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Soft power sell-off: anger as British Council announces sale of historic Madrid building | Foreign policy

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The historic Palacete building at 31 Paseo del General Martínez Campos in Madrid’s upmarket Chamberí district has been home to the British Council in Spain for about 70 years.

About 5,000 students each year pass through its 35 classrooms, learning English, attending exams, and forging cultural ties with the UK. Over the years that is hundreds of thousands of Madrileños (people from Madrid), while it also serves as a centre for the expat community.

But no longer, it seems. News that the high-end building is to be sold has brought staff on to the streets in protest. With no confirmation of where the 320 staff members will be relocated to, there is anger and real concern that their jobs may be at risk. The sale of another building in Barcelona is also proposed, it is understood.

It is part of a growing backlash across Europe by British Council staff against radical cuts and restructuring, without which, the organisation’s senior management has warned, the world’s leading soft-power agency could disappear “within a decade”.

This week, staff in Italy staged a national strike and protest against plans to cease English-language teaching after 80 years in the country, with the loss of 108 of 130 jobs.

A desperate effort to pay an outstanding £197m debt from a Covid-era Conservative government emergency loan on commercial terms, with interest to be repaid by September, has forced drastic action.

Aside from anger at UK government failure to protect an organisation, set up almost a century ago to combat fascism and communism, staff have also expressed deep concerns over the organisation’s leadership and the way measures are being implemented.

A letter of no confidence in the senior leadership team, to the board of trustees in London, seen by the Guardian, has been signed by 298 of Spain’s 560 staff. The sale, it states, “reflects a pattern of shortsighted decisions, weak leadership and poorly communicated changes made without sufficient regard for staff or organisational stability”.

The Palacete building in Madrid’s upmarket Chamberí district has been home to the British Council in Spain for about 70 years. Photograph: iPhone/Alamy

There was, it added, great anger over the direction the British Council has taken over the last few years, “which has included round after round of restructuring, investments with little return, short-termism, lack of accountability and centralised decision making”.

Another letter of no confidence has been sent by staff in Italy, with further letters from France, and more understood to be following. There are concerns, too, that the British Council’s Paris building could be at risk of sale in the future and over the reduction of services in Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Croatia and Austria.

Stuart Anderson, the Workers’ Commission, (CCOO) union representative, said there were questions over the management strategy of the organisation. One of those was its “very centralised decision-making and, you might dare say, it’s a colonial attitude: ‘London knows best’ with little consideration of local markets or on-the-ground expertise built up over decades in those markets.”

Staff were also calling on the UK government to stop the “death spiral”. The union said it “would hope that a government trying to reset the relationship between the UK and the EU would not damage the soft power organisations that have been there for well close to 100 years.”

Anderson, who has worked for the organisation for nearly 20 years and is chair of the British Council European Works Council, added: “It’s a great concern in the UK that people don’t actually, or don’t necessarily, understand what the British Council means to millions of people around the world. The analogy is the BBC World Service. The organisation has a really, respected brand globally, and is being run into the ground.”

Few seem to question its value. There is support from many quarters – the arts, universities, military, politicians.

Neil Kinnock, the former Labour leader and a former British Council chair, said: “The British Council does not want to make these cuts. They are being forced into it by the conditions required by the Treasury.”

It was set up to combat fascism and communism, “and combat it with understanding of Britain and its values – soft power as it’s called now. And they’ve done it brilliantly for 92 years”, said Kinnock, whose son, Stephen, an MP, is a former British Council country director in Russia, before being forced out by the Russian government.

There was widespread support “from those who have seen it in operation”.

Kinnock added: “In a world in turmoil where the far right is on the march and we don’t pretend to be a leading military or even political power now, especially in the wake of Brexit, the soft power deployed by the British Council is absolutely invaluable.

“I sympathise very much with the staff, so does the leadership,” he said. The British Council had “camped out” in the Foreign Office for last three or four years and put up a “hell of a fight”.

Kinnock said: “What the government should do is either find a way of cancelling the debt, or even rescheduling the debt. Because it’s to absolutely nobody’s advantage to lose the British Council.”

If it were to disappear “we’d lose recognition, reputation and countless contacts across the world including current and future decision-makers in every sphere”.

The organisation, which works in more than 100 countries, will continue operating in Spain, where it has operated for 85 years, and property sale does not represent a withdrawal from Madrid or Barcelona, it is understood.

A spokesperson for the British Council said it “remained committed to building connections, trust and understanding between people in the UK and countries across Europe”.

It continued to face financial challenges and was “taking all necessary steps to significantly cut costs and grow our revenue” including the proposed sales of some buildings to protect as many jobs as possible, maintain its “vital” work, and secure its long-term future across Europe and around the world.

“We understand that the proposed changes may be worrying for colleagues, students, and partners and we are committed to managing this process with transparency and care.”



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RG3 visits Memorial Day Poppy Wall of Honor as son of Army veterans


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This Memorial Day weekend, just like the rest of them, hits home for Robert Griffin III – but this one might be a tad more special.

The son of two U.S. Army veterans, the former Washington Commanders quarterback went back to the nation’s capital as part of his longtime partnership with USAA.

Griffin visited USAA’s Poppy Wall of Honor, a powerful tribute recognizing more than 600,000 service members who gave their lives in defense of our country, each represented by a single poppy, at the National Mall.

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Robert Griffin III standing on the sidelines at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville

Robert Griffin III looks on before the game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Cincinnati Bengals at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fla., on Dec. 4, 2023. (David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire)

“It’s really an opportunity to share their stories. They’ve actually enhanced the exhibit even more this year by adding stories of the fallen soldiers, so you can walk the exhibit and you can hear those stories that are given from their family members,” Griffin told Fox News Digital in a recent interview.

“Because in the military community, a lot of times we do feel like maybe the sacrifices aren’t appreciated as much, or maybe we are forgotten at times for the things that we do for this country. These people who are honored by this wall gave the ultimate sacrifice. So it’s not them that are feeling it — it’s their families.

“To hear those stories from the families is truly important and impactful, and all they want is to not be forgotten. So if we can continue to tell their stories and pay homage to them and honor them, it keeps their stories alive.”

Griffin knows that many Americans will take advantage of the long weekend with some poolside barbecues, but he did implore everyone to realize why they are able to do so in the first place.

A wall of more than 600000 red poppies displayed along the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

A wall of more than 600,000 red poppies representing U.S. service members who died in the line of duty since World War I is displayed along the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on May 26, 2024. (Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

BRONCOS STAR GARETT BOLLES REFLECTS ON TEAM BROTHERHOOD AFTER MEETING WITH NATION’S HEROES FOR MEMORIAL DAY

“I’m not saying it’s not about that. What I’m saying is there’s a reason that we’re able to do that, and it’s because of our service members who gave the ultimate sacrifice,” Griffin said. “I just want to be here with USAA and make that known. It’s okay to have fun, but if you have some time, get in a huddle, take a moment of silence, say a prayer, share the stories if you know someone who was in the military who gave the ultimate sacrifice, so that we can keep those stories alive and truly know the reason for Memorial Day is about them. It’s not about us.”

Being around veterans all his life, Griffin was able to take some lessons from those who served to the gridiron and in life.

“Yeah, it’s not two-pointed at all. It’s very impactful. With my parents, it was always, ‘Whatever you start, you’re going to finish.’ It’s ‘yes, ma’am,’ ‘no, ma’am,’ ‘yes, sir,’ ‘no, sir,’ and the discipline that it takes to get to where you want to be means that you’re going to have to overcome adversity,” he said. “When you talk about the type of mental fortitude you have to have to do something like that — knowing that you may not see your mom again, your dad again, your child, your husband, your wife — it’s truly remarkable, and it just shows you how seriously they take their service and how much they love this country.

Robert Griffin III standing and looking on before a football game at EverBank Stadium

Robert Griffin III, former NFL quarterback and ESPN analyst, looks on before the game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and Cincinnati Bengals at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fla., on Dec. 4, 2023. (David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire)

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“If we can apply that to everything that we do in life, this country is going to continue to grow and continue to be great at the level that it has been. To me, that is what the military is. It is the best of us, and these people deserve to be honored.”

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Cockroach Janta Party: CJP founder Abhijit Dipke’s Instagram hacked; CJP’s backup account removed by Meta – Cockroach Janta Party Founder Abhijeet Dipke’s Instagram Account Hacked; Cjp’s Backup Account Also Removed

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Cockroach Janata Party (CJP) founder Abhijit Dipke on Friday claimed that his Instagram account has been hacked. He said that at present he is not able to access his account. Giving information on social media, Abhijeet Dipke said that he suddenly lost control over his official Instagram account and is facing difficulty in logging in. He says that due to the account being hacked, the online activities of the party have also been affected.





Abhijeet Dipke tagged Meta on X
Abhijeet Dipke posted a screenshot of his account in a post on X and tagged Meta and wrote, ‘Access to my Instagram account has been lost, I am trying to recover it, but am not able to’.



(This news is being updated)

US says temporary visa holders should leave to apply for Green Cards | Donald Trump News

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Authorities say Green Cards from inside US are discretionary, not automatic rights.

The Trump administration has said foreign nationals who enter the US on temporary visas should return to their home countries if they want to apply for permanent residency, arguing that the move is aimed at reinforcing the existing legal immigration system.

Officials said the policy is intended to ensure Green Card applications follow standard immigration procedures, rather than allowing people to remain in the US while seeking permanent status through what the administration describes as “loopholes” in the system.

“An alien who is in the US temporarily and wants a Green Card must return to their home country to apply. This policy allows our immigration system to function as the law intended instead of incentivising loopholes,” the Department of Homeland Security said on X.

In new guidance issued on Friday, US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) said adjustment of status, obtaining permanent residency from within the US, is a discretionary benefit rather than an automatic right.

The agency said the immigration system is generally designed with the expectation that temporary visa holders will leave the country once the purpose of their stay ends, while noting that immigration officers should evaluate applications on a case-by-case basis.

The memo instructs officers to consider factors including visa violations, overstaying authorised periods of stay, unauthorised employment, fraud and whether applicants complied with the terms of their admission to the United States.

USCIS also acknowledged limited exceptions, including visa categories that allow “dual intent”, meaning some temporary visa holders are legally permitted to live in the US while also seeking permanent residency. The agency said those categories do not guarantee approval for Green Cards or change Congress’s expectation that visitors leave the country once the purpose of their stay ends.

The agency said on Friday that the updated guidance would help free up resources to focus on processing other immigration cases.

Rights groups warn migrants at risk

Immigrant advocacy groups criticised the measure, warning it could force vulnerable people to return to unsafe or unstable conditions while awaiting decisions on their applications.

HIAS, a nonprofit organisation that supports refugees and other migrants, said the policy could affect survivors of trafficking as well as abused and neglected children by requiring them to leave the US to complete parts of the permanent residency process.

The guidance marks the latest step in a broader push by US President Donald Trump to tighten immigration rules and restrict pathways to long-term residency in the United States.

Last year, the administration moved to shorten the duration of visas for some students, cultural exchange visitors and media workers.

In January, the State Department announced that it had revoked more than 100,000 visas since Trump returned to office.

 



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Limousine Liberal Max Kellerman apologizes to James Harden for comparing him to Trump


Former ESPN host Max Kellerman made headlines this week after criticizing Los Angeles Clippers guard James Harden for another disappointing playoff performance by comparing him to President Donald Trump.

“Bringing in James Harden to win a championship is like electing Donald Trump to fix your country,” Kellerman said Wednesday on his “Game Over” podcast.

Kellerman is now apologizing for the remark. According to him, comparing any athlete to Trump crosses the line.

DAN LE BATARD, WHO PREVIOUSLY AVOIDED DOUG EMHOFF ABUSE ALLEGATION, DECLARES JOURNALISM ‘DEAD’

Commentator Max Kellerman looking on during a super middleweight boxing bout at Allegiant Stadium

Commentator Max Kellerman watches a super middleweight bout on the undercard of the Canelo vs. Crawford event at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nev., on Sept. 13, 2025. (Chris Unger/TKO Worldwide LLC/Getty Images)

“I shouldn’t have said that because it’s not fair to James Harden. I did not mean to insult him publicly in a way that was going to go viral. It was too severe,” Kellerman said Friday on his Netflix podcast.

FORMER ESPN HOST MAX KELLERMAN BELITTLES JAMES HARDEN’S POOR PERFORMANCE WITH COMPARISON TO TRUMP

“I don’t think it’s as bad as all that. I don’t think it’s as bad as electing Trump to fix your country, but that’s the idea. That’s the opposite of what you’d do if you’re trying to get a certain result.”

Notably, Kellerman never compared a disappointing athlete to Joe Biden during his disastrous presidency.

As we argued earlier this week, whatever one thinks of Trump politically, he has won the presidency twice. Harden, meanwhile, has never led a team to a championship or even reached the NBA Finals as the primary star. The Thunder reached the Finals in 2012, but Harden came off the bench.

Max Kellerman hosting the Canelo vs. Crawford undercard press conference at T-Mobile Arena

Max Kellerman hosts the Canelo vs. Crawford undercard press conference at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nev., on Sept. 11, 2025. (Ed Mulholland/TKO Worldwide LLC)

If Kellerman wanted a more fitting analogy, comparing Harden to Kamala Harris, another figure who has never won the big one, would have made far more sense.

More than anything, Kellerman’s Trump comparison served as a reminder of why he became so unpopular during his run alongside Stephen A. Smith on ESPN’s “First Take.” Kellerman routinely used the platform to lecture viewers about politics while belittling Trump and his supporters.

In 2020, Kellerman claimed Trump voters in the South were “susceptible to very low-quality information, easy to propagandize, and almost immune to facts.”

Cleveland Cavaliers guard James Harden driving to the basket against Detroit Pistons players

Cleveland Cavaliers guard James Harden drives to the basket against the Detroit Pistons during the second half of Game 5 in the second-round NBA playoffs in Detroit on May 13, 2026. (Duane Burleson/AP)

Kellerman, while undeniably talented, has long embodied the image of a limousine liberal. With homes in New York and Los Angeles, he often comes across as someone who views Americans outside elite coastal circles as intellectually inferior simply because they do not share his politics.

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According to reports and comments from Stephen A. Smith himself, Kellerman’s increasingly left-wing commentary contributed to his eventual exit from “First Take.” Put simply, even Stephen A. appeared to grow tired of the constant political grandstanding.

Kellerman now hosts a Netflix podcast alongside LeBron James’ agent, Rich Paul. Judging by the tone and content of the show, it seems aimed less at everyday sports fans and more at the cocktail-party elite crowd Kellerman has spent much of his career trying to impress.



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First VPN Dismantled in Global Takedown Over Use by 25 Ransomware Groups

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Authorities in Europe and North America have announced the dismantling of a criminal virtual private network (VPN) service used by criminal actors to obscure the origins of ransomware attacks, data theft, scanning, and denial-of-service attacks.

The disruption of First VPN Service was led by France and the Netherlands, with several other nations supporting the investigation since December 2021, including Luxembourg, Romania, Switzerland, Ukraine, the U.K., Canada, Germany, the U.S., Spain, Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Portugal.

First VPN, per Europol, offered services designed specifically for criminal use, allowing anonymous payments and a hidden infrastructure that enabled paying customers to hide their identities when carrying out ransomware attacks, large-scale fraud, and data theft. It was promoted on Russian-speaking cybercrime forums such as Exploit[.]in and XSS[.]is as a tool to evade law enforcement.

The international operation took place between May 19 and 20, during which authorities took a series of concurrent actions that involved interviewing the service’s administrator, conducting a house search in Ukraine, taking down 33 servers, and seizing infrastructure used to support cybercriminal activity globally.

The names of confiscated domains are listed below –

  • 1vpns[.]com
  • 1vpns[.]net
  • 1vpns[.]org
  • Related onion domains operating on the Tor network

“First VPN’s website promoted itself by emphasizing anonymity, promising its users that it would not cooperate with any judicial authority, that it would not store data, and that the service would not be subject to any jurisdiction,” Eurojust said.

In a coordinated flash alert, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said the service has been active since about 2014, providing 32 exit node servers in 27 countries. Three of the exit nodes were located in the U.S. –

  • 2.223.66[.]103
  • 5.181.234[.]59
  • 92.38.148[.]58

Other exit nodes were located in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Cyprus, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Latvia, Luxembourg, Moldova, the Netherlands, Panama, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, and the U.K.

No less than 25 ransomware groups, such as Avaddon Ransomware, are said to have used First VPN infrastructure to perform network reconnaissance and intrusions. The subscription duration ranged anywhere from one day to one year. Based on the subscription plan, they cost between $2 for a single day and $483 for a whole year. It accepted payments through Bitcoin, Perfect Money, Webmoney, EgoPay, and InterKass.

“First VPN Service offered several connection protocols, including OpenConnect, WireGuard, Outline, and VLess TCP Reality, and multiple encryption options including OpenVPN ECC, L2TP/IPSec, and PPtP,” the FBI said.

“Technical support was also offered to users via a self-hosted Jabber server and Telegram encrypted messaging service. Among the VPN protocol options, First VPN Service offered ‘VLESS’ and ‘Reality’ which provides the ability to disguise VPN Internet traffic as HTTPS traffic over ports which are commonly used to connect to websites.”

According to snapshots captured on the Internet Archive, First VPN offered “Anonymity, Stability, Security,” stating “We do not store any logs that would allow us or third parties to associate an IP address in a specific period of time with the user of our service.”

“The only data we store is e-mail and username, but it’s impossible to connect the user’s activity on the Internet with a specific user of our service,” it added.

As a way to escape liability, First VPN also noted in its FAQ that it “strictly” prohibited the use of its servers for illicit activities. “This facilitates the receipt of complaints about our servers, and as a result, they will be disabled,” read the FAQ.



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Marco Rubio: Trump ‘disappointment’ with Nato will be discussed at summit | Nato

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Donald Trump is disappointed that Nato allies refused to become more actively involved in attacking Iran, the US secretary of state has said, setting up what could become a fraught summit of the alliance in July.

Marco Rubio, meeting with foreign ministers of the military alliance, emphasised that he expected the rift would be discussed at the July meeting in Ankara, making the summit “one of the more important” in Nato’s 77-year history.

“The president’s views – frankly, disappointment – at some of our Nato allies and their response to our operations in the Middle East, they are well documented,” Rubio said as he arrived for the start of the meeting in Helsingborg.

“That will have to be addressed. That won’t be solved or addressed today. That’s something for the leaders level to discuss,” he said, amid fresh US demands for help in forcing open the strait of Hormuz if peace talks with Iran fail to progress.

After the meeting, Rubio said he discussed the possibility with his counterparts of Nato countries helping militarily. “We have to have a plan B for if someone is shooting, then how do you reopen the straits?” Rubio said. “I don’t know if that would be a Nato mission necessarily, but it would certainly be Nato countries that can contribute to it.”

The UK and France have offered to lead a multinational air and naval force to maintain security for merchant shipping in the strait of Hormuz once the US and Iran have reached a peace deal, or there is a well-established ceasefire.

US troop numbers in Europe are also expected to drop from 80,000 after a review reflecting wider commitments, Rubio emphasised, although the exact cut remains unclear amid contradictory statements from the White House.

“I think it’s well understood in the alliance that the United States’ troop presence in Europe is going to be adjusted,” Rubio said after the foreign ministers’ meeting, stressing that the US had been talking to European Nato members about it.

“I’m not saying they’re going to be thrilled about it, but they certainly are aware of it, and you know, we have obligations in the Indo-Pacific, we have obligations in the Middle East, we have obligations in the western hemisphere,” he added.

At the beginning of the month, the US said it would withdraw 5,000 troops from Germany, as Trump reacted angrily to comments from the chancellor, Friedrich Merz, who had said Iran was humiliating the US in the peace talks.

Last week, the Pentagon added that it would halt the rotation of 4,000 more into Poland, only for Trump to apparently reverse that on Thursday night on social media, in a hasty announcement that appeared to catch the Pentagon by surprise.

Trump posted: “Based on the successful Election of the now President of Poland, Karol Nawrocki, who I was proud to Endorse, and our relationship with him, I am pleased to announce that the United States will be sending an additional 5,000 Troops to Poland.”

Other Nato allies admitted erratic White House policy changes left them struggling to keep up. Maria Malmer Stenergard, Sweden’s foreign minister, admitted the situation was “confusing indeed, and not always easy to navigate”.

The US secretary of state said after the meeting that while he had “long been an advocate for Nato”, one of the arguments he had made was that US “bases in the region” had provided the country’s military with “logistical options that we wouldn’t otherwise have”.

“When some of those bases are denied to you during a conflict that we’re involved in, then you question whether that value is still there,” a topic Rubio said would be discussed at Ankara.

No other Nato member joined in the 38-day attack on Iran or has so far proved prepared to force open the strait of Hormuz, closed by an Iranian blockade, though some countries did provide a degree of assistance.

Spain refused to allow US bases in the country or its airspace to be used for the attack on Iran, while France only allowed air tankers and other support aircraft to be used from the Istres air base in the south.

The UK permitted the US air force to bomb Iranian missile launchers and any other military assets obstructing the strait from Fairford in Gloucestershire, the furthest any European country was willing to go in enabling US bombing.

Earlier this year, Trump also demanded Greenland from Denmark, another Nato member, though he dropped the proposal after international lobbying and an agreement to create an Arctic air patrol mission to deter any Russian military activity.



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Spurs expected to get favorable whistle in Game 3 after Thunder flopping complaints dominated Game 2


The NBA can’t seem to get out of its own way. I’ve said something along these lines before, but they need to figure out some sort of PR or marketing campaign to help them. Maybe they just need some rule adjustments or enforcement. Whatever the solution is, they have to find a way to get people to appreciate the great games that are happening instead of just talking about the referees and flopping. No series has seen as much of that talk as this one between the Thunder and Spurs.

The Oklahoma City Thunder are seven games away from winning back-to-back championships. Former champions who have accomplished this feat often will tell you that it is harder than getting to the mountain top the first time. The Thunder are still the favorites, and there is good reason. They have a deep team, and it took a historic, double-overtime performance from a freak-of-nature to hand them their first loss in the postseason.

Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander shooting as San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama defends

Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander shoots as San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama defends during the third quarter of game two in the Western Conference finals at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City on May 20, 2026. (Brett Rojo/Imagn Images)

The Thunder tied it up with relative ease in the second game of the series, but most of the narrative was not around how well they played. Instead, it was around how much the Thunder flopped and how dirty they were playing against Victor Wembanyama. These narratives aren’t new, but they were certainly highlighted and discussed ad nauseam on shows. This will factor into my handicapping.

The San Antonio Spurs are young, hungry, and confident. That’s a dangerous combination, but I think they are still a year away from getting past the Thunder. They have had a fairly easy path through the playoffs. In the opening round, they took on the Trail Blazers, and they won the series 4-1. In the Conference Semifinals, the Timberwolves took them to six games, but even that felt like an inevitable win.

2026 WESTERN CONFERENCE FINALS ODDS, BEST BETS, SERIES SPREAD: SAN ANTONIO SPURS VS OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER

Victor Wembanyama blocks a shot by Jalen Williams during a basketball game.

San Antonio Spurs big Victor Wembanyama blocks Oklahoma City Thunder wing Jalen Williams in double overtime of Game 1 of their conference finals series in the 2026 NBA Playoffs. (Alonzo Adams/Imagn Images)

Now, they face the Thunder, a team they beat four times in the regular season. Most of the games weren’t even that close. The Spurs like to play defense, they have some outside shooting, and they have Wemby, who might be the best player in the game. Still, this series feels like they had to give their best shot to OKC to take the first game. I’m not saying they need a perfect game to win, but I do think they need some luck or help on their side.

If you search Game 2 on Twitter/X, you’ll probably see a long list of flops or fouls from the Thunder. None of those were called. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander probably had at least two or three shots where he wasn’t touched and fell to the floor instead of just landing. Isaiah Hartenstein was another complaint from those who watched the game. Hartenstein had a ton of plays where he was caught pulling hair or arms of Spurs players.

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San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama looking on during NBA game at Paycom Center

San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama looks on during the fourth quarter against the Oklahoma City Thunder in game two of the Western Conference finals at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City on May 20, 2026. (Alonzo Adams/Imagn Images)

Expect the Spurs to get a favorable whistle in this game. They are going to get some of those non-calls against them to be in their favor tonight. I’m backing the Spurs at home -1.5. The home court will be behind them, and I think the NBA has already looked at these clips and will encourage a favorable Spurs whistle. Additionally, bet on under 7.5 points. I’d expect very soft calls on him and for him to be in foul trouble tonight.

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For more sports betting information and plays, follow David on X/Twitter: @futureprez2024 



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Mahmoud Khalil’s attorneys to turn to US supreme court after ruling paves way for deportation | Mahmoud Khalil

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Attorneys for Mahmoud Khalil, the former Columbia University student who last year became the face of the Trump administration’s crackdown on pro-Palestine speech, will ask the US supreme court to intervene after a federal appeals court opened the door for the government to once again detain and ultimately deport him.

On Friday, the third circuit court of appeals upheld a January ruling by a three-judge panel, which had reversed a lower-court decision ordering Khalil’s release on bail last June. The ruling marks the latest chapter in Khalil’s months-long challenge of the government’s campaign against him. The appeals court’s decision marks a significant setback for him, but his lawyers insist he cannot be deported – for now.

“We hope the supreme court will recognize how dangerous the third circuit’s decision was, not just for Mahmoud but for other non-citizens the administration has its vengeful sights upon,” said Baher Azmy, legal director of the Center for Constitutional Rights and part of Khalil’s legal team. “That ruling greenlights holding someone in prolonged, brutal detention conditions without access to meaningful judicial review in order to punish them and deter others from dissenting from US foreign policy.”

The third circuit judges were split on the decision – with six voting against and five in favor of Khalil’s request to reverse the earlier ruling.

In a dissenting opinion, three of the judges who voted against argued that the majority’s ruling “ignores canons”, “strains precedent” and “imperils the civil liberties of [Khalil] and similarly situated noncitizens”.

Khalil’s attorneys said that they planned to ask the court to pause the decision’s implementation so they can bring the matter to the US supreme court.

Khalil is also fighting the government’s attempt to remove him in a separate legal case moving through the immigration court system. Earlier this month, his legal team filed a motion asking an immigration appeals court to reopen and throw out that case after evidence emerged that the Trump administration had improperly fast-tracked it and tried to predetermine its outcome.

Still, Friday’s ruling is a notable loss for Khalil and sets a dangerous precedent for others seeking to challenge their detention in federal court at a time when the Trump administration has politicized the immigration court system in unprecedented ways.

“What the administration wants to do is litigate his removability in the immigration court process – what I call the president’s courts,” said Azmy. “It’s a total sham process that’s designed to carry out their plan to deport him.”

Khalil, a US permanent resident who is married to a US citizen, was detained in his Columbia University housing in March 2025 – the first of several foreign students and scholars the administration targeted over their pro-Palestine advocacy. He had been a lead negotiator between the university and student protesters during the spring 2024 encampments.

Khalil has remained defiant throughout the ordeal and since being released last year has become a far more prominent advocate.

“The administration wants to arrest, detain and deport me to intimidate everyone speaking out for Palestine across this country, and they are willing to violate longstanding US rules and procedures to do it,” he said recently. “But no lies, corruption, or ideological persecution will stop me from advocating for Palestine and for everyone’s right to free speech.”

Khalil missed the birth of his first son while in detention in an Immigrationa nd Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Louisiana last year. His lawyers argued that he would suffer “irreparable harm” if forced to remain in detention while his immigration case proceeded – and a federal court ultimately sided with him and found that he was likely to succeed in his claim that the government’s actions had been unconstitutional. An appeals court struck down that decision in January after it concluded that the federal judge who ordered his release did not have jurisdiction over the case, which it said needed to remain in the immigration court system.

Attorneys for Khalil warn that the panel’s decision effectively blocks anyone in immigration proceedings from challenging their detention on first amendment grounds until those proceedings have run their course – “no matter how long they may take or how unconstitutional the basis for their detention”, they wrote in a recent statement.

The judges in the dissent agreed. “The Judiciary ‘serves as an inseparable element of the constitutional system of checks and balances’ protecting civil liberties and checking legislative and executive discretion,” they wrote. “We cannot fulfill that role if we write ourselves out of relevance and leave the Executive Branch to check itself.”

The Trump administration originally maintained that Khalil – as well as other foreign scholars it detained over their pro-Palestine advocacy – posed a threat to the government’s foreign policy objectives in fighting antisemitism, citing a little-used immigration statute from the McCarthy era. So far, that claim has not been tested in court, with the government choosing to fight Khalil’s appeal on jurisdictional grounds instead.

Government lawyers later argued that Khalil’s deportation would be justified on the grounds that he omitted details in his green card application – claims his lawyers have vehemently rejected.

Courts have expressed reservations over the government’s argument and last fall, a federal judge in Boston ruled in a blistering opinion in a related case that the detentions of pro-Palestinians had been unconstitutional and designed to chill speech.

During that trial, immigration officials involved in the detentions revealed that government officials had relied on dossiers compiled by far-right, pro-Israel groups to target those students.

While the administration, and the president himself, called Khalil a “Radical Foreign Pro-Hamas Student” and a “terrorist sympathizer”, he has been a nuanced voice in his criticism of Israel and has repeatedly spoken out against antisemitism, repeatedly saying it has “no place” in the Palestine solidarity movement.

“I grew up in a community that valued human rights and valued principles beyond religion, beyond race,” he said in a recent interview with the Jewish publication the Forward. ““I know it might sound like a very ideal utopia, but this is what we should aspire for: to get a place where there’s no more conflict, no more killing in that place and it’s open to anyone who wants to call it their home or their Holy Land.”



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Warren endorsement of Graham Platner haunts Democrats amid scandals


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Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s vocal support for her controversial New England neighbor Graham Platner’s Democratic Senate campaign is raising eyebrows in light of his Nazi-linked tattoo and a slew of resurfaced remarks, including an admission of getting aroused by smelling biocide in Port-a-Johns.

Most recently, Platner was lambasted for appearing to wish the Taliban had killed former Pennsylvania GOP lieutenant governor candidate Teddy Daniels after video of him under siege in Afghanistan surfaced:

“Dumb mother—er didn’t deserve to live,” Platner said in a resurfaced social media post about the Purple Heart recipient. “Poor marksmanship on the Taliban’s part…”

On his podcast, Washington-area radio host Larry O’Connor presented a mashup of Warren shouting, “my kind of man,” with narration of Platner’s uncovered foibles.

UNEARTHED POSTS SHOW DEM SENATE HOPEFUL PRAISING VULGAR GRAFFITI, MAKING CRUDE PORTA-POTTY ADMISSION

“Hey Elizabeth Warren, Graham Platner says that whenever he goes into a Port-a-John, he smells the blue water in there and he has to pleasure himself — how do you respond?”

“That’s my kind of man!” a clip of Warren intercedes.

“Hey Elizabeth Warren, Graham Platner just said that [‘American Sniper’] Chris Kyle … is actually a psychopathic murderer…”

“That’s my kind of man,” the clip replayed.

“Yeah I could do this all day,” O’Connor quipped. “And I have no doubt that is in fact her kind of man.”

When confronted by Fox News Digital in Washington on Wednesday, Warren smiled at the camera, said nothing, and continued walking into an office building.

DEMS SILENT ON PROGRESSIVE CANDIDATE’S NAZI-STYLE TATTOO AFTER KNOCKING HEGSETH FOR CHRISTIAN SYMBOL

Conservative commentator “Western Lensman” flagged a 33-page letter Warren had sent to Secretary of War Pete Hegseth when he was under nomination consideration in 2025.

Massachusetts Warren and Maine's Platner.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, left, gestures in a hearing; Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner, right. (Kent Nishimura/Getty Images; Sophie Park/Getty Images)

Warren questioned Hegseth about a tattoo with a Christian phrase tied to the Crusades — “Deus Vult” or “God Wills It” — and expressed concern about Hegseth reportedly being removed from former President Joe Biden’s inauguration because “fellow servicemembers feel concerned enough about to report as a potential insider threat.”

Lensman contrasted that objection to Hegseth’s Christian tattoo with her silence on Platner’s own chest tattoo considered German Nazi imagery.

“It just tells you all the [the left’s complaints about right-wing] White supremacy blah-blah is all performative nonsense,” he said.

Bernadette Breslin, a former top aide to Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., offered a side-by-side of Warren crowing about Platner just weeks ago before appearing tight-lipped to Fox News Digital.

“Look how quickly she changed her tune once his baggage started becoming a political liability,” Breslin said on X.

TOP DEM LAWMAKERS DUCK QUESTIONS WHEN PRESSED ON PLATNER’S REDDIT SCANDAL

The Republican Party’s rapid-response account RNC Research latched onto Warren’s glowing words for Platner and is now using them for second-degree criticism.

When Iowa State Sen. Zach Wahls, D-Iowa City, invoked Warren at an event and said he is “very honored to have her endorsement” in his US Senate bid to fill retiring Sen. Joni Ernst’s, R-Iowa, seat, the RNC posted context about Warren also endorsing the controversial Platner.

“Warren has also endorsed candidates like Graham Platner — who got a Nazi tattoo, praised Hamas’ tactics, and said women should ‘act like an adult’ to avoid rape,” they said.

Meanwhile, Daniels – who also ran for sheriff of Dare County, North Carolina last year – told Fox News’ “The Bottom Line” that Platner’s comments are run-of-the-mill for what he’s dealt with and that he largely dismissed them.

“I don’t get offended. I’ve been attacked by the left for years,” Daniels said.

“This coming from a man whose party has no idea what a woman is, but yet he was online and saw a video of a man and had an emotional meltdown like a 13-year-old girl who just got dumped by her boyfriend – that’s not the type of leadership we need in our government,” he added.

MAINE SENATE CANDIDATE CITES COMBAT TRAUMA WHEN CONFRONTED ON ‘TERRIBLE’ POSTS ABOUT SEXUAL ASSAULT

Teddy Daniels in Milford Pennsylvania

Then-Pennsylvania lieutenant governor candidate Teddy Daniels speaks at a pro-police rally in Pike County. A video of Daniels under fire from the Taliban was mocked by Maine’s Graham Platner. (Preston Ehrler/Getty Images)

Platner has attributed his online behavior to PTSD from Middle East military service and personal depression, saying in a statement that “I’m sorry for this. Just know that it’s not reflective at all of who I am.”

“I don’t want you to judge me on the dumbest thing I ever wrote on the internet. I would prefer if people could judge me on the person I am today,” the oyster farmer added.

Other Democrats besides Warren have also become tight-lipped on Platner this week, as House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York claimed he had not seen the Reddit posts when confronted by a Fox News Digital reporter outside the same Washington, D.C., office building Wednesday that Warren had entered shortly beforehand.

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Platner’s sudden spike in controversy now endangers Democrats’ most-coveted Senate seat this cycle, as GOP Sen. Susan Collins seeks to continue her uniquely independent tenure as the last sitting federal Republican in office in all of New England.

Fox News Digital reached out to Warren for comment.



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