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Seahawks dominate 49ers from opening kick, advance to NFC title game with 41-6 win

Seahawks dominate 49ers from opening kick, advance to NFC title game with 41-6 win

SEATTLE – Rashid Shaheed returned the opening kickoff for a touchdown, Kenneth Walker III rushed for three scores and the Seattle Seahawks advanced to the NFC championship game with a dominant 41-6 victory over the San Francisco 49ers on Saturday night.

Sam Darnold threw a touchdown pass and got his first career playoff win in his first season with the Seahawks (15-3), who will host either the Chicago Bears or the Los Angeles Rams next Sunday with a trip to the Super Bowl at stake.

“Really proud to be a part of this team and this organization,” Darnold said.

The Seahawks led 7-0 13 seconds into the game thanks to Shaheed, who fielded the opening kick and took it 95 yards to the end zone. It was the fourth kickoff return for a touchdown to open a playoff game since 2000 and the longest postseason kick return in franchise history.

Darnold, who had been listed as questionable because of an oblique injury, guided the Seahawks on two more scoring drives before San Francisco got on the board with the first of its two field goals.

After he flopped in his playoff debut last season with the Minnesota Vikings by taking nine sacks in a 27-9 loss to the Los Angeles Rams, Darnold completed 12 of 17 passes for 124 yards and connected with Jaxon Smith-Njigba for a touchdown in the star receiver’s playoff debut.

The 49ers (13-6) were never competitive in the second-most lopsided playoff loss in franchise history. San Francisco lost 49-3 to the New York Giants in the divisional round in the 1986 season.

The Niners were missing three injured All-Pros: tight end George Kittle, linebacker Fred Warner and defensive end Nick Bosa.

San Francisco’s Brock Purdy completed 15 of 27 passes for 140 yards with an interception and a lost fumble against the Seahawks’ “Dark Side” defense. Seattle also recovered a fumble by tight end Jake Tonges.

“They’re unbelievable. They’ve stepped up every single game for us,” Darnold said. “Can’t say enough great things about that defense. It was tough in training camp and OTAs going up against them. But I’m glad they’re on our side.”

Walker’s three rushing touchdowns tied him with Shaun Alexander for the most in a playoff game in franchise history.

Injuries

49ers: RB Christian McCaffrey (stinger) was injured in the second quarter and returned in the third quarter before exiting the game for good. Tonges injured a foot and did not return.

Seahawks: RB Zach Charbonnet injured a knee in the second quarter and did not return. LT Charles Cross injured a foot in the third quarter and did not return.

Up next

49ers: Heal and reload for next season.

Seahawks: Are one victory away from the fourth Super Bowl appearance in franchise history and first in 11 years.

___

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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US launches another retaliatory strike in Syria, killing leader tied to deadly Islamic State ambush

US launches another retaliatory strike in Syria, killing leader tied to deadly Islamic State ambush

WASHINGTON – A third round of retaliatory strikes by the U.S. in Syria resulted in the death of an Al-Qaeda-affiliated leader, who officials say had a direct tie to the Islamic State member responsible for last month’s ambush that killed two U.S. soldiers and one American civilian interpreter in the country.

U.S. Central Command announced that the strike in northwest Syria on Friday killed Bilal Hasan al-Jasim, who they claim was “an experienced terrorist leader who plotted attacks and was directly connected” to the Dec. 13 attack that killed Sgt. Edgar Brian Torres-Tovar, Sgt. William Nathaniel Howard and civilian interpreter Ayad Mansoor Sakat.

“The death of a terrorist operative linked to the deaths of three Americans demonstrates our resolve in pursuing terrorists who attack our forces,” Adm. Brad Cooper, CENTCOM commander, said in a statement. “There is no safe place for those who conduct, plot, or inspire attacks on American citizens and our warfighters. We will find you.”

It was the latest strike as part of a broader U.S. operation ordered by President Donald Trump following the ambush of the Americans to target “ISIS thugs” trying to regroup after the ouster of autocratic leader Bashar Assad a year ago.

The Republican president has stressed that Syria was fighting alongside American troops, as the U.S. military is expanding its cooperation with security forces as part of a coalition fighting the militant group. He added at the time that Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa was “extremely angry and disturbed by this attack.”

CENTCOM said that the operation, titled “Hawkeye Strike,” has resulted in U.S. and partners like Jordan and Syria targeting more than 100 Islamic State infrastructure and weapons site targets.

Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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Trump’s Billion-Dollar Board of Peace

Trump’s Billion-Dollar Board of Peace

Imagine you’re the president of a midsize country, and you’re offered a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council. The only condition: You have to pay the secretary-general of the United Nations $1 billion.

This is something like what Donald Trump is now offering world leaders.

The U.S. president has sent letters of invitation to various heads of government to join a new Board of Peace, which he will chair. The organization was envisioned as part of the United Nations–backed effort for the reconstruction and transitional governance of Gaza. But the new board’s charter, details of which have not been previously reported, appears to give the board a global remit, according to a copy we reviewed. And the price of a permanent position on the board is very steep.

The charter’s membership section, written in legalese that sounds not unlike an application to join the committee of an upscale golf club, says members will be invited by the chairman to participate for a three-year term, subject to renewal by Trump. But there is a way to skip the renewals and lock in for the long term: “The three-year membership term shall not apply to Member States that contribute more than USD $1,000,000,000 in cash funds to the Board of Peace within the first year of the Charter’s entry into force.”

What the money will be used for isn’t stated. Its expected purpose is to fund reconstruction and other revitalization efforts in Gaza and perhaps beyond, in whatever conflicts Trump and the board choose to address. But the charter doesn’t address that. Its finance section simply states: “Funding for the expenses of the Board of Peace shall be through voluntary funding from Member States, other States, organizations, or other sources.” That could leave interested world leaders wondering where, exactly, their money would go.

“The entire world is lining up to join President Trump’s historic effort to deliver peace to the Middle East and create a peaceful and prosperous future for the people of Gaza,” the White House spokesman Dylan Johnson told us in a statement. “This week marks a historic new beginning in the Middle East.”

Although the concept of the Board of Peace was endorsed by the Security Council in November as part of Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza, the new board’s charter appears to show an ambition to be what Trump has always wanted: a rival to the UN that lacks the latter’s notorious inefficiency.

The first paragraph of the preamble states that “durable peace requires pragmatic judgment, common-sense solutions, and the courage to depart from approaches and institutions that have too often failed.” And, in case you missed the dig, a little lower the preamble talks of the need for “a more nimble and effective international peace-building body.”

The Board of Peace charter makes no mention of Gaza. And although the November UN resolution gave the board a two-year, extendable mandate ending in December 2027, the three-year terms and billion-dollar permanent memberships suggest Trump has a much longer time horizon in mind.

The Board of Peace and other measures to address the crisis in Gaza were unveiled in recent days after months of fragile cease-fire. On Wednesday, Steve Witkoff, Trump’s friend and special envoy, announced the start of phase two of Trump’s peace plan: “the full demilitarization and reconstruction of Gaza,” as well as the establishment of “a transitional technocratic Palestinian administration.” The Board of Peace’s job is to oversee all this. The board officially formed the day after Witkoff’s announcement, according to a post by Trump on Truth Social.

The Board of Peace has an executive board, the organization’s operating committee. The White House this week named its initial seven members: Secretary of State Marco Rubio; Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and adviser; former British Prime Minister Tony Blair; Ajay Banga, president of the World Bank; the financier Marc Rowan; Robert Gabriel, a deputy national security adviser and former Fox News producer; and Witkoff. In addition, the Board of Peace has a separate panel of Palestinian technocrats, headed by the former Palestinian Authority official Ali Sha’ath. The technocrats are responsible for everyday management of Gaza.

Further announcements related to the Board of Peace are expected at the World Economic Forum in Davos, which kicks off Monday. Trump told reporters on Air Force One last week that the board will comprise the “most important leaders of the most important nations.”

In letters of invitation to join the Board of Peace, Trump said, “This Board will be one of a kind, there has never been anything like it!” according to a copy posted on X by Argentinian President Javier Milei. Trump also sent invites to Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, according to an X post by the head of Erdogan’s communications office, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, who has accepted, according to The Globe and Mail.

If Trump aims to create a UN replacement, that would square with his long-held contempt for the global body. In September, he went well over his allotted time at the General Assembly for an excoriating speech. “What is the purpose of the United Nations?” he asked, adding that the organization had “tremendous potential” that it was “not even close to living up to.” Trump claimed that he’d had to step in and end wars that the UN was too weak to handle.

Now Trump, who has long coveted a Nobel Peace Prize, will have an organization of his own with the word “Peace” right there in the name. Fellow world leaders will be there to join him—provided, that is, that they’re willing to pay to stick around.

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The Scotts Saga Continues: Kevin Gates Chimes In With Support For Desmond Amid Cheating Scandal & Mystery Makeout

The Scotts Saga Continues: Kevin Gates Chimes In With Support For Desmond Amid Cheating Scandal & Mystery Makeout

Source: Ella Hall/Christopher Polk

The breakup between Desmond and Kristy Scott has had the internet in a chokehold since the new year, and now Kevin Gates has chimed in. Lawd.

Though Desmond has been keeping *ahem* busy since his public split from his wife, the “Out The Mud” rapper took to his social media to send the influencer some support.

“Desmond Scott, I just want to say that I salute you, brotha, and I’m praying for you” Gates said in a video. “You nice looking, you fly, you intelligent and you know how to cook. It’s no woman on God’s earth that wouldn’t want you. So, just ignore the hate because right now you bout to go way up in the air now. Use the hate that you receiving right now for your motivation to propel you forward. F*** what the internet talkin’ bout. Them just miserable people.”

He continued,

“Hey, you wasn’t happy. You did something to make you happy. The only thing I wouldn’t have did was apologize. They ask me, ‘Kevin, what you would have did?’ I would have swung that d*** out and not looked back. That’s what I would have did. I’m doing all the cooking and all the cleaning. No Black man should leave the home without his d*** sucked, straight like that.

Chile. It may just be us, but if Kevin Gates is on your side, it may be time to reassess your decisions in life.

Kristy, on the other hand, is letting it be known that though the marriage is over, she’s still holding down the fort and the master key of the home they built together. She popped out with a new bob in a form-fitting, red wine number to let the gworls know that she is keeping the house in the split saying, “same address” in her caption. IKDR!

The Scotts aren’t the only messy marriage on Kevin Gates’ mind because he’s also airing out his own with Dreka Gates.

Check out Kevin Gates putting his divorce drama on blast after the jump!

Kevin Gates Accuses Dreka Gates Of Stealing From Him & Demanding Divorce When He Cut Her Off Financially

Perhaps Kevin is feeling the camaraderie between he and Desmond due to his own battle with his former wife, Dreka. According to the “2 Phones” rapper, the publicly unbothered one-time Mrs. Gates had been stealing from him alongside her family. He also alleges that their children have lived with him for the past two years, following his decision to stop sending her money.

“Since you want to attack my image, hey Dreka, I challenge you to tell people that we had an Islamic marriage,” he said in a video. “I challenge you to tell people that my children lived with me for the last two years. I callenege you to tell people that you didn’t file for a divorce until I stopped giving you money because you and your family had been stealing from me the whole time, tell em that.”

He continued,

“Since you wanna paint in like I’m a deadbeat dad. I take care of my children and I was still taking care of you while you was with that n—-, tell em that. Tell em I been gone since 2020, tell em the truth. Cause you are a goddess, you just a goddess of manipulation and darkness. Tell em the truth. When you do interviews don’t even bring my name up, get it off you.”

He also alleges that Dreka stole funds from him to open up her dispensary business, which closed within a month.

Kevin recently celebrated his nuptials with his second wife since his split with Dreka, as he was briefly married to professional hot potato, Brittney Renner, in 2025. He claims that Dreka’s feelings are in a bunch due to the new love in his life.

May this love never find the girlies in this life or the next.

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Why Silicon Valley is really talking about fleeing California (it’s not the 5%) | TechCrunch

Why Silicon Valley is really talking about fleeing California (it’s not the 5%) | TechCrunch

If you’ve been following the billionaire exodus from California with some confusion, here’s what’s actually driving the nervousness: it’s not the 5% rate. As highlighted Friday in the New York Post, the proposed wealth tax would hit founders on their voting shares rather than the actual equity they own.

Take Larry Page, who about 3% of Google but controls roughly 30% of its voting power through dual-class stock. Under this proposal, he’d owe taxes on that 30%. For a company valued in the hundreds of billions, that’s a lot more than a rounding error. The Post reports that one SpaceX alumni founder building grid technology would face a tax bill at the Series B stage of the company that would wipe out his entire holdings.

David Gamage, the University of Missouri law professor who helped craft the proposal, thinks Silicon Valley is overreacting. “I don’t understand why the billionaires just aren’t calling good tax lawyers,” he told The San Francisco Standard this week. Gamage insists founders wouldn’t be forced to sell. Those with most of their wealth in private stock could open a deferral account for assets they don’t want taxed immediately — California would instead take 5% whenever those shares are eventually sold. “If your startup fails, you pay nothing,” he explained. “But if your startup is the next Google, you’re giving California a share of your gamble.” He also said founders could submit alternative valuations from certified appraisers reflecting what shares could actually sell for, rather than being stuck with the default voting-control formula.

But that’s pretty small consolation. For startups that aren’t publicly traded, calculating valuations is “inherently difficult,” tax expert Jared Walczak told the Post. “These are not clear cut—you could come to a very different conclusion not because of dishonesty.” And if the state disagrees with your appraisal, it’s not just the company on the hook; the state can also penalize the person who calculated the valuation. Even with alternative appraisals, founders would still face enormous tax bills on control they hold but wealth they haven’t realized.

Now, if you’ve been under a rock: California’s health care union is pushing a ballot initiative for a one-time 5% tax on anyone worth over $1 billion. The union argues it’s necessary to offset the deep cuts to health care that President Trump signed into law last year, including slashes to Medicaid and ACA subsidies. As originally envisioned, they expect to raise about $100 billion from roughly 200 individuals and the tax would apply retroactively to anyone living in California as of January 1, 2026.

But the resistance is fierce and bipartisan. As reported last weekend by the WSJ, Silicon Valley elite have formed a Signal chat called “Save California” that includes everyone from Trump’s crypto czar David Sacks to Kamala Harris mega-donor Chris Larsen. They’ve called the proposal “Communism” and “poorly defined.” Some are taking just-in-case measures, too, with Larry Page reportedly dropping $173.4 million on two Miami waterfront properties across last month and the first week of the new year and Peter Thiel’s firm leasing Miami office space last month. (Thiel has had ties to Miami for years — including a home — but an uncharacteristic press release about the move was seemingly meant to send a message.)

Even Governor Gavin Newsom is fighting it. “This will be defeated, there’s no question in my mind,” he told the New York Times this week, adding that he’d been “relentlessly working behind the scenes” against the proposal. “I’ll do what I have to do to protect the state.”

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For now, the union isn’t backing down. “We’re simply trying to keep emergency rooms open and save patient lives,” said executive committee member Debru Carthan to the Journal last weekend. “The few who left have shown the world just how outrageously greedy they truly are.”

The proposal needs 875,000 signatures to make November’s ballot, where it would need a simple majority to pass.

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Texas agency approves nearly $2M in fines for environmental violations

Texas agency approves nearly M in fines for environmental violations

A view of a fluosilicic acid tank used for water fluoridation at the Davis Water Treatment Plant, Austin, Texas, November 18, 2009. (Photo by John Anderson/The Austin Chronicle/Getty Images)

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality has approved $1,909,731 in fines against 71 different entities for regulation violations. 

TCEQ approves fines

The most recent fines, approved on Wednesday, totaled $1,751,893, and were levied against 22 entities who the commission says violated regulations. 

The orders were issued for the following enforcement categories:

  • Four air quality
  • Two industrial wastewater discharge
  • Two multi-media
  • Eight municipal wastewater discharge
  • Five public water systems

A default order was also issued for a petroleum storage tank.

Another $157,838 in fines were approved Tuesday for 49 entities. Those entities were not categorized in the TCEQ’s release. 

To read more about the fines approved Wednesday, click here to see the commission’s agenda

The Source: Information in this article comes from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

Texas

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Who gets to inherit the stars? A space ethicist on what we’re not talking about | TechCrunch

Who gets to inherit the stars? A space ethicist on what we’re not talking about | TechCrunch

In October, at a tech conference in Italy, Amazon and Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos predicted that millions of people will be living in space “in the next couple of decades” and “mostly,” he’d said, “because they want to,” because robots will be more cost-effective than humans for doing the actual work in space.

No doubt that’s why my ears perked up when, at TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco weeks later, I found an on-stage prediction by Will Bruey, the founder of space manufacturing startup Varda Space Industries, so striking. Rather than robots doing the work as Bezos envisioned, Bruey said that within 15 to 20 years, it will be cheaper to send a “working-class human” to orbit for a month than to develop better machines.

In the moment, few in the tech-forward audience seemed taken aback at what many might consider a provocative statement about cost savings. But that raised questions for me – and it has certainly raised questions for others – about who, exactly, will be working among the stars, and under what conditions.

To explore these questions, I spoke this week with Mary-Jane Rubenstein, dean of social sciences and professor of religion and science and technology studies at Wesleyan University. Rubenstein is the author of the book Worlds Without End: The Many Lives of the Multiverse, which director Daniel Kwan used as research for the award-winning 2022 film “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” More recently, she’s been examining the ethics of space expansion.

Rubenstein’s response to Bruey’s prediction cuts to a fundamental issue – which is power imbalance.”Workers already have a hard enough time on Earth paying their bills and keeping themselves safe . . . and insured,” she told me. “And that dependence on our employers only increases dramatically when one is dependent on one’s employer not just for a paycheck and sometimes for health care, but also for basic access, to food and to water – and also to air.”

Her assessment of space as a workplace was pretty direct. While it’s easy to romanticize space as an escape to a pristine frontier where people will float weightlessly among the stars, it’s worth remembering there are no oceans or mountains or chirpy birds in space. It’s “not nice up there,” said Rubenstein. “It is not nice at all.”

But worker protections aren’t Rubenstein’s only concern. There’s also the increasingly contentious question of who owns what in space – a legal gray area that’s becoming more problematic as commercial space operations accelerate.

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The 1967 Outer Space Treaty established that no nation could claim sovereignty over celestial bodies. The moon, Mars, asteroids – these are supposed to belong to all of humanity. But in 2015, the U.S. passed the Commercial Space Launch Competitiveness Act, which says that while you can’t own the moon, you can own whatever you extract from it. Silicon Valley got starry-eyed almost immediately; the law opened the door to commercial exploitation of space resources, even as the rest of the world watched with concern.

Rubenstein offers an analogy: It’s like saying you can’t own a house, but you can own everything inside it. Actually, she corrects herself, saying it’s worse than that. “It’s more like saying you can’t own the house, but you can have the floorboards and the beams. Because the stuff that is in the moon is the moon. There’s no difference between the stuff the moon contains and the moon itself.”

Green light red light

Companies have been positioning themselves to exploit this framework for some time. AstroForge is pursuing asteroid mining. Interlune wants to extract Helium-3 from the moon. The problem is that these aren’t renewable resources. “Once the U.S. takes [the Helium-3], China can’t get it,” says Rubenstein. “Once China takes it, the U.S. can’t get it.”

The international reaction to that 2015 act was swift. At the 2016 UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS) meeting, Russia called the Act a unilateral violation of international law. Belgium warned about global economic imbalances. 

In response, the U.S. in 2020 created the Artemis Accords – bilateral agreements with allied nations that formalized the American interpretation of space law, particularly around resource extraction. Countries worried about being left out of the new space economy signed on. There are now 60 signatories, though notably Russia and China are not among them. 

There is grumbling in the background, though. “This is one of those instances of the U.S. setting rules and then asking other people to join in or be left out,” Rubenstein says. The Accords don’t say resource extraction is explicitly legal – just that it doesn’t constitute the “national appropriation” that the Outer Space Treaty forbids. It’s a careful dance around a fraught issue.

Her proposed solution to addressing it is straightforward if exceedingly unlikely: hand control back to the UN and COPUOS. In the absence of that, she suggests repealing the Wolf Amendment, a 2011 law that essentially bans NASA and other federal agencies from using federal funds to work with China or Chinese-owned companies without explicit FBI certification and Congressional approval.

When people tell Rubenstein that collaboration with China is impossible, she has a ready response: “We’re talking about an industry that is saying things like, ‘It’ll totally be possible to house thousands of people in a space hotel,’ or ‘It’ll be possible within 10 years to ship a million people to Mars, where there’s no air and where the radioactivity will give you cancer in a second and where your blood will boil and your face will fall off. If it’s possible to imagine doing those things, I think it is possible to imagine the U.S. talking to China.”

Rubenstein’s broader concern is about what we’re choosing to do with space. She sees the current approach – turning the moon into what she calls “a cosmic gas station,” mining asteroids, establishing warfare capabilities in orbit – as profoundly misguided.

Science fiction has given us different templates for imagining space, she notes. She divides the genre into three broad categories. First, there’s the “conquest” genre, or stories written “in service of the expansion of a nation-state or the expansion of capital,” treating space as the next frontier to conquer, just as European explorers once viewed new continents.

Then there’s dystopian science fiction, meant as warnings about destructive paths. But here’s where something odd happens: “Some tech companies seem to sort of miss the joke in this dystopian genre and just sort of actualize whatever the warning was,” she says. 

The third strand uses space to imagine alternative societies with different ideas of justice and care –  what Rubenstein calls “speculative fiction” in a “high-tech key,” meaning they use futuristic technological settings as their framework.

When it first became clear which template was dominating actual space development (fully in the conquest category), she got depressed. “This seemed to me a real missed opportunity for extending the values and priorities that we have in this world into those realms that we have previously reserved for thinking in different kinds of ways.”

Rubenstein isn’t expecting dramatic policy shifts anytime soon, but she sees some realistic paths forward. One is tightening environmental regulations for space actors; as she notes, we’re only beginning to understand how rocket emissions and re-entering debris affect the ozone layer we spent decades repairing.

A more promising opportunity, though, is space debris. With more than 40,000 trackable objects now circling Earth at 17,000 miles per hour, we’re approaching the Kessler effect – a runaway collision scenario that could make orbit unusable for any future launches. “Nobody wants that,” she says. “The U.S. government doesn’t want that. China doesn’t want it. The industry doesn’t want it.” It’s rare to find an issue where every stakeholder’s interests align perfectly, but “space garbage is bad for everybody,” she notes. 

She’s now working on a proposal for an annual conference bringing together academics, NASA representatives, and industry figures to discuss how to approach space “mindfully, ethically, collaboratively.”

Whether anyone will listen is another question. There certainly doesn’t seem to be much motivation to come together on the issue. In fact, back in July of last year, Congress introduced legislation to make the Wolf Amendment permanent, which would entrench restrictions on China cooperation rather than loosen them.

In the background, startup founders are projecting major changes in space within five to ten years, companies are positioning themselves to mine asteroids and the moon, and Bruey’s prediction about blue-collar workers in orbit hangs in the air, unanswered.

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‘Such a Pathological Liar’: CNN Cuts Kristi Noem’s Praise for ICE Agents with Brutal Footage That Humiliates Her in Real Time — and She Never Even Notices

‘Such a Pathological Liar’: CNN Cuts Kristi Noem’s Praise for ICE Agents with Brutal Footage That Humiliates Her in Real Time — and She Never Even Notices

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem stunningly calls agents with Immigration and Customs Enforcement “gifted” even as video of their interactions with Americans and protesters often shows violent beatings and aggressive arrests of not only immigrants lacking permanent legal status but Americans, too.

CNN showcased the hypocrisy of Noem’s words live on air with proof of ICE agents’ hostile behavior during an interview with the DHS chief on Thursday, Jan. 15, in Washington.

‘Such a Pathological Liar’: CNN Cuts Kristi Noem’s Praise for ICE Agents with Brutal Footage That Humiliates Her in Real Time — and She Never Even Notices
U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem bows her head during the benediction at the Assumption of Command Ceremony for U.S. Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Kevin E. Lunday at the U.S. Coast Guard Headquarters on January 15, 2026, in Washington, DC. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Image

“The officers that we have out there are very highly trained and skilled specific for the operations that they’re doing,” Noem insisted as video of at least a half dozen agents brutally beating a single Minneapolis man lying in the street played out on the left side of the screen.

“They’re utilizing the most gifted individuals on these operations to go out and to do enforcement because many times they’re going after murderers,” she claimed.

Noem sparked a social media backlash with her misleading rhetoric as violent protests continue to play out in Minneapolis and across the country more than a week after an ICE agent identified by news outlets as Jonathan Ross, gunned down 37-year-old mother of three Renee Good on the morning of Jan. 7 in her Minneapolis neighborhood as she was trying to drive away from a growing anti-ICE protest.

WTF Is Wrong with Him?’: Trump Caught Off Guard By Reporter’s Question, Hurls Insults, Finally Gives Answer But Gets It Completely Wrong 

“The way their knees are around that person’s neck is just absolutely terrifying,” Threads user Its the Summer noted about the CNN video.

“She needs to be impeached with the rest of them!” this Threads user chimed in.

“Fox News was doing this unironically. Having Jesse Watters talk to Bovino saying how great a job ice was doing while they showed b roll of peaceful protesters being brutalized. Ultra dystopian. These people are fucking monsters,” another Threads poster angrily proclaimed, referring to Border Control boss Greg Bonvino.

Exactly a week after Good’s killing, a federal agent shot a man in the leg on Wednesday, Jan. 14, with DHS explaining that they made a “targeted traffic stop,” according to CNN, to stop a Venezuelan national who “violently assaulted” an agent during the stop.

DHS said as officers battled the immigrant, others approached the scene from a nearby apartment and “attacked the officer using a snow shovel and a broom handle,” CNN reported, with the suspect getting loose during the attack and joining in.

That’s when the agent fired “defensive shots,” DHS said, striking the Venezuelan in the leg. He was treated at a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. DHS’ explanation has not been confirmed.

Another Threads user wondered, “Did they also ask Kristi to explain it as well as why they’re tear-gassing babies?”

“She’s such a pathological liar. It’s pathological at this point because she speaks lies so easily,” another user wrote.

At a large demonstration that turned violent Wednesday night in Minneapolis following the second ICE shooting there in a week of the Venezuelan national, a man told the city’s KMSP-TV how his vehicle with his six children inside got caught in the crossfire as federal agents and police tried to disperse the crowd.

He told the station that three of his children, including a 6-month-old baby, who stopped breathing at one point from tear gas smoke that got into the van, were treated at the hospital.

Meantime, Noem made even more startling statements Thursday, Jan. 15, telling reporters, according to Newsweek, that Americans may need to show proof of citizenship during ICE enforcement operations.

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Trump wants nations to pay $1 billion to stay on his peace board | Fortune

Trump wants nations to pay  billion to stay on his peace board | Fortune

The Trump administration is asking countries that want a permanent spot on his new Board of Peace to contribute at least $1 billion.

According to a draft charter for the proposed group seen by Bloomberg, President Donald Trump would serve as its inaugural chairman and would decide on who is invited to be members. Decisions would be taken by a majority, with each member state present getting one vote, but all would be subject to the chairman’s approval.

“Each Member State shall serve a term of no more than three years from this Charter’s entry into force, subject to renewal by the Chairman. The three-year membership term shall not apply to Member States that contribute more than USD $1,000,000,000 in cash funds to the Board of Peace within the first year of the Charter’s entry into force,” the draft says.

Critics are worried that Trump is trying to build an alternative, or rival, to the United Nations, which he has long criticized.

The board is described in the charter as “an international organization that seeks to promote stability, restore dependable and lawful governance, and secure enduring peace in areas affected or threatened by conflict.” It would become official once three member states agree to the charter.

Trump would also be responsible for approving the group’s official seal, the document says.

White House officials didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment. 

Trump has invited a number of world leaders, including Argentina’s Javier Milei and Canada’s Mark Carney, to be part of a Board of Peace for Gaza, which would be formed under the broader umbrella of his new Board of Peace.

That plan attracted swift criticism from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said the details hadn’t been coordinated with his country.

Read More: Gaza ‘Board of Peace’ Takes Shape as Israel Raises Concern

Several European nations have been invited to join the peace board, according to people familiar with the matter. The draft appears to suggest Trump himself would control the money, something that would be considered unacceptable to most countries who could have potentially joined the board, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private matters.

Several nations strongly oppose the draft of Trump’s charter and are working on collectively pushing back against the proposals, the people added.

The Board of Peace would convene voting meetings at least annually and “at such additional times and locations as the Chairman deems appropriate,” the draft charter says. The agenda would be subject to approval by the chairman. The peace board would hold regular non-voting meetings with its executive board. Such meetings would be convened on at least a quarterly basis.

Read More: Trump Pulls US From 31 Bodies in UN, Already in Fiscal Peril

Trump would also have the power to remove a member, subject to a veto by a two-thirds majority of member states. “The Chairman shall at all times designate a successor for the role of Chairman,” the charter says.

On Friday, the White House announced a first executive panel that would include Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair before the formation of the overall board.

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No. 2 Iowa State loses second straight, 79-70 to Cincinnati

No. 2 Iowa State loses second straight, 79-70 to Cincinnati

CINCINNATI – Day Day Thomas scored 19 points to lead Cincinnati to a 79-70 win Saturday over No. 2 Iowa State, which has lost two straight after winning its first 16 games.

Milan Momcilovic scored a career-high 34 points, hitting eight 3-pointers, for the Cyclones (16-2, 3-2 Big 12) who were looking to rebound after an 84-63 loss to Kansas on Tuesday.

But a desperate Cincinnati team made things difficult, forcing 12 turnovers leading to 20 points. Iowa State trailed by as many as 26 points against Kansas and 17 on Saturday.

Jizzle James scored 15 points and Sencire Harris and Jalen Celestine each scored 12 for Cincinnati (10-8, 2-3) which has won two straight games after starting 0-3 in the league.

Three straight 3-pointers by Celestine gave the Bearcats an early 16-8 lead. Day Day Thomas’ 3-pointer made the score 19-8.

The Bearcats made six 3-pointers in the first half. Moustapha Thiam’s 3-pointer gave them a 35-24 lead.

Iowa State, which leads the nation in three-point percentage, made just one of its first seven three-point attempts. They finished 9 of 21, with eight of those makes by Momcilovic.

Momcilovic’s first made 3-pointer with 1:38 remaining in the first half helped the Cyclones rally from an 11-point deficit to trail 35-31 at halftime.

Joshua Jefferson’s layup tied the score at 38 early in the second half. But Cincinnati answered with an 11-0 run. Jefferson scored 16 points.

Thomas hit a 3-pointer and a mid-range jumper to give the Bearcats a 54-42 lead. His third 3-pointer of the night made the score 67-50.

Iowa State responded with a 14-2 run. Momcilovic scored nine of those points to cut the Cyclones’ deficit to 69-64 with 4:38 left. But Cincinnati held on.

Cincinnati was 0-6 in Quad 1 opportunities coming into the game and coach Wes Miller was booed loudly during pregame introductions.

UP NEXT

Iowa State: Hosts UCF on Tuesday.

Cincinnati: Visits top-ranked Arizona on Wednesday.

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