Monday, May 25, 2026

Trump promises better Iran deal than the one Obama signed, says not to listen to ‘losers’ - Nicholas Ballasy

 

by Nicholas Ballasy

“So don’t listen to the losers, who are critical about something they know nothing about,” Trump wrote 

 

President Trump said on Sunday he won’t rush reaching an Iran deal but it will definitely be better than the one former President Obama hatched.

"If I make a deal with Iran, it will be a good and proper one, not like the one made by Obama, which gave Iran massive amounts of CASH, and a clear and open path to a Nuclear Weapon," he wrote.

"Our deal is the exact opposite, but nobody has seen it, or knows what it is. It isn’t even fully negotiated yet. So don’t listen to the losers, who are critical about something they know nothing about. Unlike those before me who should have solved this problem many years ago, I don’t make bad deals!" he also wrote. 

Earlier on Sunday, Trump said he advised his team not to rush into an agreement with Iran. 


Nicholas Ballasy

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/white-house/trump-says-he-wont-rush-iran-deal-it-will-definitely-be-better-one-obama

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Trump: Iran agreement will be ‘great and meaningful’ or ‘there will be no deal’ - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

The president said that any pact would be the “exact opposite” of the nuclear accord negotiated by the Obama administration.

 

U.S. President Donald Trump arrives to deliver remarks during a campaign and economic policy event in the Eugene Levy Fieldhouse at SUNY Rockland Community College on May 22, 2026 in Suffern, New York. Photo by Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images.
U.S. President Donald Trump arrives to deliver remarks during a campaign and economic policy event in the Eugene Levy Fieldhouse at SUNY Rockland Community College in Suffern, N.Y., on May 22, 2026. Photo by Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images.

U.S. President Donald Trump pushed back on Monday against critics of the potential agreement being negotiated with Iran, writing on his Truth Social account that any such accord “will either be a great and meaningful one, or there will be no deal.”

Trump continued, “It will be the exact opposite of the [2015] JCPOA disaster negotiated by the failed Obama Administration, which was a direct and open path to a Nuclear Weapon for Iran. No, I don’t do deals like that!”

The White House said in a social media post on Sunday that negotiations with Tehran are progressing smoothly. The statement followed an announcement on Friday by Trump that Iran and “various other countries” had “largely negotiated” an agreement to end hostilities.

“The negotiations are proceeding in an orderly and constructive manner, and I have informed my representatives not to rush into a deal in that time is on our side. ... Both sides must take their time and get it right. There can be no mistakes!” the White House posted, quoting Trump.

The post included an attached statement from the president saying that the relationship between the United States and the Iranians was becoming much more “professional” and “productive.

“They must understand, however, that they cannot develop or procure a nuclear weapon or bomb,” Trump said. 

Reportedly, the proposed deal with Iran includes reopening the Strait of Hormuz and easing sanctions to allow Tehran to resume oil exports. In return, Iran reportedly committed not to advance its nuclear program.

Trump defended the potential deal in a Truth Social post on Sunday, saying that if an agreement is reached, “it will be a good and proper one, not like the one made by Obama, which gave Iran massive amounts of CASH, and a clear and open path to a Nuclear Weapon.”

The president continued: “Our deal is the exact opposite, but nobody has seen it, or knows what it is. It isn’t even fully negotiated yet. So don’t listen to the losers, who are critical about something they know nothing about. Unlike those before me who should have solved this problem many years ago, I don’t make bad deals! President DJT.”

A U.S. official told Axios on Sunday that the White House believes that “it could take several days” for an agreement to end the war with Iran to be approved by Iran’s leadership, including Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu posted to X on Sunday that he had spoken with Trump about the negotiations.

“President Trump and I agreed that any final agreement with Iran must eliminate the nuclear danger. That means dismantling Iran’s nuclear enrichment sites and removing its enriched nuclear material from its territory,” Netanyahu wrote. “My policy, like President Trump’s, remains unchanged: Iran will not have nuclear weapons.”

Trump also reaffirmed Israel’s right to take action against threats “on every front, including Lebanon,” the prime minister added.


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/u-s-news/trump-iran-talks-proceeding-in-an-orderly-and-constructive-manner

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Thousands expected at Gracie Mansion Rally after Flatbush demonstrations - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

Thousands are expected Tuesday, May 26 at 7:00 PM outside Gracie Mansion in Manhattan for a rally organized by End Jew Hatred to protest rising extremism, antisemitism and intimidation after anti‑Israel demonstrations in Flatbush. Organizers say leaders of multiple faiths will speak; details at the official event page.

 

Rabbi Daniel Schonbuch 

Thousands Expected at Gracie Mansion Rally After Flatbush Demonstrations - Tuesday, May 26 at 7:00 PM

On Tuesday, May 26 at 7:00 PM, New Yorkers from across the city are expected to gather outside Gracie Mansion for a rally protesting what organizers describe as rising extremism, antisemitism, and intimidation targeting Jewish communities throughout New York City.

The rally, organized by End Jew Hatred, comes in response to last week’s anti-Israel demonstrations in Brooklyn’s Flatbush neighborhood, where protesters marched outside a synagogue hosting an Israeli real estate event. Demonstrators reportedly waved Hezbollah flags, displayed Hamas-linked symbols, and chanted slogans including “Intifada Revolution" and “Zionism will fall."

The protests outside the Young Israel of Midwood synagogue escalated into confrontations with police, leading to multiple arrests. Videos circulating online showed chaos in the streets and a young Jewish girl being assaulted during the demonstrations.

Organizers say the rally will unite Jewish, Christian, Hindu, and Muslim leaders against extremism and political violence.

Featured speakers are expected to include:

● Sid Rosenberg - WABC Radio host
● Brooke Goldstein - Founder of End Jew Hatred and The Lawfare Project
● Zach Sage Fox - Activist and content creator
● Anila Ali - Muslim Zionist activist and President of AMMWEC.org
● Mazi Pilip - Nassau County Legislator
● Simon Deng - Sudanese Christian activist
● Pankaj Mehta - Hindus for Universal Human Rights
● Dr. Bill Donohue - President of the Catholic League
● Lizzy Savetsky - Influencer and activist
● Jayne Zirkle - End Jew Hatred
● Ghazal Mizrahi - Singer and activist
● Rabbi Daniel Schonbuch - Rabbi, psychotherapist, and host of the Viktor Frankl Podcast

Organizers say the event is meant to send a message that New Yorkers of all backgrounds must stand together against intimidation, antisemitism, and extremist violence before it becomes normalized in the city.

The rally will take place Tuesday, May 26 at 7:00 PM outside Gracie Mansion in Manhattan. More information is available through the official event page.


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/427561

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Credibility crisis: ‘NYT’ rape story source caught removing terrorists from its ‘Gaza journalists’ list - David Isaac

 

by David Isaac

The Committee to Protect Journalists removed six names between March 29 and May 7. All six were actually “terror combatants.”

 

Al-Qassam Brigades
Members of the Al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Hamas terrorist movement, on patrol in Rafah, the southern Gaza Strip, April 27, 2020. Photo by Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90.

The Committee to Protect Journalists, one of the key sources in The New York Times May 11 report by opinion writer Nicholas Kristof accusing Israel of systemic sexual violence against Palestinian security prisoners, has been caught removing terrorists on its list of purported “journalists” killed by Israel.

Kristof’s report, which has been crumbling under scrutiny, described CPJ as “a respected American organization,” but as JNS reported already in 2024, CPJ’s list of journalists was virtually identical to a Hamas-supplied list, a fact exposed by veteran British reporter David Collier.

By adopting the Hamas list, CPJ helped propel a falsehood within a falsehood, that in addition to the wanton killing of civilians, Israel was targeting journalists.

Now, The Washington Free Beacon reports that HonestReporting, an Israeli media watchdog group, discovered “that in the weeks leading up to the publication of the Times piece on May 11, CPJ surreptitiously removed six names from its running list of ‘Journalist casualties’ in the Gaza War.”

The six names were removed by CPJ between March 29 and May 7, without any “contemporaneous acknowledgment of error from the organization,” the Free Beacon reported. All six were actually “terror combatants.”

This further undermines the credibility of sources used in the Times’ piece, the Free Beacon reported.

The six names that CPJ deleted without mention included a member of “Hamas’ Jabalia Battalion,” “a terror combatant for Islamic Jihad,” “a commander in the Nasser Salah Al-Din Brigades” and three other known jihadist militants.

Their names were added to a “clarifications and corrections” page on CPJ’s website only after HonestReporting’s Salo Aizenberg brought attention to the matter, the Free Beacon reported. CPJ still doesn’t mention their terrorism ties, identifying the six only as civilian journalists or media workers.

“By not issuing a clarification regarding its removal of these names from its list, it is clear that the CPJ is trying to hide its inclusion of so many terror combatants on its list of journalists killed in Gaza,” HonestReporting said in its report. “This removal of names from the running list of killed journalists seems to be much more widespread than the CPJ is letting on.”

The Times report cited statistics from CPJ, whose survey of 59 Palestinian “journalists” released by Israel after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led invasion found that 3% claimed that they had been raped while in custody and 29% that they had experienced some form of sexual violence.

One of the reporters who went on record for the Times, Sami al-Sai, 46, described in the report as a “freelance journalist,” is actually a “confirmed Hamas operative,” according to Aizenberg.

The Times’ report has been pilloried since its publication, as its sources, not just CPJ, have been shown to be seriously compromised.

Despite the revelations undermining the report, and the announcement by Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar that they intend to sue the Times, the newspaper continues to defend it.

Kathleen Kingsbury, the head of Times Opinion, in a May 21 Q&A, insisted that “Nick’s reporting underwent a rigorous vetting process by Opinion’s fact-checking department to ensure that every testimony and anecdote he personally reported was supported by independent sources.”

One of those sources, Euro‑Med Human Rights Monitor, which supplied the “dog rape” claim, is headed by Ramy Abdu, who appeared on a 2013 list published by Israel of Hamas’s “main operatives and institutions” in Europe.

On May 20, asked about a photograph in which he appeared with Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh (2006 to 2017), Abdu said, “I am proud to engage with all segments of my Palestinian people. I do not see for their struggle for the freedom of their homeland anything that places them in the category of terrorism.” 


David Isaac

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/u-s-news/credibility-crisis-nyt-rape-story-source-caught-removing-terrorists-from-its-gaza-journalists-list

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The Islamic Terrorist Conquest of West Africa - Lawrence A. Franklin

 

by Lawrence A. Franklin

It is past time for the US to take action to protect not only the vast natural resources in the area, but also to stop even more of Africa from being swallowed up by this expanding jihadist takeover.

 

  • The steady advance of Islamic terrorist control over territory in the Sahel could soon threaten the sovereignty of West African states on the continent's Atlantic Coast -- just across the ocean from Latin America and the United States.

  • It is past time for the US to take action to protect not only the vast natural resources in the area, but also to stop even more of Africa from being swallowed up by this expanding jihadist takeover.

The steady advance of Islamic terrorist control over territory in the Sahel could soon threaten the sovereignty of West African states on the continent's Atlantic Coast -- just across the ocean from Latin America and the United States. Pictured: A gunman from the "Azawad Liberation Front" (FLA) stands next to a damaged Mi-24 helicopter at a base that formerly housed Russian "Africa Corps" mercenaries in Kidal on May 6, 2026. The FLA coordinates attacks with the Al Qaeda terrorist affiliate Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM). (Photo by AFP via Getty Images)

The widened scope and quickened pace of the Islamic State's military operations in the Sahel region -- just below North Africa, roughly from Senegal to Sudan -- threatens to alter the strategic orientation of the African continent. Efforts at countering terrorist operations in the Sahel, such as they were, have evidently failed. As all roads to Mali's capital of Bamoko are now blocked, that country might be the first state to "go under."

On April 25, during a coordinated attack on several Malian cities, Muslim terrorists killed the country's Minister of Defense. The terrorists then drove the Malian Army and its allied Russian mercenaries out of the country's north.

The military juntas ruling Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have proven themselves as ineffective at combatting Islamic terrorist operations as the democracies that they overthrew. The increasing terrorist assaults across the Sahel and the jihadists's determined efforts to take over Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger have eroded the sovereignty of these states.

The combat successes of the jihadists in the Sahel in March 2022 precipitated their elevation to the status of "Islamic State Sahel Province" within the hierarchy of the IS, and several other factors have facilitated the growth of the jihadist advance in the Sahel.

The cooling of the once global counterterrorist crusade — following an apparent shift in focus by the world's great power rivalries, as well as fewer resources directed against the terrorist problem — left a vacuum that was adroitly filled by jihadist groups, which has reduced the pressure on Islamic State and Al Qaeda regional affiliates.

Another situation that might have impacted negatively upon the Sahel's overall security is the monumental migratory flow of Africans from sub-Saharan countries who pass through the Sahel to the Mediterranean, and the consequent stress this puts on the Sahel economies.

A third force eroding state sovereignty of Sahel countries is warfare waged by Al Qaeda terrorist affiliates that are rivals of the Islamic State, such as the Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM). JNIM also coordinates attacks with the Malian anti-government militia known as the Azawad Liberation Front.

Jihadist violence has become ubiquitous in the Sahel, and recently expanded to include fighting between Islamic State and Al Qaeda. On April 2, a notable clash between these two rival terrorist networks occurred in western Niger.

The Sahel now appears to be the epicenter of global terrorist violence. Sahel's terrorist groups might also be acquiring confidence that they can achieve permanent and more ambitious goals in the near future.

Islamic State units have also been exploiting the deteriorating security situation in the Sahel and in Nigeria's northeastern states, which are already governed under Islamic sharia law. Islamic State probably feels buoyed by its easy success in recent battles with the Nigerian Army.

On April 25, Al Qaeda terrorists conducted simultaneous attacks against several Malian urban areas. Their success might well tempt jihadist fighters to move into major urban areas in northern Nigeria and elsewhere in the Sahel.

An additional worrisome trend indicates that terrorist violence is moving westward to Africa's Atlantic coast.

State control increasingly is being eroded in the Sahel region, despite multilateral efforts to sustain the sovereignty of several states in the Sahel, such as the Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) consisting of Chad, Nigeria, Benin, Cameroon, and, until last year, Niger. The MNJTF had made significant strides in halting the advance of the Al Qaeda-affiliated Boko Haram terrorist group, particularly in Chad, but recently the overall scorecard is less conclusive.

The MNJTF is sustained mostly by the continent-wide Organization of the African Union (OAU). While the MNJTF originally planned to field a 10,000-member OAU army, insufficient air cover, poor communications, and logistical problems have reduced the organization's effectiveness.

Another multinational group — the "G5 Sahel" of Mauritania, Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, and Niger — proved ineffective after its 2014 launch. Beset by bureaucratic problems, military coups, and lack of adequate commitment by member states, it dissolved in December 2023.

France, the former colonial "mother country" of several Sahel states, has also made a valiant effort to contain the region's Islamist threat. Acting on behalf of a Malian request for military support, France in 2013 dispatched troops to northern Mali in "Operation Serval."

After substantial success, France, along with UN political support, launched "Operation Barkhane" in 2014 to combat Islamist terrorist activity in the Sahel region. The mission ended in 2022, however, when, following military coups, three Sahelian states asked the French to leave. Later, these same three states invited assistance from Russian mercenaries, which has not resulted in any permanent progress on the battlefield.

With the advance of Islamic terrorist control over ever wider swaths of the Sahel, in recent years, US Special Forces teams have been operating in Niger. On October 4, 2017, this deployment resulted in the killing of four US soldiers and a score of Nigerien soldiers in an ambush staged by "Islamic State in the Greater Sahara." More recently, US national security priorities elsewhere seem to have resulted in a diminution of American military involvement in the Sahel.

The steady advance of Islamic terrorist control over territory in the Sahel could soon threaten the sovereignty of West African states on the continent's Atlantic Coast -- just across the ocean from Latin America and the United States.

It is past time for the US to take action to protect not only the vast natural resources in the area, but also to stop even more of Africa from being swallowed up by this expanding jihadist takeover.

 

Dr. Lawrence A. Franklin was the Iran Desk Officer for Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld. He also served on active duty with the U.S. Army and as a Colonel in the Air Force Reserve.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22534/west-africa-islamic-terrorists

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The Progressive Senate and Its Discontents - Stephen Soukup

 

by Stephen Soukup

The Seventeenth Amendment reshaped the Senate from a body tied to the states into a national political arena defined by permanent ambition and escalating federal power.

 

 

For most Americans—or at least most Americans with even a remedial education in civics—the phrase “separation of powers” usually explains the tripartite nature of the federal government. The Founders, in their wisdom, divided that government into branches: the legislative branch, which debates and enacts laws; the executive branch, which enforces the laws; and the judicial branch, which interprets the laws and ensures that they are compliant with one another and with constitutional principles. It’s a nice, clean, simple, and, above all, effective system for limiting the power of the federal polity. It ensures that laws are carefully and thoughtfully created and enforced in accordance with the idea that “all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, [and] that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.”

People (understandably) tend to forget that the Founders’ separation of powers referred not only to the construction of the federal government but also to the construction of the federal republic. To the Founders, the states were considered the primary site of governance, while the federal entity had only a “few and defined” responsibilities. The Constitution was crafted specifically and purposefully to limit government’s ability to interfere in the lives of the people by separating the governance role among several different entities.

Ironically, the “Federalists,” whose positions were recapped in 85 famous “papers,” were the “big government” types of their era. The Federalists are often cited today (as they will be in this column) in defense of a small federal government and a nation dominated by state interests. Nevertheless, they wrote their invaluable papers specifically to convince the skeptics—the anti-Federalists—that a strong federal government was necessary at all.

The case for a limited federal government and much more formidable state governments is made throughout the Constitution, most notably in the now-largely-forgotten Tenth Amendment: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” That case is also famously made in Federalist Papers Nos. 44, 45, and 46, which explain in great detail how “the states are the protectors of liberty” and how the federal government is dependent for its existence on the states and their voluntary concessions of power. The case is also made, albeit far less famously, in Federalist Papers Nos. 62 and 63. Among other things, those two essays defend the establishment of a Senate whose members were selected indirectly, by state legislatures rather than by the people themselves. The House of Representatives was designed to represent the will of the people, whereas the Senate was intended to represent the will (and the rights and prerogatives) of the states:

It is equally unnecessary to dilate on the appointment of senators by the State legislatures. Among the various modes which might have been devised for constituting this branch of the government, that which has been proposed by the convention is probably the most congenial with the public opinion. It is recommended by the double advantage of favoring a select appointment, and of giving to the State governments such an agency in the formation of the federal government as must secure the authority of the former, and may form a convenient link between the two systems.

Unfortunately, the Constitutional order established by the Founders existed for only about a century. On the surface, the “great” men of the Progressive Era could not have appeared more different from one another, highly unlikely to unite in purpose to undermine the Founders’ republic and change the very nature of the American nation. That’s what they did, however, even if unintentionally. The three greatest Progressive “reformers”—Herbert Croly, Woodrow Wilson, and Teddy Roosevelt—shared a small handful of ideas and ideals in common, despite their superficial differences—and among these was their loathing for the Constitution and the limits it placed on the federal government. All three believed in the necessity of a central authority, dedicated to the principles of the science of man and operated by the best and the brightest society could offer, namely themselves.

By way of example, in his first annual message to the nation, Roosevelt derided the Constitution and the federalism so prized by its framers, declaring that they had been woefully mistaken when they “accepted as a matter of course that the several States were the proper authori­ties to regulate, so far as was then necessary, the comparatively insig­nificant and strictly localized corporate bodies of the day.” He forgave the Founders personally (and ever so graciously) but nevertheless insisted that “the conditions today are wholly different” than they were in 1788, “and wholly different action is called for.” “The old laws, and the old customs which had almost the binding force of law,” he continued, were no longer sufficient “to regulate the accumulation and distribution of wealth.” Most tellingly, he suggested that fate had empowered him to act on the people’s “sincere conviction that combination and concentration should be, not prohibited, but supervised and within reasonable limits controlled; and in my judgment this conviction is right.”

Conservatives today generally acknowledge that the Progressive Era reforms most devastating to the Founders’ Constitution were the establishment of a graduated income tax (through the passage of the Sixteenth Amendment) and the creation of the Federal Reserve. Often, they forget the damage done by the Seventeenth Amendment, which ended the “selection” of senators and replaced it with their direct election.

George Mason of Virginia had argued that the point of indirect election of senators was to provide state legisla­tures with “some means of defending themselves against encroachments of the national govern­ment.” Madison himself had argued that it helped ensure that the government remained “federal” and not “national,” thereby safeguarding the separation of powers. Massachusetts Congressman Fisher Ames, a dedicated Federalist and, as such, one of the more insistent defenders of the federal government, insisted that the indirect election of senators was the key to maintaining the nature of the republic and that without it, the whole experiment would fail:

The state governments are essential parts of the system … The senators represent the sov­ereignty of the states; … they are in the quality of ambassadors of the states … [But suppose] that they [were] to be chosen by the people at large … Whom, in that case, would they represent? Not the legislatures of the states, but the people. This would totally obliterate the federal features of the Constitution.

Despite all of this, the Progressives won the argument, and in 1913, the Seventeenth Amendment was ratified by the states.

All of this is worth keeping in mind today, as the various political controversies of the day unfold. For example, President Trump has been fighting, very prominently, with several senators from his own party. This past week, Trump or his surrogates clashed repeatedly with Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who has been a sharp critic of the White House and went so far as to call the president’s advisers “stupid.” Trump has also had high-profile clashes with the Senate Majority Leader, South Dakota’s John Thune, who has repeatedly thwarted the administration’s attempts to fill open positions in the government through recess appointments and who insists that he is powerless to pass the SAVE Act, which would require ID to vote in federal elections. Trump also, rather conspicuously, endorsed Ken Paxton, the Texas attorney general, in his race to unseat incumbent Republican Senator John Cornyn.

Now, one needn’t be naïve enough to believe that Trump endorsed Paxton in service to the states’ interests rather than his own to see this dysfunction as a significant problem. The Federalists (in this case, Madison and/or Hamilton) saw the indirect election of senators as one means to avoid such drama and to maintain the people’s trust in the government and its institutions. And clearly, that is desperately needed today. The Founders never expected the president and senators from his own party to quarrel over their personal political predilections. Indeed, the Founders didn’t really expect senators to have personal political predilections at all.

On the other side of the aisle, of course, the people of Maine seem poised to elect a political neophyte with a prominent Nazi tattoo and a history of problematic online behavior, while Nebraskans are flirting with an “independent” candidate whose views on social issues—especially abortion—differ dramatically from their own. Both men promise a working-class “revolution” against the ruling class, while both embrace largely amorphous platforms that, on the rare occasion they do get specific, generally support longstanding ruling-class policies.

The history of the American constitutional republic is largely divided into halves: 124 years before the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment and 113 years after. In the first half, senators mostly did their jobs for a limited time and returned home. Three former senators were elected president—James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson—and only two senators, Henry Clay and Stephen Douglas, ran for president while in the Senate. In the second half, by contrast, the Senate has been seen by senators less as a temporary position in service to their home states and more as a permanent position of public prominence or a springboard to bigger things. Since 1972 alone, 50 different sitting or former U.S. senators have run for president a collective 62+ times. Major party nominees and serious contenders have included John F. Kennedy, Barry Goldwater, Hubert Humphrey, George McGovern, Bob Dole, John Kerry, John McCain, Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, and many others. Harding, Kennedy, and Obama were elected directly from the Senate, while Biden and Lyndon Johnson were senators before becoming vice president. Additionally, of the ten longest-serving senators in history, all ten were elected after the Seventeenth Amendment.

It goes without saying that the indirect election of senators was hardly perfect, and it did, indeed, enable a great deal of corruption during the Gilded Age. But then, the Gilded Age produced corruption in nearly every institution, and it’s not as if corruption in the Senate has been eliminated in the last century. More to the point, there is little question that the alignment of senators’ views with those of their state legislatures was a significant factor in the obstinacy of the Southern states in the fight over slavery, which is why the effort to change the process began in the aftermath of the Civil War, even before the Progressive Era officially began. That said, the Civil Rights Act and the official end of Jim Crow were protested vehemently by popularly elected Southern Democratic senators and were achieved, by and large, only because the old Confederacy was, by the early 1960s, significantly outnumbered.

The American Founders were an unusually smart, prescient, and prudent group of men. The Progressives, while mostly well-meaning, were notably less so. They saw real problems and offered what they saw as real solutions, but did so far less judiciously and cautiously than their predecessors had done. While it is hardly fair to say that all our governmental problems today are relics of the Progressive reforms, many were. The size and scope of the federal government and the general sense that the Senate exists principally to advance the interests of its occupants are just two of the most pronounced. 


Stephen R. Soukup is the Director of The Political Forum Institute and the author of The Dictatorship of Woke Capital (Encounter, 2021, 2023)

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2026/05/25/the-progressive-senate-and-its-discontents/

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Trump's Anti-Weaponization Fund: The Facts - Joe Fried

 

by Joe Fried

Perhaps the full $1.8 billion fund will not be required, but it is likely that a substantial fund will be needed to compensate people victimized by overzealous political prosecutors.

 

President Trump and sons sued the federal government for its unauthorized release of their tax returns to the public. A settlement resulted, and it was agreed that a $1.8 billion fund would be established to compensate people (but not the Trumps) who were prosecuted on the basis of their political convictions.

This Anti-Weaponization fund will be available to anyone making a credible and verified claim, regardless of party or politics. Even James Comey and Letitia James will have the opportunity to file claims. However, it is likely that most claims will be made by people who were excessively prosecuted for their actions in or near the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Critics say that Trump has established a “slush fund,” while supporters claim that the fund will be used for people who deserve compensation.

To determine whether those J6 prosecutions were excessive, I compared them to the prosecutions related to a similar event that took place seven months earlier: the May-June 2020 White House and Lafayette Park riots. For each of those two events, I considered the nature and number of the crimes committed, the vigor of the prosecutorial efforts, and the reasonableness of the punishments rendered.

Although the J6 events are widely known, there has been relatively little news coverage of the May-June riots at the White House. For that reason, a summary of those events is presented here.

The White House and Lafayette Park Riots of 2020

Starting on May 29, 2020, thousands of protestors began a three to four-day riot at the White House and nearby Lafayette Park. Although they were angry about the George Floyd killing, the riot was very political, and it was directed against the Trump White House.

 

“Protestors attempted to breach the Treasury Annex,” and they “threw projectiles at officers, including bricks, rocks, water bottles, and gallons of milk.” They also “deployed fireworks, threw alcohol at government agents, fired pepper spray at officers, and attempted to hit them with burning objects” (DoJ Report). The historic St. John’s Church was set ablaze.

A large number of Secret Service and Park personnel were injured and treated onsite or at a local hospital (DoJ Report).

In an interview on “Face the Nation,” Attorney General William Barr stated that 150 officers were injured by the thousands of protesters during the White House riots. That number exceeds most estimates of injuries on “January 6th.”

Thus, a comparison of the injury rates indicates that the violence of these events was roughly equal.

Disparities in the Prosecutorial Efforts and Punishment

J6 PROSECUTIONS

With regard to J6 defendants, the DoJ was aggressive to an extreme. Anyone near the Capitol, regardless of age, was at risk of being charged -- even months later. This included an 81-year-old Army veteran and a couple of 71-year-old “MAGA Grannies.”

The DoJ used several methods and technologies to identify alleged suspects, including cell phone “geofencing,” facial recognition, and anonymous tips. In total, 1,583 individuals were arrested. Hundreds were charged. and nearly every one of them was convicted or forced into a plea agreement. Most of the prosecutions were for non-violent crimes such as trespassing.

Here are a few examples of potentially excessive J6 prosecutions. In each case, the “criminal” was nonviolent.

  • Jacob Chansley, the guy with the horns, was sentenced to a 41-months for “obstruction,” despite being completely nonviolent. He was convicted before the release of video that showed him peacefully walking through the Capitol with police officers.
  • Enrique Tarrio was given a massive 22-year sentence plus additional supervised release -- far more than many murderers receive. Tarrio was not even present at the Capitol on January 6, although he was accused of planning J6 events remotely. Some people believe he was prosecuted primarily for being the leader of a controversial Trump-supporting organization called the “Proud Boys.”
  • Richard Barnett, the guy sitting at Nancy Pelosi’s desk. This non-violent offender was sentenced to 54 months in prison (4.5 years). His junior high antics included putting his feet on Pelosi’s desk, leaving a vulgar note, and theft of one of her letters. For those crimes some jail time might be appropriate, but the 4.5-year prison sentence is obviously excessive.
  • Couy Griffing was a county commissioner in New Mexico. He was not violent, didn’t damage anything, and his only crime was one of trespass. Despite that, a left-wing group (CREW) was able to have him removed from office with the claim that he violated the 14th Amendment “insurrection clause.”

2020 WHITE HOUSE PROSECUTIONS

In contrast to J6 Capitol marchers, rioters at the Trump White House received gentle treatment. Although hundreds of individuals threw rocks, used pepper spray on police, and breached security fences, very few were charged, and almost no one faced jail time. This was the case even though their actions caused the Secret Service to send the President and his family to the White House bunker for nearly an hour.

The very definition of “violence” was altered for the two events. Any J6 protester using pepper spray was considered to be violent and guilty of a felony. That was not the case for White House rioters. Although there were many people who aimed pepper spray at Secret Service agents and police, I could find no reports of anyone being charged for that.

Relative to the 2020 White House riots, only four individuals were arrested for breaching one of the security fences. Those people served zero days in prison and received no formal criminal sentences.

I can’t provide examples of prosecutions because there are so few. However, the rioting at the White House was part of the larger George Floyd riots, and I can address that in a general way.

The left-wing UK newspaper the Guardian acknowledged that very few George Floyd rioters were prosecuted. Presumably, those rioters included the ones at the White House and Lafayette Park.

“The vast majority of citations and charges against George Floyd protesters were ultimately dropped, dismissed or otherwise not filed, according to a Guardian analysis of law enforcement records and media reports in a dozen jurisdictions around the nation.”

The New York Post reported something similar:

“Hundreds of alleged looters and rioters busted last year in protests over George Floyd’s murder by police have had their charges dropped, according to NYPD data -- figures ripped as ‘disgusting’ by a local business owner.

And The Hill said something similar, but with an explanation:

The majority of cases brought against demonstrators during the George Floyd protests are being dismissed, as prosecutors concluded they were exercises of basic civil rights (emphasis added).

Conclusion

The prosecution of January 6th Capitol rioters was excessive when compared to the treatment of 2020 White House rioters. Ultimately, the January 6th defendants received commutations or pardons (in 2025). By then, however, many of them had already spent substantial time in prison, spent tens of thousands of dollars on legal defenses, and/or were fired from their jobs.

Perhaps the full $1.8 billion fund will not be required, but it is likely that a substantial fund will be needed to compensate people victimized by overzealous political prosecutors.

Related Topics: Trump, J6, Anti-Weaponization Fund 


Joe Fried
is an Ohio-based CPA and the author of Debunked? An auditor reviews the 2020 election -- and the lessons learned. In that book, Joe argues that the 2020 election should not have been certified. In addition, Joe has assisted various attorneys representing January 6th defendants. His totally free substack account is found at joefriedcpa.substack.com.

Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/05/trump_s_anti_weaponization_fund_the_facts.html

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Australia spy chief says Jew-hatred was left unchecked after Gaza war began - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps was behind at least two antisemitic attacks, Australia’s national security agency found.

 

Items placed in memory of the victims of the Dec. 14 Bondi Beach shooting are seen at the Bondi Pavilion in Sydney on Jan. 22, 2026. Photo by Steven Markham/AFP via Getty Images.
Items placed in memory of the victims of the Dec. 14 Bondi Beach shooting are seen at the Bondi Pavilion in Sydney on Jan. 22, 2026. Photo by Steven Markham/AFP via Getty Images.

Antisemitism in Australia was left unchecked and became normalized after the outbreak of the war against Hamas in Gaza in October 2023, fueling violence against Jewish people, the country’s national security and intelligence chief said on ‌Monday.

The frank remarks were made during a public inquiry into last December’s Bondi Beach mass shooting in Sydney, the worst terrorist attack in Australian history.

“There is no doubt that the war in the Middle East invoked a range of emotions in Australia,” said Mike Burgess, director-general of the Australian Security Intelligence Organization. “Some of those violent aspects ... and those behaviors, including antisemitism that, in our view, were left unchecked, were therefore normalized and gave more permission for violence ..., and Jewish Australians were on the receiving end.”

Burgess told the Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion that beginning in late 2024, antisemitism “escalated in severity from threatening, intimidating behavior ‌to direct targeting of people, businesses and places of worship.”

Australian Jewish groups had long claimed that the government turned a blind eye to the incitement to violence that began immediately after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel and that it was allowed to fester unchecked for months before a rash of violent attacks began against the Jewish community, including arson and vandalism of synagogues, shops and private vehicles.

Fifteen people, including a 10-year-old girl and an 87-year-old Holocaust survivor, were killed by father-and-son gunmen in the shooting at Bondi Beach on the first night of Chanukah.

Iran fingered

The Australian Security Intelligence Organization had concluded that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps was behind at least two antisemitic attacks in Australia, including one on a kosher restaurant in Sydney and another at Melbourne’s Adass Israel Synagogue, leading to the expulsion of Iran’s ambassador in August, Burgess noted.

He added that the Islamic Republic was likely involved in other attacks.

“They use their network of proxies and agents to do their bidding, and that is to bring harm to Jewish people wherever they are in the world,” he said.

About 110,000 Jews live in Australia, primarily in Melbourne and Sydney. 


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/antisemitism/australia-spy-chief-says-jew-hatred-was-left-unchecked-after-gaza-war-began

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U.S. attorney in Miami sends ‘message’ to deep state with indictment against ex-prosecutor - John Solomon

 

by John Solomon

Charges against former Assistant U.S. Attorney Carmen Mercedes Lineberger carry more than 20 years in prison.

 

In less than a week, the U.S. attorney in Miami supervising the probe of Obama-Biden era government weaponization secured indictments against Cuban communist dictator Raul Castro and an alleged money launderer for Venezuelan strongarm man Nicolas Maduro.

But it was Jason Reding Quinones’ indictment against one of his own former federal prosecutors for trying to steal a sealed, classified report from Jack Smith’s investigation of President Donald Trump that may have sent the loudest shockwaves through government.

The charges against former Assistant U.S. Attorney Carmen Mercedes Lineberger carry more than 20 years in prison, and put on notice the current and former FBI agents, intelligence community spies and prosecutors whose conduct is currently being examined by a grand jury in Fort Pierce, Fla.

“It’s not only a message to any prosecutor, it's a message to any government employee that you have an obligation, you take an oath to work for the government, and you take that oath to support and defend the Constitution, and to do your duties well and faithfully, and we take that here in the Southern District of Florida very seriously,” Quinones told Just the News in a wide-ranging interview.

In Fort Pierce, where Lineberger worked, the special Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe diGenova is exploring whether a decade long pursuit of Trump by Obama-Biden era intel and law enforcement officials amounted to a criminal conspiracy to violate the president’s and his followers’ civil rights.

Lineberger played a role in one part of that pursuit, assisting from her Fort Pierce office Smith’s probe into classified memos found during a raid of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home. 

As she was preparing to retire, Lineberger tried to steal the sealed, classified report Smith wrote before he dismissed his charges against Trump, according to the indictment handed up by a grand jury last week.

“This is a troubling case, because it's from one of our, our former, not only federal prosecutors, assistant US attorneys, but one of our former leaders,” Quinones said. “It's a person that ran an office in Fort Pierce, that we call a managing assistant United States Attorney, and there's very serious charges against her.

“What she was trying to do is steal government documents. For what purpose, we'll let that come out when she has her day in court," Quinones explained. "She was trying to steal government documents for some purpose that she wasn't authorized for, and she renamed those government documents you know, Bundt cake recipe, chocolate chip cookies. This is very, very serious stuff.”

Lineberger pleaded not guilty on Wednesday.

The department, in announcing the charges, said that in separate instances in late 2025, Lineberger altered the electronic file names of government records that she received in her official capacity "to conceal" her unauthorized electronic transmission of the records to personal email accounts belonging to her "without being detected.” 

The altered government records included a document that included parts of internal DOJ electronic messages, an internal DOJ memorandum and a DOJ report related to a criminal prosecution that had been court-ordered to remain under seal and prohibited from distribution or disclosure outside of the department, the DOJ also said.

Lineberger allegedly attempted to conceal her actions by saving electronic copies of the government records in question under misleading file names such as “chocolate cake recipe” and “Bundt cake recipe” before emailing the documents to her personal email accounts.

The DOJ also said Wednesday that Lineberger also acted "knowing that her transmission of the record outside DOJ directly violated the court order and impaired the proper administration of the underlying criminal prosecution."

“This afternoon, a former managing assistant U.S. Attorney who supported Jack Smith’s politicized investigation of President Trump has been charged with stealing the confidential investigation documents,” FBI Director Kash Patel said. “This FBI will not hesitate to bring to account those who violated the trust of the American public in an investigation that should’ve never been brought to begin with.”

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, who oversaw this element of Smith’s special counsel investigation, ruled in February 2026 that then-Attorney General Pam Bondi and all DOJ officials and employees were all barred from releasing, transmitting, or sharing the second volume of Smith’s report on Trump.

Quinones said his team was floored by the alleged conduct when it was discovered late last year.

“When I came into office, I gave this office a mission, and that mission is a three-part sentence: protect Americans, restore impartial justice and defend the rule of law, and I chose those words very carefully,” he said.

Lineberger’s current online biography says that she is a “Retired Managing Assistant U.S. Attorney” from the Southern District of Florida.

She is also on the advisory board of the National Black Prosecutors Foundation and is the continuing legal education chair for the National Black Prosecutors Association. Lineberger praised President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris and critiqued Trump DOJ policies in the past while she was an active DOJ attorney.

The DOJ’s website currently lists Lineberger as among its “DOJ Ambassadors to Law Schools” and says she is a DOJ ambassador to Florida A&M University College of Law in Orlando, Nova Southeastern University–Shepard Broad Law Center in Fort Lauderdale, Drexel University Thomas R. Kline School of Law and Temple University Beasley School of Law in Philadelphia, and Villanova University School of Law in Pennsylvania. 


John Solomon

Source: Charges against former Assistant U.S. Attorney Carmen Mercedes Lineberger carry more than 20 years in prison.

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The hasidic rebbe's surprising ruling - Dvir Amar

 

by Dvir Amar

Hasidic daily publishes new ruling from Amshinover Rebbe allowing visits to Temple Mount under certain conditions.

 

Haredim on the Temple Mount
Haredim on the Temple Mount                                          Temple Mount Administration

The Amshinov hasidic newspaper Yirah Vesimcha, published a conversation between the Amshinover Rebbe and his son, regarding the issue of ascending the Temple Mount during the current period.

During the conversation, the Rebbe was asked whether it is forbidden today to ascend the Temple Mount, and he replied, "A person who is impure from contact with the dead is permitted to enter the Temple Mount itself. Only the cheil, which is beyond the Temple Mount, is forbidden."

"Can someone who immerses in a regular mikveh (ritual bath) enter the Temple Mount?" his son asked. The Rebbe answered: "Yes, but again, only the beginning of the Temple Mount."

The Rebbe’s son pressed further: "Where is the beginning - where today’s Temple Mount is?" The Rebbe replied: "Not deep inside. Deeper inside is already the cheil."

When asked whether the Western Wall is connected to the Temple, the Rebbe answered that "the Western Wall is connected to the wall of the Temple Mount," as brought in Kaftor Vaferach, chapter 6.

To the question of whether "behind the wall of the Kotel is already the Temple Mount," the Rebbe said, "Apparently, yes. But the Temple Mount is not the Temple courtyard. The Temple Mount is the Camp of the Levites," the Rebbe explained. Therefore, it is permitted to enter the area at the beginning of the Temple Mount after proper immersion for purification according to Jewish law.

The conversation also dealt with the issue of waving the Two Loaves on the Temple Mount, as they said was done on the Shavuot (Feast of Weeks) holiday.

"Seemingly, there is a mitzvah (Torah commandment)," the Rebbe replied. However, he noted that "it must be baked inside," adding, "I do not understand how they take it out" after the waving. Seemingly, he said, "there is a problem that it becomes invalid by being taken out." The Rebbe also raised additional questions such as priestly lineage, various colors mentioned on the subject, and the location of the altar.

The Rebbe’s son asked whether "this is like the Passover sacrifice," and his father responded, "The Passover sacrifice is required of each and every individual; the Two Loaves are a communal meal-offering." He also stressed that "for the Passover sacrifice, an altar is needed."

"Are they carrying an altar with them too?" he asked with a smile, referring to Temple service activists who entered the Mount, 13 of whom were arrested after waving the Two Loaves.

Temple Mount Administration director Rabbi Shimshon Elboim welcomed the publication of the Amshinover Rebbe's remarks, saying, "This is a major step forward in the Jewish progress of Israel’s return to the Temple Mount, which will significantly advance the renewal of the Temple service there, and even the building of the Temple."

The Administration noted that police currently also allow a short route for those who wish to enter only the area near the entrance to the Mount from the gate at the wooden bridge by the Kotel, walking close to the Western Wall from the inside and immediately exiting through the exit gate used by all those leaving the Temple Mount, without completing the full circuit around the Mount.

They also mentioned additional recent statements by haredi rabbis who discussed the possibility of ascending the Temple Mount. Last week, Rabbi Dr. Yitzchak Breitowitz also published his position on the issue.

The Administration expects that following the publication of the Amshinov Rebbe’s remarks in the community newspaper, there will be a growing wave in the number of Jews ascending the Temple Mount according to Jewish law, after the number already crossed 35,000 since the start of the year.

The Temple Mount is open this week for Jewish ascents during days following Shavuot only from Sunday to Tuesday. This is due to the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, which begins on Wednesday this week.

The Administration still hopes the closure will be canceled, and hopes for a repeat of the opening during Eid al-Adha, as occurred during the tenure of Minister Gilad Erdan when it coincided with the Jewish date of Tisha B’Av. 


Dvir Amar

Source:https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/427564 

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