks, "I'm gonna kill her tomorrow," and then gets up when the door opens.
Sister Maria also conducts surprise room inspections twice per month.
"You don’t know the date, but I'll be there," she reportedly said with a smile.
As for Sister Rita, who loves her girls, she said that she vets any boyfriends who are brought to the building and tells the girls to their faces if she doesn't like them.
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The Chickens Have Come Home to Roost for Antifa As DOJ Slams 15 With Federal Charges
HOT STOCK: SpaceX IPO is making even its welders rich
A welder named Juan Hernandez joined SpaceX in 2015 at $28 an hour. He took stock instead of a fatter paycheck. The day the company was listed, those shares were worth about $880,000.
He has company. More than 4,000 current and former SpaceX employees became millionaires when the company began trading on the Nasdaq at $135 a share. The valuation hit $1.77 trillion, the seventh-largest public company and ahead of Tesla. It was the biggest IPO ever recorded. About 400 of those workers now hold stakes above $100 million, and some of them ladle soup in the cafeteria.
The teenager weighing a coding boot camp against welding school should study the leaderboard in Brownsville.
Learn to weldThat last part flips the usual script. Rank-and-file employees have struck gold in stock debuts before, but most often they were the ones writing code or creating marketing decks
This time it’s very different.
SpaceX handed equity down to welders, machinists, and line workers at Starbase, many of whom took below-market pay for shares. The bet looked reckless a decade ago, back when SpaceX still lost rockets on the launchpad. Today, the only thing still exploding is their net worth.
The setting makes it stranger. Brownsville sits near the bottom of every income chart in Texas, and SpaceX put more than 3,000 jobs there. Home prices in Cameron County have more than doubled since the rockets arrived, climbing from around $131,000 in 2014 to over $281,000.
Critics call that unaffordable, but the complaint misses who is doing the buying. The new money was earned in the county, by people who lived there before SpaceX showed up. When a poor town's home values double on the back of local paychecks, the residents hold the deeds. Rising prices turn dangerous when wages sit still. Brownsville got richer faster than it got expensive.
DeskboundNow for the mandatory dread about machines coming for our jobs and, in the more ominous forecasts, our throats. But now automation is a white-collar problem. AI can draft a deal sheet or pass the bar exam. What it can't do is snake a wire past a joist or seal a fuel tank that holds at cryogenic temperatures without splitting. The jobs vanishing first are the ones done sitting down. Paralegals should sweat. Plumbers can light up a cigarette and relax.
In April, a humanoid robot built by the phone maker Honor finished a Beijing half-marathon in 50 minutes and 26 seconds, quicker than any human has run the distance. A year before that, at the first such race, one machine toppled at the start and another walked into a barrier, and every robot needed a human handler jogging beside it like a parent at a toddler's first steps. Ask one of those to fish a cable through a finished wall and find the live wire before something ignites. Fine motor control and sound judgment still belong to people. The robots can run, but keep them away from your breaker box.
So the trades have an opening, and it widens if manufacturing returns. A factory needs hands long before it needs a wellness coordinator. The teenager weighing a coding boot camp against welding school should study the leaderboard in Brownsville.
RELATED: The first trillionaire: SpaceX goes public — and it's not just Elon Musk who's striking it rich
Marvin Joseph/Washington Post/Getty Images
Elon earned itThen there is Musk. The IPO makes him a trillionaire, the richest man alive. Bernie Sanders, the millionaire who wrote a best-seller about the immorality of millionaires, calls the number obscene. Paul Krugman blames a "rigged system."
None of this started with the IPO. Attacking Musk has been a fixture on the left for years, somewhere between a hobby and a second income. The trillion-dollar number raised the stakes. The objections write themselves and skip the question worth asking first. How did he get there?
Plenty of fortunes start with a dead grandparent and end in an offshore account. But this one came from hardware that lands itself and flies again. Musk bet on factories and launchpads while easy money chased apps. He keeps hours that would bury most executives. He sleeps on factory floors when a launch date slips, a habit his critics conveniently ignore.
And he paid everyday Americans in stock when cash would have cost him less, allowing them to win as well.
Before wheeling out the guillotine and inviting Mark Cuban to drop the blade, separate the fortunes built on extraction from the ones built on output. Musk is a visionary, a builder of truly great things. He made the rocket cheaper and the cook richer. Capitalism has never looked so hard to hate.
McDonald's Brings the Nostalgia for America's 250th, With the Return of Its Classic 'Fried' Apple Pie
Vance: 'Trump Literally Reported Jeffrey Epstein to the Police'
Tuesday on ABC's "The View," Vice President JD Vance defended President Donald Trump over the administration's handling of the Epstein files.
The post Vance: ‘Trump Literally Reported Jeffrey Epstein to the Police’ appeared first on Breitbart.
Iran World Cup team forced to leave US after tournament opener in apparent change of plans
Big One Closer Than Ever: San Andreas Fault Now Hitting Record Tectonic Stress
US travelers warned after deadly rides and sexual assaults tied to beach vendors
Vance Defends Trump on Affordability — 'The Idea that Republicans Caused the Affordability Problem Is a Hoax'
Tuesday on ABC's "The View," Vice President JD Vance defended President Donald Trump over a comment he made about inflation.
The post Vance Defends Trump on Affordability — ‘The Idea that Republicans Caused the Affordability Problem Is a Hoax’ appeared first on Breitbart.
Colonial Williamsburg gears up for America 250 birthday to remember
Tanker Companies Say Hormuz Traffic Will Take ‘Weeks’ to Return to Normal
Tamura Jotaro, CEO of Japan’s Mitsui OSK Lines (MOL), predicted that it will take “at least a couple of weeks, or if not a month” for shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz to return to pre-war levels.
The post Tanker Companies Say Hormuz Traffic Will Take ‘Weeks’ to Return to Normal appeared first on Breitbart.