CURRENT EVENTS

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“…No one from the U.S. government appears to have communicated those concerns to Argentina before a delegation from that nation left Buenos Aires for what it thought would be a Monday ceremony to sign the final visa-waiver agreement.


  • After two days in Miami, the Argentinian delegation went back home without a visa deal.
What they're saying: "Let's just say this was not a great look from us," a senior Trump administration official told Axios. "It's embarrassing."…”
 

For the better part of a decade, tech investor Balaji Srinivasan has been calling for Silicon Valley to “secede” from the rest of the United States. The free-market tech guru doesn’t just want space from regulators and government officials; he literally wants the industry’s coders and bigwigs to split off and crowdfund their own separate country.

Over the years, Srinivasan has articulated his own political philosophy, which he calls “the network state” movement—an anarcho-capitalist school of thought that envisions the creation of privately run “countries” that are governed by decentralized corporations rather than governments.

Last year, Srinivasan announced the launch of a new school where interested tech denizens could learn how to take part in the Network State movement. The school, which was announced on his blog, was styled as a place where the founder’s followers could go to learn about the tenets of his philosophy, which is, admittedly, pretty weird. Even weirder was the school’s announced location: a $100 billion city in Malaysia that was partially developed by the Chinese government as part of its “Belt and Road” initiative before being abandoned due to political turmoil between China and the local government. “Forest City,” located in Johor, is now considered a “ghost” metropolis, filled with uninhabited high-rises and other urban superstructures that no one is using. Well, no one except Srinivasan’s Network Staters, that is.
 


“… "I am very disappointed in President Putin, I can say that, and we will be doing something to help people live," Trump said in an interview on The Scott Jennings Radio Show.

… Trump was also asked in the interview if he was concerned "about an axis forming against the United States with China and Russia."

"I am not concerned at all ... We have the strongest military in the world, by far. They would never use their military on us. Believe me," he said….”

Sounds familiar.
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Abraham Lincoln: “Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth, upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the PROPOSITION that all men are created equal.”

The CPAC folks probably don't like a lot of what Lincoln did....
 
If Susan Collins would switch parties, she might win. And she'd be allowed to act on all her concerns.

Maine, don't embarrass yourself again. You are a running joke. I heard a professional esports commentator from Australia busting on Susan Collins. That's what the world thinks of you.
 
Hmmm -- https://www.cnn.com/2025/09/03/media/newsmax-sues-fox-news

Christopher Ruddy’s pro-Trump channel Newsmax on Wednesday filed an antitrust lawsuit against Fox News, accusing the Rupert Murdoch-owned broadcaster of illegally blocking competition in the right-wing pay-TV market.

The lawsuit, filed in the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida against the Fox News Network and its parent company, Fox Corp, accused Fox of engaging in “an exclusionary scheme to increase and maintain its dominance in the market for US right-leaning pay TV news.”

“Fox’s control over this must-have news channel gives it significant market power and leverage to impose onerous demands on distributors of its content,” Newsmax alleges in the lawsuit. “Fox leverages this market power to coerce distributors into not carrying or into marginalizing other right-leaning news channels, including Newsmax.”

In a statement, Ruddy, the company’s founder and chief executive, said “Fox may have profited from exclusionary contracts and intimidation tactics for years, but those days are over.”
 
The fact that right wing channels are arguing that "right leaning pay TV" is a separate market unto itself, not in competition with CNN, NY Times, etc. -- I mean, what better evidence does one need that they aren't trying to be news sources at all.

They are saying that viewers have no substitute for their propaganda. That is not me talking. That's Newsmax.
 
The fact that right wing channels are arguing that "right leaning pay TV" is a separate market unto itself, not in competition with CNN, NY Times, etc. -- I mean, what better evidence does one need that they aren't trying to be news sources at all.

They are saying that viewers have no substitute for their propaganda. That is not me talking. That's Newsmax.
This is right there with Fox & Tucker Carlson defending a lawsuit by stating that viewers should have no expectation that Carlson tells them the truth for admitting things that one ought not to admit.
 
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