Full video of an Elon Musk Deranged psychopath who keyed a neighbor's Tesla, shot it, and got arrested.
— Vince Langman (@LangmanVince) June 1, 2025
FAFO! pic.twitter.com/Y14TZCbSzM
“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
Full video of an Elon Musk Deranged psychopath who keyed a neighbor's Tesla, shot it, and got arrested.
— Vince Langman (@LangmanVince) June 1, 2025
FAFO! pic.twitter.com/Y14TZCbSzM
PARIS: 2 dead, 192 injured, 426 arrested, and hundreds of millions of euros in damage in a night of mayhem.
— Dr. Maalouf (@realMaalouf) June 1, 2025
How many more times will this happen before Europe finally wakes up?
pic.twitter.com/33RDcTWneM
U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee suggests to France: “If you're so eager to give the Palestinians a state — carve out part of the French Riviera and establish it there.”
Legacy media is one big psy op https://t.co/lDf0beQ4vu
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 1, 2025
According to The New York Times @elonmusk is the only one giving a Nazi Salute. Not Cory Booker or Tim Walz. And if you think anything else, you’re a racist pic.twitter.com/OzHvdMqBpd
— Alec Lace (@AlecLace) June 1, 2025
When it comes to Harvard University, “Real Time” host Bill Maher and President Donald Trump are on the same page.
On the latest episode of his HBO talk show, Maher announced he backs the president’s push to penalize the elite Ivy League institution by freezing billions in federal grants, charging the school has failed to crack down on antisemitism on campus.
“Trump has declared full-scale war on Harvard, and like so many things he does, there’s a kernel of a good idea there,” Maher said during Friday’s broadcast, before bragging, “I’ve been sh–ing on Harvard long before he was.”
Maher is himself an Ivy League graduate, having earned his degree from Harvard rival Cornell University in Ithaca.
Guest and CNN host Jake Tapper referenced Maher’s alma mater, but he said his Harvard bashing had nothing to do with the longstanding enmity.
“It’s because Harvard is an a–hole factory in a lot of ways that produces smirking f–k faces,” Maher said bluntly.
It is unclear if Maher was aware his other guest, Congressman Seth Moulton (D-Massachusetts), attended Harvard.
“He has three degrees from Harvard,” Tapper pointed out. “He’s a f–k face times three.”
The liberal comic has changed his tune on the president.
Once a vocal critic, Maher had dinner with Trump at the White House alongside UFC owner Dana White and Kid Rock.
After the meal, Maher acknowledged Trump was a “different” person than the one portrayed by liberal media outlets.
“The guy I met is not the person who, the night before, s–t-tweeted a bunch of nasty crap about how he thought this dinner was a bad idea, and what a deranged a–hole I was,” said Maher.
Trump has threatened to revoke Harvard’s tax-exempt status and tried limiting the number of foreign-born students admitted to the school.
A federal judge blocked a move Thursday by Trump’s administration to revoke the visas of international students at Harvard.
Trump said he wants to see more American students accepted into Harvard.
Longtime Democratic Rep. Jerrold Nadler slammed President Trump for “sowing chaos” nationwide after federal agents handcuffed one of his aides inside his lower Manhattan office.
The lawmaker’s verbal tirade came after Department of Homeland Security officers entered the Big Apple office Wednesday and accused his staff of “harboring rioters” in a dramatic confrontation caught on video.
“President Trump and the Department of Homeland Security are sowing chaos in our communities, using intimidating tactics against both citizens and non-citizens in a reckless and dangerous manner,” he said in a statement to Politico.
“If this can happen in a Member of Congress’s office, it can happen to anyone — and it is happening.”
The video, obtained by Gothamist, showed one agent aggressively restraining a teary-eyed female staffer, while another employee asked for a warrant and blocked a second officer from entering a private section of the congressional office, located in the same Varick Street building as federal immigration court.
“I’m a federal officer, we’re here checking on something,” the male agent said to the employee standing in his way, the footage showed.
“We have the right to check. You are harboring rioters in the office,” he argued in the heated back-and-forth that ended with the staffer granting him access to the back office.
Nadler said that the “deeply troubling” incident showed a clear violation of legal protocols.
Federal Protective Service officers went to the congressman’s office to conduct a security check after receiving reports that protesters were hiding inside, DHS told The Post in a statement.
“Based on earlier incidents in a nearby facility, FPS officers were concerned about the safety of the federal employees in the office and went to the location to ensure the safety and wellbeing of those present,” Homeland Security officials said.
When they arrived, one individual – the woman who was briefly detained – was “verbally confrontational and physically blocked access to the office” after the officers identified themselves and explained why there were there.
“The officers then detained the individual in the hallway for the purpose of completing the security check,” DHS said.
The aide was released after the fiery standoff — which reportedly erupted when a Nadler staffer invited two advocates monitoring ICE activity at the courthouse into the office.
Nadler charged that the Trump administration is embracing totalitarian and authoritarian tactics.
“The Trump administration is trying to intimidate members of Congress,” Nadler told the New York Times Saturday.
“They’re behaving like fascists. We have to fight them. We don’t want to be a fascist country.”
The White House did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.
An incident in South Williamsburg earlier this week has ignited a firestorm of concern within New York City’s Orthodox Jewish communities – and has become a major talking point in a New York City Council race. On Sunday evening, a 3-year-old Chasidic girl was struck by an e-bike while crossing the protected bike lane on Bedford Avenue, sustaining minor injuries. The event, captured on video and widely circulated on social media, has intensified condemnation of the city’s bike lane policies.
The child had just exited a double-parked car near Park Avenue when she darted into the bike lane and was hit by a 22-year-old cyclist, who remained at the scene. She was treated at Bellevue Hospital for minor abdominal injuries. The incident is one among over 50 bike-related injuries reported on Bedford Avenue since 2024, according to public records.
Community leaders and residents have long voiced concerns about the safety of bike lanes in areas like Williamsburg and Crown Heights.
The controversy has become a focal point in the upcoming City Council Democratic primary. Challenger Sabrina Gates criticized incumbent Lincoln Restler for supporting the bike lane, saying, “Bedford Avenue was dangerous even before the bike lane. Lincoln Restler has been on the wrong side of this issue. It’s time to move the bike lane before another child is hurt.” Restler defended his position, citing the need for protected bike lanes to ensure safety for all road users, while also acknowledging the need for safety enhancements.
Mayor Eric Adams has also weighed in, saying, “When the people speak, we listen — with or without their councilman’s support.” The city is now considering modifications to existing bike lanes and evaluating plans for new ones in other Orthodox neighborhoods, including Flatbush and Crown Heights, where proposals have met significant opposition due to concerns over parking loss and pedestrian safety.
“The era of endless tit-for-tat bombings must end,” al-Sharaa said. “No nation prospers when its skies are filled with fear.”
While stopping short of endorsing normalization with Israel, al-Sharaa acknowledged the possibility of regional alignment. “We have common enemies — and we can play a major role in regional security,” he said, responding to questions about future relations.
His comments come amid renewed Israeli airstrikes in Syria over the weekend, part of a long-running campaign to prevent Iranian entrenchment near Israel’s northern border. Al-Sharaa called for a return to the spirit of the 1974 Disengagement Agreement between Israel and Syria, framing it not just as a ceasefire line but as a mechanism for “mutual restraint and protection of civilians,” particularly the Druze communities in southern Syria and the Golan Heights.
“Syria’s Druze are not pawns,” he said. “They are citizens — deeply rooted, historically loyal, and deserving of every protection under the law. Their safety is non-negotiable.”
The new Syrian leader also praised U.S. President Donald Trump, whom he met earlier this month at a summit in the Gulf. Calling Trump “a man of peace,” al-Sharaa said the two leaders had faced similar enemies and could find common ground.
“Trump understands leverage, strength, and outcomes,” he said. “If there is a possibility of alignment that helps bring stability to the region — and security to the U.S. and its allies — I am ready to have that conversation.”
Al-Sharaa echoed Trump’s campaign slogan, stating his own desire to “make Syria great again.” He described his vision for Syria as pluralistic and inclusive, pledging support for the return of all Syrians — including Jews, Druze, and Christians — whose properties were confiscated by the former regime.
“I did not seek this position to rule,” he said. “I accepted it because Syria must turn the page.”
Asked whether the public can trust a government emerging from years of civil war and authoritarian rule, al-Sharaa responded, “I don’t ask for trust. I ask for patience — and for scrutiny. Hold me accountable. Hold this process accountable.”
The interview comes amid reports of quiet, indirect contact between Israel and Syria aimed at reducing tensions along their shared border. However, officials in Israel and the West remain wary. Many caution that al-Sharaa, once linked to al-Qaeda and the Islamic State, may be using moderate rhetoric to consolidate power before potentially returning Syria to a confrontational stance.