Home Blog Page 117

Lisa McClain Emphasizes Tax Cuts for Working Families Amid Democratic ‘Tax the Rich’ Campaign

0

On Wednesday, House Republican Conference Chairwoman Lisa McClain seized the occasion of Tax Day to host a roundtable discussion with a diverse group including lawmakers, small business owners, workers, manufacturers, and tax experts. The focus was to highlight the positive impacts of the Working Families Tax Cuts, which were enacted last year. These cuts have reportedly led to increased tax refunds, reduced taxation on tips and overtime pay, and provided crucial relief for small businesses during the latest tax season.

Held in conjunction with Rep. Rob Wittman of Virginia and Rep. Steve Womack of Arkansas, the event came against a backdrop of Democrats using Tax Day to advocate for higher taxes on affluent Americans. In contrast, McClain emphasized how the tax law supports everyday Americans, citing her visits to seven districts where she engaged with local manufacturers and business owners to discuss the legislation’s benefits.

During the roundtable, McClain underlined several key aspects of the Working Families Tax Cuts, such as the elimination of taxes on tips and overtime pay, an expanded child tax credit, and relief for small businesses via Section 199A. Additional features included bonus depreciation and incentives for research and development, all contributing to what Republicans describe as “bigger paychecks” for workers.

“The past few years have felt like a squeeze for many families,” McClain remarked. “You worked more, but your money did less.” She stated that the tax cuts were championed by Republicans who understood these struggles. Wittman hailed the law as “historic relief” benefitting a wide range of Americans, from seniors to small business owners, while Womack expressed pride in the fact that workers in his district were retaining more of their income thanks to the no tax on tips policy, stressing the significance of every saved dollar.

George Agurkis, vice president of government relations at H&R Block, shared that IRS data reveals a roughly 11 percent increase in refunds this year, with over four million taxpayers benefiting from the no tax on tips provision. He recounted a case from Southern California where a single mother working at a bowling alley, who typically owed taxes each year, received a refund this time by claiming the no tax on tips benefit. This example underscores the tangible impact of the tax law on working families.

Simmons, a full-time DoorDash driver who delivered McDonald’s to President Trump at the White House earlier this week, said many Dashers had benefited from the no tax on tips provision, adding, “They’re getting more money back into their homes.”

Stacey Tyree, a Great Clips employee, said that after years of ending up owing taxes, she received a refund this year because of the No Tax on Tips provision, which allowed her to enroll her husband as a dependent on her health insurance “for the first time in his entire adult life.”

Amber Benamati and Ron Benamati, who both work at Metallus, where their son Jacob Lacey is also employed, said the Working Families Tax Cuts changed how their family views overtime work. Amber Benamati said, “It’s been great for our family—it’s changed a lot of things. We actually got a tax return back this year, which is nice. And I like to work overtime now.” Ron Benamati added, “It’s nice being able to keep the money in our pocket where it belongs.”

Kaylee McGhee White said her family benefited from the expanded child tax credit, which would “help us rebuild from the inflation and damage the Biden Administration wrought on our economy.”

Paola Hinton, owner of Five Senses Spa, Salon, and Barbershop, said, “I can’t believe I’m about to say this, but I can’t wait for Tax Day. This year, it’s different for small business owners and working Americans.” She said that over the past few weeks she had heard from salon owners across the country, including a woman in California who received more than $38,000 in tax credits from two locations, Brandon in Texas who was using his savings to fund 401(k)s for employees, and Brian in Georgia who was able to maintain health insurance for his team. Hinton added, “The impact is very, very real.”

Elizabeth Gartner, who said she and her husband own 12 Great Clips salons in Northeast Tennessee, Southwest Virginia, and Eastern Kentucky, said they had collected more than $1 million in tips by September of last year and saved $76,000 when they filed their taxes this year because they were no longer paying taxes on money that never reached their topline revenue. She said the savings was used to improve employee benefit packages.

Sarah White, managing partner of Westover Taco, which she described as a small restaurant in Arlington, said her restaurant and employees saw larger refunds this year, saying, Just having the opportunity to see our tax returns this year—to see our staff light up when they see their tax refunds this year—has just been amazing.

Mike Twining, vice president of sales and marketing for Willard Agri-Service, said provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill and the Working Families Tax Cuts, particularly expensing and investment incentives, lowered the upfront cost of durable machinery, production facilities, and other necessary equipment for his business and its agricultural customers.

Buddy Henley, president of Henley Construction, said, “Small family-owned businesses like mine need tax policy they can count on,” adding that the provision making small business deductions permanent gave companies like his greater certainty to reinvest in equipment, materials, and workers without concern about future tax increases.

Sarah Wellman of Ryder System said the allowance of EBITA and 100 percent bonus depreciation “couldn’t have come at a more pivotal time” as the trucking industry “has been navigating a multi-year freight downturn,” adding that the provisions “help drive long-term capital investments” and spur “the investment and deployment of newer equipment with safety and efficiency benefits.”

Matt Frostic, vice president of the National Corn Growers Association and a fifth-generation farmer, said making the tax cuts permanent in agriculture would allow farms to make long-term decisions and manage risk more effectively. He said, “To be able to know that we have a way of investing and a way of leveling our tax consequences from year to year brings that longevity and a sense of permanence to our farms.”

Unexplained Increase in European Redhead Population Puzzles Scientists

0

Those with red hair who once faced teasing on the playground may now have reason to celebrate. A new study indicates that their numbers are on the rise, courtesy of natural selection.

Scientists have discovered that humans are still undergoing evolution, and the pace is much quicker than previously thought.

Through DNA analysis, researchers have identified that the gene responsible for red hair has become increasingly prevalent among Europeans over the last 10,000 years.

This suggests that the distinctive red locks of celebrities like Ed Sheeran, Prince Harry, and Florence Welch might become more common in the future.

Other genetic traits that appear to have gained prevalence include lighter skin tones, a reduced likelihood of male-pattern baldness, a quicker walking speed, and enhanced cognitive abilities.

Additional traits that have proliferated are a susceptibility to celiac disease, immunity to HIV, resistance to leprosy, a lower risk of rheumatoid arthritis and a lower body fat percentage.

The researchers, from Harvard University, aren’t completely sure what survival advantage red hair may have in modern times.

‘Perhaps having red hair was beneficial 4,000 years ago,’ they said. ‘Or perhaps it came along for the ride with a more important trait.’

DNA analysis shows that the ginger gene has become more common among Europeans

A major genetic risk factor for gluten intolerance also began to spike around 4,000 years ago

DNA analysis shows that the ginger gene has become more common among Europeans, left. Meanwhile a major genetic risk factor for gluten intolerance also began to spike around 4,000 years ago, right

The red hair sported by Ed Sheeran could become increasingly more common, experts revealed

The red hair sported by Ed Sheeran could become increasingly more common, experts revealed

The findings challenge conventional theories that humans have changed little in evolutionary terms since we first emerged 300,000 years ago.

For the study, the researchers analysed ancient DNA from nearly 16,000 people across more than 10,000 years in West Eurasia – which is now Europe and parts of the Middle East.

They collaborated with more than 250 archaeologists and anthropologists to sift through the DNA.

Overall, they found that most of the genetic selection accelerated after the introduction of farming, reflecting how different traits became advantageous as people shifted to agriculture from hunting and gathering.

Some of the changes seem logical – for example developing a resistance to certain diseases.

But others appear counterintuitive, like the major genetic risk factor for gluten intolerance spiking after people began farming wheat.

‘With these new techniques and large amounts of ancient genomic data, we can now watch how selection shapes biology in real time,’ first author Ali Akbari, from Harvard University, said.

‘Instead of searching for the scars natural selection leaves in present–day genomes using simple models and assumptions, we can let the data speak for itself.’

The study found the ginger gene is becoming more common, meaning we could be seeing more redheads such as Florence Welch

Geri Horner, formerly known as 'Ginger Spice', is also renowned for her red hair

The study found the ginger gene is becoming more common, meaning the number of redheads such as Florence Welch, left, and former Spice Girl Geri Horner is increasing

Other variants that appear to have become more common include a faster walking pace and higher intelligence

Other variants that appear to have become more common include a faster walking pace and higher intelligence

Traits that are becoming more common

  • Red hair
  • Light skin tone 
  • Lower chance of male pattern baldness
  • Faster walking pace
  • Higher intelligence
  • Susceptibility to celiac disease
  • Immunity to HIV
  • Resistance to leprosy
  • Lower risk of rheumatoid arthritis
  • Lower body fat percentage 

Genetic quirks are usually the result of random mutations that occur during errors in copying parents’ DNA during reproduction.

Most mutations hardly have any impact, but if one provides some kind of survival advantage then the carrier is more likely to live longer and pass on the variant to their children.

Over generations, the most advantageous variants can become dominant across a whole species, driving evolution via natural selection.

‘This work allows us to assign place and time to forces that shaped us,’ Harvard Geneticist David Reich said.

The authors, who published their work in the journal Nature, plan to repeat the research in East Asia, East Africa and Central and South America to uncover yet more genetic variations.

They hope this could help with disease prevention and pave the way for developing new gene therapy medications.

‘To what extent will we see similar patterns in East Asia or East Africa or Native Americans in Mesoamerica and the central Andes?’ Professor Reich asked.

‘If we can’t use ancient DNA to study the most important period in human evolution one million to two million years ago, then at least we can study selective pressure on human genomes during more recent periods of change and learn broader principles.’

The red hair trait runs in the royal family thanks to Prince Harry

The Weasley family, including Ron, played by Rupert Grint, from the Harry Potter franchise are renowned for their ginger locks

The red hair trait runs in the royal family thanks to Prince Harry. Meanwhile the Weasley family, including Ron, played by Rupert Grint, from the Harry Potter franchise are renowned for their ginger locks

Despite the findings, redheads are still relatively rare – making up less than 2 per cent of the global population.

A previous study found that red-headed women have genetically different pain thresholds to the rest of the female population.

A report in the medical journal Anesthesiology said redheads’ pain thresholds were linked to the hair gene mutation which partially switches off a sensory receptor.

They also have the highest orgasm rates of all hair types, experts found.

‘The sex lives of women with red hair were clearly more active than those with other hair colour, with more partners and having sex more often than the average,’ Dr Werner Habermehl, from the University of Hamburg, said. ‘The research shows that the fiery redhead certainly lives up to her reputation.’

Russia’s Most Lethal 2026 Strike Claims At Least 16 Lives in Ukraine

0

Russia has launched its most lethal assault of 2026 on Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, as well as other cities, resulting in the deaths of 16 individuals, among them a 12-year-old child, and leaving many others wounded due to drone and missile attacks.

Throughout the night, parts of the capital were engulfed in uncontrollable fires, casting thick plumes of black smoke into the sky, while firefighters battled to extinguish numerous infernos.

By Thursday morning, residents alongside emergency workers were clearing the debris that littered the areas around severely damaged structures in the city.

In Kyiv, four fatalities were reported, including the young child, according to the city’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, on Thursday.

The strikes also claimed the lives of nine people in Odesa and two more in the southeastern city of Dnipro, where Russian raids ignited residential areas, as stated by regional authorities.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the night had proven that Russia did not deserve any easing of global ‌policy or lifting ‌of sanctions, with 100 people ⁠wounded alongside those killed.

“There can be no normalisation of Russia as it is today. Pressure on Russia must work. And it is important to fulfil every promise of assistance to Ukraine on time,” he said.

In March, the US temporarily lifted sanctions on Russian oil that had already been loaded onto tankers for export, with US Treasury secretary Scott Bessent describing the move as a “short-term measure” intended to “promote stability in world energy markets”.

The 30-day waiver expired on 11 April and Bessent has said it would not be renewed.

‘Immoral, counterproductive, and dangerous’

Ukrainian air force units shot down or neutralised 31 missiles and 636 drones, but 12 missiles and 20 drones hit in the 24 hours to 7am on Thursday, the air force said.

Ukraine’s deputy prime minister, Oleksiy Kuleba, said rescue operations were ongoing and the toll could rise, while the country’s foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, urged the international community to act.

“All decisions required to increase pressure on the aggressor ⁠must be unblocked now,” he said on X.

“It is immoral, counterproductive, and dangerous to ‌delay sanctions against Russia or packages of support for Ukraine.”

Four people stand amidst the debris of a heavily damaged, bright blue house that has been partially leveled by an explosion or conflict.
Locals stand near a damaged private building at the site of a Russian strike on a residential area in Ukraine’s capital Kyiv on 16 April 2026. Source: AAP / EPA / Sergey Dolzhenko

Klitschko said that Kyiv came under another attack early on Thursday, adding that a drone, flying very low, slammed into an 18-storey building.

Prosecutors put ‌the number of injured in the city at 54.

Klitschko said rescue teams had rescued a mother and child from a building in a central district where the ground floor was badly damaged.

He also said missile debris had hit the sixth floor of an apartment building in the central Podil district.

A large fire had broken out in a building in a district in the north of the capital and four emergency medical workers were injured, while debris had fallen in several locations, Klitschko said.

For the latest from SBS News, download our app and subscribe to our newsletter.

Eric Swalwell Campaign’s Hotel Payments Under Scrutiny Amid Assault Allegations by Lonna Drewes

0

Eric Swalwell, once a contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, recently resigned from Congress and withdrew from the California governor’s race amid a flurry of allegations, including sexual misconduct and rape. It’s reported that he used campaign funds at a Hollywood hotel where a former model claims the assault took place.

According to campaign finance records highlighted by Rob Pyers, a campaign finance expert, Swalwell’s 2018 re-election campaign paid the Montrose hotel at 900 Hammond Street $353 and $8 on July 18, 2018. This location is the same as the one identified by Los Angeles deputies after speaking with accuser Lonna Drewes about an incident she says occurred in July 2018. Swalwell has denied the allegations from Drewes and other women.

A further examination of Swalwell’s financial records by Fox News Digital uncovered a Lyft charge of $43.24 in California on the same day. The details of who used the ride or additional specifics are not included in the filing.

An additional review of Swalwell’s expenditures by Fox News Digital revealed a $43.24 Lyft ride in California on that day. The filing does not show who took it or include more specifics about the ride.

The Montrose hotel is on a slightly inclined street, with balcony's and striped awnings visible.

The Montrose Beverly Hills hotel, seen in a Google Maps image taken on Hammond Street. (Google)

Now the disgraced ex-congressman faces legal probes on both coasts, according to authorities in New York and Los Angeles.

FBI Director Kash Patel challenged the former lawmaker to come in for an interview and encouraged any potential witnesses or victims to call the bureau’s tip line in an X post. And the House Ethics Committee announced Monday its own probe into allegations of sexual misconduct.

While initially the allegations stemming from a 2024 encounter with a former staffer after a New York City gala seemed most likely to lead to charges, new evidence is emerging in California that appears to at least partially corroborate another accuser’s story, according to Donna Rotunno, a Chicago-based trial attorney and Fox News contributor.

“She seems fairly legitimate to me,” she said of Swalwell’s unnamed New York accuser. “There was outcry. She went to the hospital. She seems to have some evidence to back up her story.”

Rep. Eric Swalwell speaks at Capitol press conference on committee assignments.

Rep. Eric Swalwell spoke during a press conference on committee assignments for the 118th Congress at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 25, 2023, in Washington, D.C. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Outcry is when a victim reports a sexual assault incident to someone else, like friends or family, rather than police. Testimony from witnesses on the receiving end of these conversations is allowed in court under certain conditions, Rotunno said. It’s an exception to hearsay rules.

And the New York accuser also got tested for pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections, for which she has medical records.

“She at least comes across as somebody who can back it up,” said Rotunno, who is an expert defense lawyer in sex assault cases. “Now it’s for somebody else to determine whether or not they think that it’s a crime.”

If Manhattan investigators decide to file charges, she said they can expect a vigorous defense from Swalwell’s legal team.

“Would he have known if she’s too intoxicated to consent?” she posited. “Just because you don’t remember doesn’t mean you don’t consent.”

Drunken drivers consented to get behind the wheel before committing those crimes, she said. Drunken Uber riders consent to pay the bill and get home safely.

“Any jury can put themselves in that person’s position,” she said. “Drunk people have sex all the time. It’s a very nuanced area of law.”

After the New York accuser went public with her allegations in a San Francisco Chronicle interview published Friday, other women came forward with allegations of misconduct or worse.

Lonna Drewes speaks with attorney Lisa Bloom during news conference on assault allegation.

Lonna Drewes, alongside attorney Lisa Bloom, spoke during a news briefing on April 14, 2026, in Beverly Hills, California, where Drewes alleged that former Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., drugged and sexually assaulted her during a 2018 encounter after offering professional mentorship. Swalwell has denied the allegations. (Myun J. Chun / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

One of them was Drewes, who told Los Angeles deputies Tuesday that Swalwell allegedly sexually assaulted her at a West Hollywood hotel in July 2018, located on the 900 block of Hammond Street — the address of the Montrose hotel where Swalwell’s campaign made two payments on July 18, 2018.

“It corroborates… that she was there,” Rotunno said. “Now he would have to say it was consensual rather than it didn’t happen at all.”

“We were supposed to go to a political event, and he said he needed to get paperwork from his hotel room,” Drewes, a former model and software entrepreneur, said during a news briefing alongside her attorneys Lisa Bloom and Arick Fudali Tuesday.

She said she was already “incapacitated” by the time they got to his room.

“He raped me,” she alleged. “And he choked me. And while he was choking me, I lost consciousness. And I thought I died. I did not consent to any sexual activity.”

The allegations are similar to those in the Chronicle piece, from a former staffer accusing him of sexually assaulting her when she was blackout drunk after the New York City gala on April 25, 2024.

Rep. Eric Swallwell walking into a closed-door deposition room in Washington, D.C.

Rep. Eric Swallwell (D-CA) returns to a closed-door deposition with Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, in the O’Neill House Office Building on Feb. 28, 2024, in Washington, D.C. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

According to the report, she claimed to remember only “snippets of the night,” including telling Swalwell “no.” Three days later, she reportedly told a friend she believed she was sexually assaulted.

“As a lawyer who has dealt with Harvey Weinstein for now a little less than a decade, I would be very upset if they were not equally treating these people fairly,” Rotunno told Fox News Digital. “This allegation in New York is identical to the allegation on Harvey, without the alcohol. The alcohol makes it even worse.”

In New York City, Manhattan prosecutors are also asking for additional witnesses or victims to call them.

Harvey Weinstein standing in a Manhattan state court courtroom.

Harvey Weinstein appears in state court in Manhattan for his retrial on Wednesday, June 4, 2025, in New York.  (Curtis Means/Pool Photo via AP)

“We urge survivors and anyone with knowledge of these allegations to contact our Special Victims Division at 212-335-9373,” a spokesperson for the Manhattan District Attorney’s office told Fox News over the weekend. “Our specially trained prosecutors, investigators, and counselors are well-equipped to help you in a trauma-informed, survivor-centered manner.”

After the Chronicle report, other women came forward with allegations, including Drewes, who said at a news conference in Beverly Hills Tuesday that she believes Swalwell drugged and raped her at a hotel in 2018.

Swalwell has denied the allegations, but he quit the governor’s race.

“I will fight the serious, false allegations that have been made,” he wrote on X Sunday. “But that’s my fight, not a campaign’s.”

He later resigned from Congress.

<!–>

–>

Chilling Confession: Man Throws Baby into Pond After Murdering Parents – A Case That Shook the Nation

0

Left (clockwise from top left): Geraldina Peguero-Mancebo, Junior Cabrera-Colon, and their son Jeyden (GoFundMe). Right: Jose Luis Rodriguez (Reading Police Department).

A man from Pennsylvania has confessed to the tragic act of throwing a 1-year-old boy into a pond, resulting in the child’s death. This came after he had already taken the life of the boy’s mother, claiming she refused to leave her husband for him. The following day, he also killed her husband. Afterwards, he allegedly reached out to the mother’s family, posing as a concerned friend.

“Everyone believed he was assisting us until we discovered he was the culprit,” shared Heinel Medrano, the cousin of Geraldina Peguero-Mancebo, the murdered mother. Geraldina, her husband Junior Cabrera-Colon, and their son Jeyden were all killed in September 2025. Medrano spoke to local TV station WFMZ after the sentencing of their murderer, Jose Luis Rodriguez, on Tuesday.

“The baby suffered the most,” Medrano commented.

Jose Luis Rodriguez, aged 61, pled guilty to first-degree murder and received a sentence of three consecutive life terms without parole.

“We’re thankful because, while it’s not a relief, it does mark the end of a chapter,” Medrano expressed to WFMZ. “Being in the same world as him was incredibly difficult.”

As previously reported by Law&Crime, prosecutors and police accused Rodriguez of shooting Peguero-Mancebo in the head first “because she did not want to leave her husband.” The mother and her son were picked up by Rodriguez, who was in a relationship with Peguero-Mancebo and also cosigned her apartment lease, before the slaying occurred inside his car.

Rodriguez dumped Peguero-Mancebo’s body and then drove Jeyden to an area in Ontelaunee Township, where he threw the boy into the pond. An autopsy showed that mud was present in the boy’s lungs, indicating that he was “alive at the time of submersion,” according to police.

“I don’t think we can express in words the tragedy and the horrific circumstances of that child’s death,” said Berks County District Attorney John Adams at Rodriguez’s sentencing, according to WFMZ. “That child was thrown into an algae laden pond and left there to die,” Adams said.

Rodriguez told investigators he decided against dropping Jeyden off at a hospital or police station “for fear of getting caught.” After throwing the boy into the pond, Rodriguez got into an altercation with Cabrera-Colon a day later in Reading and shot him to death. His body was found in a wooded area near some basketball courts in Baer Park.

Police arrested and charged Rodriguez with three counts of murder on Sept. 19, 2025. He directed investigators to the 9 mm handgun he used in the killings, which he had stashed at someone else’s home under their porch.

A GoFundMe page, which was launched last year to raise money to have Peguero-Mancebo and Cabrera-Colon’s bodies returned to their native Dominican Republic, said the couple also shared three other children, ages 8, 10, and 13 years old.

“There’s no punishment that could ever equalize the pain he has caused,” Adams told the court Tuesday about Rodriguez. “He will never see the light of day and hopefully, this will bring some closure to the family and to anyone who knew any of the victims.”

Court Overturns New Restrictions on Protests in Bondi

0
Powers used to restrict protests in the aftermath of the Bondi massacre have been deemed by a court to have breached constitutional freedoms.
The controversial measures, which were rushed through NSW Parliament in December, allowed the police commissioner to make a declaration preventing residents from seeking authorisation for rallies in key areas of Sydney for up to three months after a terror attack.

Protesters found themselves at risk of arrest for blocking either street traffic or pedestrian pathways during their demonstrations.

NSW police during the protest at Town Hall against the visit of Israeli President Isaac Herzog in Sydney in February. (Kate Geraghty)

Despite the state government’s insistence that these regulations were essential for maintaining public order, activist groups like Palestine Action Group and Blak Caucus challenged them in court.

On Thursday, Chief Justice Andrew Bell ruled that the laws placed an “impermissible burden” on several constitutional freedoms, as stated in a decision by the NSW Court of Appeal.

The declaration came in the wake of an incident where two gunmen allegedly opened fire at a Hanukkah event at Bondi Beach in mid-December, resulting in 15 fatalities.

These restrictions were only relaxed in February, which was shortly after police intervened to disperse a protest at Town Hall against Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s visit to Australia.

The event was also policed under a major events declaration that gave authorities powers to clear the area at their determination.

Asked about the laws ahead of the court’s decision, Premier Chris Minns continued to back them.

“I’m not saying there wasn’t clashes, I’m not saying it wasn’t difficult and I don’t regret moving that legislation at all,” he said.

“It’s tricky when you’re introducing changes to legislation like that because there’s a necessary infringement on constitutional principles.

“But there are other constitutional principles: the right of individual citizens to go about living their life free of intimidation, persecution or violence.”

NEVER MISS A STORY: Get your breaking news and exclusive stories first by following us across all platforms.

Angela Okorie Criticizes Ruth Kadiri’s Controversial ‘Holy Spirit as AI’ Comment

  • Nollywood actress Angela Okorie criticized colleague Ruth Kadiri for her recent online spiritual message.
  • Kadiri shared a video on Instagram claiming a revelation from the Holy Spirit.
  • She stated that people would start referring to the Holy Spirit as the “first AI.”

Angela Okorie, a prominent figure in Nollywood, recently expressed criticism towards fellow actress Ruth Kadiri in response to a spiritual message Kadiri shared on social media.

Kadiri’s Instagram post featured a video in which she claimed to have received a divine revelation. According to her, the Holy Spirit informed her that it would soon be regarded as the “first AI.” Kadiri expressed concern that many Christians are increasingly turning to artificial intelligence for guidance, rather than seeking spiritual counsel through prayer.

She cautioned that there are malevolent forces at work attempting to sway the world and urged Christians to remain vigilant and spiritually aware.

“Where there is an original, there is often a counterfeit,” Kadiri stated. “The devil is attempting to exert influence in unprecedented ways. God revealed to me that the Holy Spirit is akin to what people now call the first AI. Many Christians are starting to direct their issues to AI, forgetting that God originally intended for His creations to fulfill their emotional needs. If Christians don’t remain cautious, they may mistakenly place their faith in these technological solutions.”

Slamming her in the comment section of a blog post, Angela Okorie responded sharply, “This nonsense has to stop,” noting that no Holy Spirit would tell her such.

“Na wa o. Which Holy Spirit go and sit down and shut up your mouth. This nonsense has to stop”.

See screenshot of post below:

In other news… A Nigerian man has gone viral after recounting how he lost his job and secured a better one within minutes while working at an airport in Canada.
In a video shared on X (formerly Twitter), the man explained that he was working as a ramp agent, handling baggage loading, before he was dismissed due to repeated lateness during his probation period.
“I was fired around 11:40am. They said since I had been coming late during my probation, they had to let me go. I didn’t even feel bad. I just told them it’s not your fault.”
Rather than dwelling on the setback, he said he immediately took action by walking into another office within the airport to seek a new opportunity.
“As I came out, I entered another office and asked if they had vacancies. They asked if I could drive, and I said yes. They gave me a driving role immediately. I moved from $19 per hour to $24.”
According to him, the transition was swift because he already had the necessary airport clearance, allowing him to begin the new role almost immediately without going through a lengthy hiring process.

Unveiling Elon Musk’s Path to Unprecedented Global Influence and Power

0

As you gaze into the night sky, any bright, moving object you spot is likely another addition to Elon Musk’s celestial domain.

Elon Musk, the world’s wealthiest individual with a net worth soaring beyond £600 billion, first introduced his Starlink satellites in 2019. His vision was to deliver high-speed internet to the most secluded corners of the globe through these orbiting satellites.

These satellites, hurtling through space at 17,000 mph and positioned about 342 miles above the Earth, complete an orbit in just over 90 minutes.

Fast forward seven years since their initial launch, and the once prominent constellations like Orion and Ursa Major now share the night sky with a dazzling array of Musk’s satellites, described as encircling the planet “like a cloud of gnats.”

This impressive achievement has been made possible by the innovation of SpaceX, Musk’s aerospace company, which has revolutionized satellite launches with its reusable rockets, slashing the costs by more than 90 percent.

Starlink’s parent company now accounts for 95 per cent of all spacecraft launched into orbit in the US and 50 per cent of the world total.

If this didn’t make his space business pretty much indispensable, his imposing satellite constellation’s ability to provide high-speed internet connections almost anywhere you care to mention has certainly done so.

As the company strikes ever more deals with governments, the number of satellites grows by the week.

Elon Musk, the richest man in the world, owns 40 per cent of Starlink

Elon Musk, the richest man in the world, owns 40 per cent of Starlink

There are now around 10,000 Starlink spacecraft up there – two-thirds of all 14,500 satellites in orbit – and he plans many, many more.

Musk, who owns 40 per cent of Starlink but 80 per cent of the voting rights, recently lodged an application with the US regulator, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), to launch a constellation of up to a million satellites – yes, a million – that will be sun-powered orbital data centres for Artificial Intelligence computing power.

Satellites are increasingly vital in fields such as navigation, climate research and earth observation but nowhere are they more critical than when it comes to communications. And the Starlink system is as user-friendly as it gets.

All a subscriber needs is a small receiver with an electronically-controlled antenna, which automatically steers toward the satellites as they pass overhead.

The portable terminals, which are about the size of a pizza box, receive signals from these satellites and transmit them to a nearby router, which supplies the broadband internet connection.

As is being demonstrated in conflicts across the globe, especially Ukraine, Starlink has given Musk – a private citizen – geopolitical powers that many agree are historically unprecedented.

It is no exaggeration to say that it gives him the ability to change the course of wars on a whim. And the mercurial, vindictive and conspiracy theory-prone Musk has shown himself to be rather prone to whims.

Experts have long observed that whoever dominates space will have the power to oversee our lives on Earth, with the speculation initially focused on whether it would be the US or China. Until a few years ago, nobody predicted it might be a single man – least of all a man like Musk.

He has already shown himself to be alarmingly fickle. In 2022, fearful that he would be blamed by Moscow for any battlefield losses. he shut down the Starlink service to Ukrainian forces trying to launch a drone attack on the the Russian fleet at Sevastopol.

Observers are nervously waiting for the next time he decides on a similarly unhelpful intervention.

For the moment, however, Musk’s interests have largely aligned with the West’s. Ukraine, whose own satellite system was destroyed in one of the opening salvos of the Russian invasion, has come to depend on Starlink for its defence: coordinating troop movements and steering drones.

Until recently, the Russians relied on Starlink, too. Despite the service being unavailable in Russia, The Kremlin used middlemen to smuggle Starlink terminals into Ukraine in large numbers.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 29 Starlink satellites takes off earlier this year

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 29 Starlink satellites takes off earlier this year

Elon Musk has 80 per cent voting rights in Starlink, which launched its first satellites in 2019

Elon Musk has 80 per cent voting rights in Starlink, which launched its first satellites in 2019

 But as of February 1, Starlink terminals won’t work in Ukraine unless they are on a ‘white list’ approved by the Kyiv government.

As a result, Russia’s ability to mount attacks using drones, which need a strong internet connection, has been crippled. Commanding officers even used Starlink, which could send video confirmation of a soldier’s position, to check their own men hadn’t deserted.

Now they are forced to use military radios to control their troops, which means they have to operate much closer to the front line and so put themselves in harm’s way.

Ukrainian special forces recently told the Wall Street Journal that, without Starlink, their opponents have now been ‘basically pushed back to Cold War-era communications’.

This has transformed the conflict, resulting in Kyiv’s forces’ biggest domestic territorial gains in more than two years.

Starlink has been a crucial factor in other conflicts, too. In Sudan, rebels used the terminals to communicate with allied militias. In Iran and Venezuela, civilians have used them to get around government information blackouts or censorship. In Gaza, they’ve been used for humanitarian purposes, with doctors and aid organisations employing them to coordinate the movement of supplies and to provide online medical treatment.

As in Ukraine, Starlink is helping to revolutionise the use of cheap drones in the Iranian conflict. There, the US has been having great success with a new model called the Low-Cost Uncrewed Combat Attack System, or Lucas.

Dubbed a ‘kamikaze’ drone, Lucas is controlled by a Starlink terminal which means it can be operate over greater distances and resist Iranian jamming attempts.

It may not be the main source of Musk’s wealth – that’s still electric car company Tesla – but Starlink is his most impressive technical accomplishment and the one that has turned out to be by far the most empowering.

While originally designed to fill in gaps in the world’s internet coverage, it’s now becoming a highly competitive alternative to many existing services.

Russia, China, Belarus, Afghanistan, Syria and North Korea are the only no-go areas on Starlink’s global coverage map – everywhere else it’s either available or ‘coming soon’ (the latter area almost entirely limited to parts of Africa and Asia).

In March, Musk announced that Starlink had obtained its operating licence in the Central African Republic, meaning that it is now available in 27 out of 54 African countries.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is launched, carrying 23 Starlink satellites into low Earth orbit in Cape Canaveral, Florida in 2024

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is launched, carrying 23 Starlink satellites into low Earth orbit in Cape Canaveral, Florida in 2024

Musk has also unveiled a new service, StarlinkMobile, which will deliver direct satellite-to-handset connectivity.

Later this year, in a deal with Starlink, Virgin Media O2 is set to become the first mobile network operator to offer UK customers automatic connectivity via satellite in places without a phone signal.

The satellites will effectively act like ‘phone masts in the sky’, said a telecoms analyst, who stressed that they are the only technology ‘that can truly close the coverage gap across mountains, oceans and rural areas’.

In 2020, Musk reassured existing broadband providers – who provide the internet via cables – that Starlink ‘is not some huge threat’ to them, but they say they now know different.

Industry executive Hans Geerdes this week warned a cable industry conference that Musk’s ‘aggressive’ business behaviour – launching much bigger and more powerful satellites and engaging in relentless cost-cutting – could drive them all out of business.

This would leave Musk dominant in the field of high speed internet, offering his service not just in remote areas and war zones but everywhere.

As for his jaw-dropping ambition to launch up to a million satellites, it depends on his driving down the costs of putting them into space even further, via a huge new Starship rocket which is still in development.

His plan has – as so many of Musk’s grand plans do – attracted many objections. In this case, they go beyond the obvious environmental toll of endless rocket launches and the potential build-up of dangerous space debris, which not only provides a hazard to other spacecraft but occasionally falls to earth without burning up on re-entry.

The US government relies on Musk for everything from space missions and satellite communication to tech research and championing electric cars

The US government relies on Musk for everything from space missions and satellite communication to tech research and championing electric cars

Despite the supposed environmental benefits of putting AI data centres into space (because the huge amount of heat they generate won’t contribute to global warming), there are a number of downsides to Musk’s satellites.

For a start, they are highly reflective, prompting scientists and environmentalists to warn that the inevitable exponential increase in light pollution will have dire consequences for the circadian rhythms – or body clocks – of humans and animals alike.

This could lead to declining bird and insect populations and an epidemic of sleep problems that can cause obesity and cancer.

Critics also predict that putting a million satellites into space means we will see more of them than stars, destroying the panorama of the night sky.

However, despite the seriousness of the downsides, nobody will be particularly surprised if US regulators wave through Musk’s application.

He might have his occasional spats with President Trump, as when his ‘DOGE’ (Department of Government Efficiency) experiment led to a mass sacking disaster.

But the US government relies on Musk for too much – everything from space missions and satellite communication to tech research and championing electric cars – so it needs to keep him sweet.

US officials have even talked of how their government is ‘living off his good graces’ and the worrying lack of leverage that Washington has over him.

It has even been predicted that, if Musk’s SpaceX continues to dominate the launches that take satellites into space and the unmatched digital services they provide back on Earth, he will end up with more power over how people exchange information than anyone in the history of civilisation.

It’s a sobering thought given that this is the man who proposed ‘nuking’ Mars to warm it up and make it habitable, and who once brought a flamethrower to a cannabis-infused interview with a podcast king.

Other countries are belatedly waking up to Musk’s vice-like grip on satellite communications and are starting to develop alternatives. However, for the foreseeable future, say experts, no other system will be able to match the huge reach and proven reliability of Starlink.

A frightening new book, Muskism, claims Elon is bent on dominating our lives by making his technology indispensable. ‘Trying to unplug from Musk, you realise that he owns the socket,’ say its authors.

Putnam County Teen Convicted of First-Degree Murder in 2023 Shooting, Confirms State Attorney

0

A 19-year-old man from Putnam County has been convicted of first-degree murder following a 2023 shooting incident, as announced by the State Attorney’s Office. The verdict was reached after a two-day trial.

On Wednesday, State Attorney R.J. Larizza’s office disclosed that Ramon Gomez-Hernandez Jr. was found guilty of several charges, including first-degree murder, two counts of attempted second-degree murder, aggravated assault, and possession of a firearm by a juvenile delinquent.

State Attorney Larizza commented on the case, stating, “The defendant is part of a violent group of young people who show an absolute disdain for the sanctity of life. This group of ‘Young Guns’ is responsible for a significant portion of the gun violence we witness today. They must be removed from our communities for as long as the law allows.”



This story continues below.

The case stems from an incident on June 30, 2023, when deputies from the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office responded to reports of a shooting on Kane Road in East Palatka.

According to the SAO, on June 30, 2023, deputies with the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office responded to a call that a person was shot on Kane Road in East Palatka.

Deputies said one victim, identified as Rubli Perez-Lucas, was taken in a vehicle to a hospital along with another victim, while a third gunshot victim stayed at the scene and was later taken to a hospital.

Perez-Lucas died before arrival at HCA Florida Putnam Hospital.

During the investigation, witnesses told detectives that multiple people in a vehicle pulled onto Kane Road to fight an undisclosed person.

According to the sheriff’s office, Perez-Lucas and several people intervened, and a fight ensued between the groups. Shortly after, a second car pulled into the area, and its driver, identified as Gomez-Hernandez, pulled a gun out and started shooting at the groups fighting, police said.

Detectives said that they located a crashed white Dodge Journey, one of the vehicles witnesses described at the scene, to which they located a ski mask, a handgun and a cellphone. DNA testing by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement identified those items as belonging to Gomez-Hernandez. 

Gomez-Hernandez was later arrested on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024.

“This was a difficult investigation due to the lack of cooperation from those associated with Ramon Gomez-Hernandez,” Sheriff Gator DeLoach said at the time. “At every step there was intentional efforts to thwart this investigation, but justice prevailed due to the plethora of forensic evidence obtained all linking this wannabe gangster to the murder of Rubli Perez-Lucas and the attempted murder of two others.”

Columbia County Chamber Organizes Pre-Election Candidate Forum


EVANS, Ga. ()- The Columbia County Chamber of Commerce is set to organize a Candidate Forum.

This event is intended for individuals vying for positions in the forthcoming election.

Through the forum, community members will have the chance to listen directly to the candidates.

Unlike a traditional debate, this forum is designed as an informational session.

During the event, each candidate will present their platform and discuss their main priorities.

The following groups that received invites are Board of Education District 2 and 3.

The County Commission Chair, County Commission District 1 Seat and district 4 seat.

The Chamber encourages all community members to attend and engage.

“Our responsibility is simply to provide a fair and neutral platform where candidates can share their ideas directly with the public. Whenever voters and businesses have clear, reliable information, our entire community benefits. And that’s why we do it,” said President and CEO of the Columbia County Chamber of Commerce, Heath Taylor.

He also added, “We want you to hear the candidates platform. So we have questions, that are fair. None of the candidates have seen the questions. They’ll all hear them for the first time at the forum, and they’ll answer those questions. And that will help you make a more informed decision on how you would like to vote.”

The forum is from 5:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. at Hardin Auditorium inside the Columbia County Library.