“I don’t speak because I have the power to speak; I speak because I don’t have the power to remain silent.” Rav Kook z"l

Sunday, April 20, 2025

Not Again! Congresswoman Going to El Salvador to get a "wife beater" back... Not One DemonRat Went to Gaza to get any Hostages Back


 

Iris Hotel in Brookline Canceled Large Pesach Seder to Accommodate Rashida Tlaib

 


Qatar Upset About Video of the Construction of the Third Bais Hamikdash

 




Orthodox Jews Couldn't Care Less What the World Thinks of Them!

 



Nikki Haley slams Tulsi Gabbard for claiming that Iran has no active nuclear weapons program-

 

"Not one person was vetted coming into the US ..DemonRats Want to Vet those Deported! LOL

 

Dalia Ziada an Arab Muslim Experiences her own "Exodus" from Egypt

 


Harvard makes the case against itself

 

Harvard faculty members are finally upset about free speech and viewpoint intolerance. Hundreds of professors signed a letter of outrage over what they called an attack on the “rights of free expression, association, and inquiry” in higher education.

The cause for this outcry is the threat to end the university’s tax exempt status, freezing federal grants, and other punitive measures. Some of those measures raise serious concerns over academic freedom and free speech.

The problem is that Harvard faculty members have spent decades denying those rights to teachers and students alike.

Meet the Tren de Aragua gang members That Supreme Court Stopped Trump from deporting


 The Trump administration on Saturday released the rap sheets and photos of alleged Tren de Aragua (TdA) gang members detained in Texas who the administration is trying to deport.

The suspects of the violent Venezuelan gang were going to be deported using the recently reinstated Alien Enemies Act of 1798 before the U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) ruled Saturday morning against deportations under the 18th century law.

In a decision in favor of the American Civil Liberties Union, the administration was barred from removing Venezuelans held in Texas' Bluebonnet Detention Center "until further order of this court."

Left-leaning AP is out of step with the rest of the US

 

by Michael Goodwin NYP

As a lifelong journalist, I should be on the side of The Associated Press in its ongoing legal fight with the Trump White House.

And I would be if the AP were the neutral, fact-driven wire service it used to be.

Unfortunately, it has become just another outlet peddling leftist opinion disguised as straight news.

And as its fight with the White House demonstrates, it also reeks of a sense of elite entitlement.

The case involves the AP’s claims that its freedom of speech was violated when it was booted from its long-standing spot in the press pool, an elite, small group of legacy news outlets that get near-daily access to the president.

The AP was one of three wire services in the group, along with Reuters and Bloomberg.

Others getting special access include television and cable companies, photographers, radio reporters and rotating members from print outlets.

Refused to adjust

Because there was just one spot reserved for print reporters, most got only a monthly chance to question the president in small-space events, such as the Oval Office and Air Force One.

The AP got the boot from the group after it refused to change its influential stylebook and continued to refer to the “Gulf of Mexico” after President Trump officially changed the name to the “Gulf of America.”

I agreed with the federal judge who ruled the demotion unfairly punished the AP, but have come to admire even more the way the White House has used the case to carry out a much-needed move to democratize access to the president.

Press secretary Karoline Leavitt, who at 27 is the youngest person to hold her job, took office wanting to open the door to new media outlets, including edgy podcasts, political influencers and specialized wire services.