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Mass General Brigham study finds vitamin D may reduce long COVID risk

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Vitamin D supplements may offer researchers a new clue about lingering COVID symptoms that persist after infection, according to a new study.

Researchers at Mass General Brigham examined whether high doses of vitamin D could influence COVID-19 outcomes, including the risk of developing long COVID, a condition in which symptoms such as fatigue, shortness of breath and brain fog continue weeks or months after the initial infection.

The findings were published in The Journal of Nutrition.

HIGHLY CONTAGIOUS VIRUS WITH NO TREATMENT SPREADING RAPIDLY THROUGH WESTERN STATE

The randomized clinical trial included 1,747 adults who had recently tested positive for COVID-19, along with 277 members of their households. Participants were assigned to receive either vitamin D3 supplements or a placebo for four weeks.

Person taking yellow softgel vitamin or supplement capsules from their hand while sitting on a couch at home.

A new study suggests vitamin D may help researchers better understand and possibly prevent long COVID. (iStock)

Dr. JoAnn Manson, senior author of the study and a physician at Mass General Brigham, told Fox News Digital that the results point to a possible benefit related to long-term symptoms.

“A key takeaway is that vitamin D supplementation looks promising for reducing the risk of developing long COVID but does not appear to affect the severity of the acute infection,” Manson said.

COMBINATION NASAL SPRAY VACCINE COULD PROTECT AGAINST COVID, FLU AND PNEUMONIA AT ONCE

Researchers found that vitamin D supplementation did not significantly change short-term outcomes such as symptom severity, hospital visits or emergency care.

The study also showed no difference between the vitamin D and placebo groups in the likelihood that household contacts would contract the virus.

Middle-aged man sitting on a couch with his head in his hand, looking stressed or fatigued at home.

Long COVID is a condition where symptoms like fatigue, shortness of breath, and brain fog last for weeks or months after the initial infection. (iStock)

However, when researchers analyzed participants who closely followed the supplement regimen, they observed a possible difference in lingering symptoms.

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About 21% of participants who took vitamin D reported at least one ongoing symptom eight weeks after infection, compared with 25% of those who received a placebo.

“There’s been tremendous interest in whether vitamin D supplements can be of benefit in COVID, and this is one of the largest and most rigorous randomized trials on the subject,” Manson said in the press release.

“While we didn’t find that high-dose vitamin D reduced COVID severity or hospitalizations, we observed a promising signal for long COVID that merits additional research,” she added.

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Manson said vitamin D may influence longer-term complications because the nutrient plays a role in regulating inflammation in the body.

Researchers say vitamin D may affect inflammation in the body, which could play a role in long COVID symptoms.

Researchers say vitamin D may affect inflammation in the body, which could play a role in long COVID symptoms. (iStock)

Study limitations

The researchers noted several limitations in the trial. The study had to be conducted remotely during the pandemic, and participants began taking vitamin D several days after their COVID diagnosis.

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Ideally, Manson said, supplementation would begin before infection or immediately after diagnosis.

She added that larger studies will be needed to confirm whether vitamin D could reduce the risk or severity of long COVID symptoms.

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Researchers are planning additional trials to examine whether vitamin D supplementation may help treat people already experiencing long COVID.



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UK complicit in desecration of international law in Gaza, says Corbyn-led tribunal | Labour

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The Labour government has been complicit in crimes committed by Israel in Gaza and in the desecration of international law, according to an unoffical tribunal on Gaza chaired by the former party leader Jeremy Corbyn and two specialists in international law.

The tribunal’s findings to be published on Monday are likely to be cited in May’s local elections, in which Labour faces a rearguard action to beat off challenges from the Greens and Your Party, in part driven by anger that the government has not done enough to back the Palestinian cause.

The tribunal took evidence from lawyers, medical professionals, former Foreign Office officials and Palestinians, and focused largely on whether the UK should have done more to end its cooperation with Israel to avoid being accused of failing to meet its duty to prevent a genocide.

It finds that the government should have ended all arms exports to Israel, stopped sharing intelligence and reviewed its trade relations with the country, especially after the international court of justice (ICJ) said in a July 2024 advisory opinion that Israel was occupying Palestine unlawfully.

The tribunal’s report reads: “Britain’s failure to meet its legal obligations has contributed to the mass killing of Palestinian civilians and the wholesale destruction of civilian objects, the desecration of international law and the further erosion of Britain’s status as a nation committed to the rule of law in the international arena.”

It says the UK not only failed to meet its duty to seek to prevent a genocide, but in some instances actively participated in such acts.

The Foreign Office says it has imposed three sets of sanctions in response to settler violence in the West Bank and opposes all forms of forced displacement.

The Middle East minister, Hamish Falconer, told MPs earlier this month that the government “was due to update parliament on the wider issues posed by the ICJ advisory opinion”. “There must be accountability and justice for all crimes committed right across Palestinian and Israeli territory,” he said.

The ICJ has not yet had a full hearing on whether a genocide was committed in Gaza, but it said in January 2024 that there was a real and imminent risk of irreparable prejudice to Palestinians’ rights to be protected from acts of genocide.

The two co-chairs of the tribunal were Dr Shahd Hammouri, a lecturer in international law at the University of Kent, and Neve Gordon, a professor of human rights law at Queen Mary University of London.

Much of the report focuses on the legal duties that the ICJ rulings placed on the government. It concludes that the January 2024 finding placed all states on clear notice that their duty under the Geneva conventions to prevent genocide had been engaged, and doing so required “more than expressions of concern”.

The fundamental duty should not be superseded by contractual obligations to US arms manufacturers, or by stating that no definitive conclusion had been reached by international courts, it says.

The 112-page report also claims the ICJ advisory opinion on the unlawfulness of the Israeli occupation of Palestine placed a legal duty on the UK and other states to abstain from entering into trade dealings with Israel concerning the occupied territories, especially if the trade might entrench its “unlawful presence”.

In his preface, Corbyn says the report “will help cement Labour’s legacy as an active participant in one of the great crimes of our time”.

The tribunal, drawing on evidence compiled in a UN domestic court case brought by the Global Legal Action Network, found the government had imposed a requirement on itself to ask Israel for justification of specific attacks in Gaza, leading it to conclude that a breach of international humanitarian law had definitively occurred in only one of the 413 cases examined.

The report says its perverse self-imposed methodology “required the government to examine the impact of an individual strike on a hospital, but not the lawfulness of the decimation of the whole healthcare system”.

In evidence cited by the tribunal, Falconer told MPs that reaching a conclusion about individual incidents required specific sensitive information “such as the intended targets, anticipated military advantage and anticipated civilian harm, which is often not available to us”.

The tribunal recommends the government release all licensing data, publish all legal advice concerning its obligation to prevent genocide, set up a full public inquiry and provide the ICJ with all the surveillance footage it compiled during RAF overflights of Gaza.

The tribunal’s findings are likely to be used by the left to attack Labour in the local elections. A Vote Palestine 2026 campaign backed by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) is calling for Gaza to be on the ballot paper given that local councils invest billions in Israel. So far 1,200 council candidates have signed the PSC’s commitment to Palestine.

Local pacts are being encouraged in which independents and local Green parties cooperate to target Labour councillors. Your Party, of which Corbyn is the parliamentary leader, said it would be “campaigning loudly on Gaza and Palestine including by calling on councils to divest from Israel”.



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Rihanna targeted in alleged drive-by shooting at Beverly Hills home

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Rihanna‘s star status nearly cost her her life last weekend during an attempted drive-by shooting at her Beverly Hills home.

Ivanna Lisette Ortiz allegedly drove up to the “Diamonds” singer’s mansion and fired multiple rounds from a semiautomatic weapon at the house, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

Ortiz, 35, was charged Tuesday with attempted murder and faces life in prison if convicted on the charges.

Following the shooting, cryptic posts were unearthed from Ortiz’s social media channels and provided an eye-opening look at overbearing celebrity fans.

RIHANNA’S BEVERLY HILLS HOME TARGETED IN BRAZEN DAYLIGHT SHOOTING

Rihanna, Ivanna Ortiz

Ivanna Lisette Ortiz allegedly drove up to Rihanna’s mansion and fired multiple rounds from a semiautomatic weapon at the house, police say. (Getty Images; AP; Ivanna Ortiz Facebook)

According to Ortiz’s Facebook, the self-employed suspect addressed Rihanna just weeks before the attack.  

“@badgalriri — Are you there?” she wrote. “’Cause I was waiting for your AIDS 5-head self to say something to me directly instead of sneaking around like you’re talking to me where I’m not at.”

In a Dec. 20 post, Ortiz wrote that she was “already through with Rihanna,” before referencing another major A-list star.

Rihanna's home

Authorities investigate the scene after multiple shots were fired at Rihanna’s Beverly Hills home. (ABC7 Los Angeles via AP)

Ivanna Ortiz

Ivanna Ortiz faces life in prison if convicted of the charges. (Ivanna Ortiz Facebook)

“I restricted that stupid b— Kim Kardashian,” she wrote. “Your turn hiding b—-, stop begging for a look.”

Additionally, Ortiz hosted a daily prayer for 60 days on her YouTube channel. In her videos, Ortiz read scripture and often referenced the devil’s presence.

ROSIE O’DONNELL CONSIDERS RESTRAINING ORDER AGAINST ALLEGED STALKER WHO HAS A ‘FREAKY FOCUS’ ON HER

“God’s presence is here, but so is the devil,” Ortiz said in one video posted in January. “That’s what we need to highlight. Sometimes we think it’s just trials and tribulations, but we need to know and understand that we have an enemy. You have an enemy. There’s an enemy…someone who wants to attack you. There’s someone who wants to see you lose. There’s someone who wants to kill you.”

“That’s the devil and I rebuke him in the name of Jesus,” she continued. “I’m not going to let him take my dignity or my personality or my character or my heart … That’s Satan. He wants to kill something beautiful, just like his Rihanna.”

Ortiz was charged with one count of attempted murder, 10 felony counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm and three felony counts of shooting at an inhabited dwelling or camper. 

Rihanna at an event for the Superbowl

Rihanna was allegedly home at the time of the incident. (Getty Images)

Her bail was set at $1.875 million. If convicted as charged, Ortiz faces up to life in prison.

“Opening fire in any populated neighborhood is extremely dangerous, puts lives at risk and will be fully prosecuted,” Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan J. Hochman said. “Thankfully, no one was injured in this shooting, but this careless violence will not be tolerated in our community. Such shooters will find their next destination to be our jails and prisons.”

ARIANA GRANDE SILENCES PHOTOGRAPHERS AT ‘WICKED’ PREMIERE DAYS AFTER FAN RUSHED RED CARPET

Rihanna’s brush with an unwelcome visitor isn’t anything new by Hollywood standards. Many celebrities – including Ariana Grande and Justin Bieber – have faced similar disturbing encounters.

During the worldwide “Wicked: For Good” press tour, Grande was accosted by an overzealous fan at the Singapore premiere.

Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Michelle Yeoh and Jeff Goldblum were walking the yellow carpet to celebrate the upcoming release of the second “Wicked” movie when the shocking moment happened.

A fan attending the premiere jumped over a barricade and rushed toward Grande, according to multiple videos from the event. Once he reached her, he put his arm around her neck before Grande’s co-star, Cynthia Erivo, immediately jumped in to pull him away.

ARIANA GRANDE RUSHED BY FAN AT ‘WICKED’ PREMIERE AFTER BARRICADE JUMP

The “7 Rings” singer received an unwanted surprise from a stalker in 2022 when he violated a restraining order and broke into her Montecito home on her 29th birthday, according to TMZ.

Aharon Zebulun Israel Brown pleaded guilty to stalking charges in 2024 and was sentenced to three years in prison.

Justin Bieber has had multiple stalkers, including a New Mexico man and his nephew who plotted to murder and castrate the pop singer in 2013.

Ariana Grande waves to the crowd at the Wicked Singapore premiere

A fan jumped onto the red carpet at the “Wicked: For Good” premiere and grabbed Ariana Grande. (Suhaimi Abdullah/Getty Images)

Justin Bieber walks Grammys red carpet

Justin Bieber has been outspoken against uncomfortable fan interactions. (Amy Sussman/Getty Images)

The plan began after a man in prison attempted to contact Bieber with no response. He then recruited his nephew and another man to drive to the “Love Yourself” singer’s home and castrate him with garden shears before murdering him, according to reports.

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Bieber was outspoken about his feelings toward people who wait outside his home in a social media post in 2020.

“How can you convince yourself it’s not completely inappropriate and disrespectful to wait outside my home to gawk, stare and take pictures as I walk into my apartment,” he wrote at the time. “This is not a hotel. It’s my home.”

Taylor Swift has had a number of stalkers throughout her career. Most recently, a Brooklyn man stalked the singer at her NYC home and “across multiple states,” according to police. The man was arrested on July 2 and charged with “stalking and criminal trespass.”

Taylor Swift poses on Grammys red carpet

Taylor Swift feels like she faces “imminent harm” by her alleged stalker. (Getty Images)

“You’re dead you know,” the man allegedly spoke into Swift’s Tribeca home intercom on June 12, 2021. “You’re holding her prisoner and I need to set her free.”

In 2025, the “Honey” singer was granted a restraining order against an ex-convict who allegedly visited her Los Angeles home several times in the last year.

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Fox News Digital’s Christina Dugan Ramirez and Lauryn Overhultz contributed to this report.



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Office for Students faces judicial review over public funding for bible colleges | Office for Students

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A university regulator in England has failed to investigate potential breaches of laws protecting academic freedom at a dozen theological colleges and is now facing legal action, the Guardian has learned.

The National Secular Society says it is preparing to pursue the Office for Students (OfS) through the courts to act on complaints first made five years ago, arguing that the colleges are ineligible for public funding or government-backed student loans because of their commitment to theological doctrine.

The society said the 12 bible or theological colleges received more than £80m through the government-backed Student Loans Company and £1m in funding from the OfS since 2018.

The OfS said it was unable to comment due to the pending legal action, but Stephen Evans, the NSS’s chief executive, said his organisation had become frustrated at the OfS’s refusal to respond or act, despite multiple contacts and meetings with the regulator since 2021.

Evans said: “It’s a case of the regulator not doing its job properly. These colleges don’t appear consistent with the OfS requirements on academic freedom and freedom of expression, so they shouldn’t have been registered in the first place.

“The lack of transparency is striking. If institutions are built around enforcing a confessional worldview rather than academic freedom, then they shouldn’t be registered by the OfS or receiving public funds.

“Since we’ve raised this with the OfS, as far as we can tell, nothing appears to have been done about it.”

Higher education providers in England must register with the OfS to access student loans, and are required to uphold freedom of speech and academic freedom.

The NSS has told the OfS that it will seek a judicial review to reveal what action it has taken against the colleges, including one whose “college law” included a provision: “To promote the fear of the Almighty God through education and information dissemination.” Another college’s code of conduct for students lists “sexual intercourse outside of marriage” as grounds for disciplinary action.

The legal action comes as the OfS is waiting on a crucial high court judgment on its investigation into the University of Sussex, after the OfS fined Sussex a record £585,000 for alleged breaches of regulations.

The NSS’s action is supported by Prof Chris Higgins, a former vice-chancellor of Durham University, who said the complaint does not apply to theological colleges, such as those run by the Church of England, which are not registered with the OfS.

“As far as we are concerned the OfS made a mistake in registering these independent bible colleges in the first place because their governing documents specifically restrict academic freedom and freedom of speech,” Higgins said.

“Many of these bible colleges [also] offer degrees which have nothing to do with training for the ministry … such as courses in business or the performing arts. Yet they still require students and staff to adhere to a statement of faith and worship together – something which has recently been outlawed as indoctrination by the supreme court in relation to communal worship in schools in Northern Ireland.”

The NSS’s pre-action letter to the OfS mentions three of the colleges: Moorlands College in Dorset; Regents Theological College, a training centre of the Elim Pentecostal church in Malvern; and Christ the Redeemer College in Harrow.

The Rev Michelle Nunn, principal of Regents Theological College, said: [The college] seeks to operate in accordance with UK equality and freedom of speech legislation and the Office for Students regulations. Students are admitted based on academic criteria and choose to study with us because our programmes align with their academic and vocational interests.

“We encourage robust intellectual inquiry and debate in our classes and welcome respectful engagement with differing perspectives.”

Moorlands College and Christ the Redeemer College did not take up offers to respond after being contacted by the Guardian.



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Prince William honors Princess Diana with heartfelt Mother’s Day tribute

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Prince William is honoring his late mother Princess Diana on Mother’s Day in the U.K. 

On Sunday, the 43-year-old royal took to social media to share a never-before-seen photo of him and the late princess.

“Remembering my mother, today and every day. Thinking of all those who are remembering someone they love today. Happy Mother’s Day. W,” he captioned the photo on Instagram, which featured a young William and Diana in a field of flowers. 

PRINCE WILLIAM HAUNTED BY CHILDHOOD PAIN AS HE FACES NEW FAMILY WORRIES: EXPERT

Prince William, Princess Diana

Prince William paid tribute to his late mother Princess Diana on Mother’s Day in the U.K. (Getty Images)

Princess Diana died on Aug. 31, 1997. At the time, the 36-year-old was being chased by paparazzi in Paris. Her companion, Dodi Fayed, and their chauffeur, Henri Paul, also perished in the crash. Prince William was 15 years old at the time of his mother’s death. 

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In a 2024, two-part documentary, “Prince William: We Can End Homelessness,” royal experts spoke at length about Diana’s impact on both Prince William and his brother Prince Harry. 

“Princess Diana has been influencing Prince William a lot,” Roya Nikkhah, royals editor for The Sunday Times and co-host of the podcast “The Royals with Roya and Kate,” told Fox News Digital at the time. 

Princess Dian on Neckter Island

Diana, with Harry and William in 1990, died in 1997.  (Getty Images)

“What’s very interesting is you hear him in his own words saying that he’s been thinking a lot about, ‘What do people want my role to be? What do people want from me?’” she shared. “And he says, ‘I’ve been thinking about that a lot recently and taking guidance and inspiration from my mother now more than ever before.’”

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A split side-by-side image of Prince William and Princess Diana looking serious.

Princess Diana has had a massive influence on Prince William throughout the years.  (Ian Vogler – WPA Pool/Getty Images; Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images)

“Diana’s vision – taking her young sons to homeless shelters when they were very young, showing them the other side of life, her pioneering work in all sorts of areas like mental health, HIV and AIDS and homelessness – it’s had a big impact on him,” said Nikkhah. “It’s still shaping his role now as heir to the throne and as a father. He talks about how she’s introduced him and Harry to those issues and how he’s starting to introduce his children to them as well.”

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“She’s still got a huge influence,” Nikkhah added.

In the documentary, William recalled how, growing up, his mother took him and Prince Harry to The Passage, which works to end homelessness.

“I was a bit anxious as to what to expect,” the royal recalled, as quoted by People magazine. “My mother went about her usual part of making everyone feel relaxed and having a laugh and joking with everyone. I remember at the time kind of thinking, ‘Well, if everyone’s not got a home, they’re all going to be really sad.’ But it was incredible how happy an environment it was.”



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Cory Booker calls both parties ‘feckless’ for ceding war powers to Trump | US-Israel war on Iran

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Democratic US senator Cory Booker has criticized both his own political party as well as its Republican counterpart for being “feckless” in ceding congressional war powers to Donald Trump, saying that their decision could embolden the president to unilaterally attack Cuba, North Korea and other countries.

“I’m going to be one of those Democrats [who] say I think both parties have been feckless in allowing the growth of the power of the presidency,” Booker said on Sunday on CNN’s State of the Union.

The New Jersey senator said nothing Barack Obama did while in the White House – or that even Trump did before his first presidency ended in defeat to Joe Biden – was “in any way related to what we’re seeing right now”.

Booker’s comments alluded to US military strikes Trump has ordered in Nigeria, Venezuela and Iran since Christmas. He called the war that the US and Israel started in Iran on 28 February – when a missile strike killed Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – “the biggest military engagement of our country since the war in Afghanistan”.

Meanwhile, during that stretch, Trump has also renewed threats to seize Greenland for the US by military force if necessary.

Booker’s fellow Democrats in the US House put forth a measure calling for a stop to US military action in Iran. But without support from members of Trump’s Republican party, the measure failed, and the military campaign in Iran has continued.

One day prior, the US Senate rejected a war powers resolution in a 47-53 vote that largely followed party lines.

Booker pointed to how the spiraling conflict has not only roiled regional stability but oil markets as well. The strait of Hormuz, a waterway crucial to world trade, has been closed for two weeks as of Sunday.

“Literally, you see with what’s going on in the strait of Hormuz right now as the biggest gumming up of the oil markets we have ever seen,” Booker said to CNN. “The consequences strategically for us moving so many assets in the region means that we’re endangering the assets we have necessarily and potentially in other areas.”

Booker alluded to the deaths of 13 US military members amid reported as of Sunday amid the Iran conflict, saying: “This is a massive military undertaking, costing American taxpayers billions and billions of dollars and tragically costing 13 lives.”

He recognized that previous presidents had strayed from limits on their power to engage in war but maintained Trump’s Iran campaign had exceeded that precedent.

“At this magnitude, at this cost, why is Congress just laying down and doing nothing?” Booker said. “Because, if we allow this to happen, then we give Trump the permission to say, ‘OK, finished with Venezuela, I went to Iran, now I’m going to go to Cuba, now I’m going to go to North Korea.’

“It is outrageous and never conceived of that we could have this level of a military engagement without the people’s house, Congress, doing something about it.”



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Senate should eliminate filibuster to counter far-left institutions

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The filibuster, which is in essence a 60-vote threshold to pass legislation in the United States Senate, is a well-intentioned instrument meant to protect the rights of states, markets and individuals from excessive federal law. But it must now be abandoned.

Under the filibuster, the Senate can only act when a piece of legislation is overwhelmingly popular, and in the current case of the Save America Act, which has widespread public support, not even then.

When the Senate abdicates this power, the power doesn’t disappear, rather it is vested in non-governmental institutions that we are meant to trust are working in the interest of the country and its people.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., split

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Senate Democrats bucked Senate Majority Leader John Thune’s, R-S.D., attempt to prevent a partial government shutdown.  (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg via Getty Images ; Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

So, for example, without the Save America Act’s limits on mail-in ballots, non-government entities, like Mark Zuckererg and Meta back in 2020, are free to influence elections by offering mail-in ballot assistance, but only in their politically approved areas.

THUNE GUARANTEES VOTER ID BILL TO HIT THE SENATE DESPITE SCHUMER, DEM OPPOSITION: ‘WE WILL HAVE A VOTE’

In an age in which we had trusted institutions of education, homeless outreach or monitoring of elections, this might be fine, even admirable. But we do not live in such an age. In our age, far-left progressives have captured almost every institution the Senate willingly hands its power over to.

In the 1720s, England had almost no government-run prisons. Instead, wardensips were purchased, and the warden would profit from prisoner fees.

In 1729, an architect named Robert Castell was thrown into debtors’ prison, but could not pay the warden’s fee. He was put in a room with a man who had smallpox, contracted the disease and died.

SEN LEE DARES DEMOCRATS TO REVIVE TALKING FILIBUSTER OVER SAVE ACT, SLAMMING CRITICISM AS ‘PARANOID FANTASY’

Outrage ensued, and even Sir Robert Walpole, arguably England’s first prime minister who far favored indirect management to direct government control of institutions, began to see the need for state-run prisons.

Was the flawed, non-governmental prison system of Georgian England really so different from our own federal government handing millions of dollars to fraudulent day care centers in Minneapolis or no-show hospice care sites in LA?

Even short of fraud, our leading institutions have had incredible negative impacts in areas like the trans movement, where basically every single one of them agreed that children should be subjected to surgery and hormones to change their gender.

DAVID MARCUS: SEN THUNE HAS NO IDEA HOW MAD THE GOP BASE IS AT HIM

It was not until executive orders, state legislatures and the courts stood up to trans madness that the fever began to cool, and now, hospitals are quietly removing those “services.”

It was the government, by and of the people, that put in check the shadow government of far-left institutions that nobody ever voted for.

Castell was not the first person to be abused or to die in the very old private English prison system, so why did his case suddenly cause so much furor and eventual change?

REPUBLICANS, TRUMP RUN INTO SENATE ROADBLOCK ON VOTER ID BILL

Well, about 25 years earlier something had arrived on the scene in London called a newspaper, suddenly, not just the literate Londoner, but the man who heard the news read aloud at the coffeehouse or tavern had an immediate window into corruption.

Likewise, 25 years ago, we saw the rise of online news, and suddenly the gatekeepers could no longer hide the evils of the institutions on whose boards they often sat.

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Suddenly stories of voter fraud, or detransitioning, or absurd DEI lessons in our schools could not be covered up. The rot at the core of our institutions was laid bare for all to see, just as the cruelty of England’s prisons were 300 years ago.

THE HITCHHIKER’S GUIDE TO THE ‘TALKING FILIBUSTER’ AND THE SAVE ACT

Today, Senate Majority Leader John Thune faces a choice similar to Walpole’s in the 18th Century. He would much prefer to keep the federal government out of the lives of Americans, but the institutions that do operate in their lives are broken and corrupt.

While it is the House of Representatives, not the Senate, that is meant to be the vehicle of popular will in our system, that Senate is not meant to be a perpetual roadblock to the will of the people’s house even in the face of massive popular support.

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Sadly, that is what the filibuster has become today, an excuse for our legislators to do nothing as non-government institutions continue to firm their grip on American society.

There might have once been a time when the filibuster made sense, but now is not that time. Now is the time for the people’s government to take back power from our broken, far-left institutions.

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Twelve arrests at al-Quds Day rally and counterprotest in London | UK news

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Twelve people were arrested as hundreds joined a pro-Palestinian al-Quds Day demonstration on one side of the Thames, while hundreds more gathered on the opposite bank to back Israeli and American attacks on Iran.

At least 1,000 police officers were drafted in to keep the two rival protests apart. Lambeth Bridge, the nearest river crossing to each rally, remained closed on Sunday afternoon.

The Metropolitan police assistant commissioner Ade Adelekan said: “We made 12 arrests including for showing support for a proscribed organisation, affray and for threatening or abusive behaviour. We are also investigating chants made by a speaker at the al-Quds protest.”

The home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, granted a police request to ban al-Quds protesters from marching, for the first time since 2012. She said: “I expect to see the full force of the law applied to anyone spreading hatred and division instead of exercising their right to peaceful protest.”

Police warned the al-Quds demonstrators on the Albert Embankment that they would arrest those displaying placards, flags or chanting that “cross the line into hate crime or support of a proscribed organisation”.

Some did carry placards of Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, or his father and predecessor, Ali Khamenei, who was killed on the first day of the war.

A woman hands out sweets to counterprotesters. Photograph: Kevin Coombs/Reuters

There was also a heavy police presence over the Thames at Millbank at a counterprotest co-organised by Stop the Hate and the Lion Guard of Iran group.

Some protesters carried both an Israeli flag and the flag of the Iranian state before the 1979 Islamic revolution to show support for Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iran’s former pro-western monarch.

Georgie Stagg, 70, a retired arts administrator from Lewisham who was wearing a Palestinian keffiyeh, walked past the pro-Israeli demonstration on her way to the al-Quds rally. She was quickly moved on by a police officer, who said: “Because of what you are wearing, unfortunately I’m going to have to ask you to move that way.”

Stagg said: “We’ve marched on al-Quds Day for 40 years, and I have never seen any trouble. There was friction last year, but that’s because the pro-Israel people were down at Parliament Square, along with a lot of far right who were causing the trouble.”

Stagg added: “You can’t criticise the Iranian government for being anti-democratic when we’ve got a government here that’s arresting people holding placards. We were told you couldn’t say ‘from the river to the sea’, and you can’t say global intifada – that just means uprising.”

The rival demonstrations exposed bitter divisions between Iranians in the UK. One of the pro-Israeli protesters carried a banner saying: “Qud you take your terrorism and fuck off.”

Raham Moshami 52, fled Iran in 2010 after being tortured in jail. She showed scars on her forehead as proof. “We are here to support our people, because the Iranian government is holding my people hostage,” she said.

She added: “Netanyahu and Trump are trying to help us. We have to remove a cancer, because the Iranian government is like a cancer. Pahlavi is a good man, he’s very educated.”

Moshami also dismissed the al-Quds demonstrators as being in the pay of the Iranian government, without offering any evidence for the claim.

On the other side of the Thames, Fereydun Bahrami, 71, had travelled by coach from Glasgow with 50 other Iranians to join the al-Quds protest, which is named after the Arabic name for Jerusalem and was organised by the Islamic Human Rights Commission.

At least 1,000 police officers were drafted in to keep the two rival protests apart on opposite banks of the Thames. Photograph: Toby Shepheard/Reuters

“We are here to celebrate al-Quds Day and also protest against the war,” he said. Bahrami, who left Iran to study engineering in Glasgow where he went on to run a metalworks, was carrying a placard that read “Stop Using UK bases to bomb Iran”.

Gesturing across the river he said: “They are brainwashed to support Israel, rather than their families under bombardment.”

He added: “I’m very sad about this war. At the beginning America killed 168 girls in a school. For the last 47 years Iran hasn’t attacked anyone.”

Bahrami objected to government ministers suggesting the demonstration was a hate march. “This is a love walk, how can it be a hate march?” he said. “We love human beings. We love Jewish people. We are Muslims, we are bound by religion to love everybody else. There is no hate in this crowd here.”

Salma, 60, who works for a freight company in London, said she supported Iranian retaliation against targets in the Gulf. She said: “Fighting back and standing up to the Americans is right – Trump had no right to go in and take out an 86-year-old leader.”

She added: “You can’t have one side being allowed to bomb schools and then worry about ships waiting in the strait of Hormuz. If petrol prices are going up, who cares? Because at the end of the day, this was created by the US.”

Adelekan said fewer people attended the march than anticipated due to the restrictions. “Our policing plan worked, with both groups kept apart and we saw no attempts from either side to breach conditions by marching. Both sets dispersed as planned from 1500 hours,” he said.

“The restrictions and conditions meant many people chose to stay away and not to attend the protest or counterprotest.”



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Keane says US could seize Iran’s key oil hub ‘at a time of our choosing’

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Retired four-star Army Gen. Jack Keane said the United States could choose to seize Iran’s main oil export hub, warning the regime that its most critical economic lifeline remains vulnerable as U.S. forces continue dismantling Tehran’s military capabilities.

“We can take Kharg Island at a time of our choosing, and we choose not to take that now,” Keane told “Sunday Morning Futures.”

“Would we take it in the future? Those options are there for the president, likely towards the end of this? Because, if we take Kharg Island, either we occupy it or blockade it, there’s a number of things that we can do.”

IRAN HOLDS WORLD ENERGY HOSTAGE WITH ‘NIGHTMARE’ STRAIT OF HORMUZ SEA MINES, FORMER CENTCOM OFFICIAL WARNS

Kharg Island Iran

Kharg Island is a major source of Iranian oil exports. (Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Keane said such a move would effectively put the Iranian regime in “checkmate,” given how heavily its economy depends on the island.

“Now we [would] own all of their major assets. It’s 50% of their budget, 60% of the revenue, 80, 90% of the distribution points for their oil,” he said.

BEFORE-AND-AFTER SATELLITE IMAGERY OFFERS A RARE LOOK AT DAMAGE INSIDE IRAN

Gen. Jack Keane seen on "Fox News Sunday" set discussing Russia

Fox News senior strategic analyst Gen. Jack Keane [Ret.] appears during a segment on “Fox News Sunday.”  (FOX NEWS)

“So it is clearly a strategic asset, but we will do that at a time of our choosing.”

Keane’s remarks come as the U.S. and Israel continue their military campaign against Iran, targeting the regime’s offensive capabilities and threatening further action against its energy infrastructure.

The remarks also come after President Donald Trump said Friday that the U.S. had carried out a bombing raid on the island.

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“Moments ago, at my direction, the United States Central Command executed one of the most powerful bombing raids in the history of the Middle East, and totally obliterated every MILITARY target in Iran’s crown jewel, Kharg Island,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

The island has a loading capacity of about 7 million barrels per day, and roughly 90% of Iran’s crude oil exports pass through it. Most of those exports are shipped to China and India, underscoring the island’s importance not only to Iran’s energy trade, but also to broader global oil markets.

Fox News’ Amanda Macias contributed to this report.



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Pakistan targets militant hideouts in Afghanistan as conflict continues | World news

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Pakistan has targeted militant hideouts in Afghanistan’s Kandahar province overnight, as the fighting that erupted between the two neighbours late last month showed no signs of abating.

The cross-border attacks, which have included Pakistani airstrikes in Kabul, are the deadliest yet between the countries. Islamabad has referred to the conflict as an “open war”, adding to concerns about regional stability as the US-Israeli conflict with Iran engulfs the Middle East and beyond.

In a post on X, Pakistan’s information minister, Attaullah Tarar, said the military had struck equipment storage facilities and “technical support infrastructure” in the attacks.

The Afghan government said one of the buildings destroyed was used by its security guards. Photograph: Qudratullah Razwan/EPA

The Afghan government spokesperson, Zabihullah Mujahid, said Pakistan had hit two locations: a site used by security guards during the day that was empty at night and a drug rehabilitation centre that suffered slight damage. He said there were no casualties, but that the strikes showed Pakistan was “continuing to invade and fuel the fire of war”.

Afghanistan’s defence ministry said it carried out an attack on an army camp in Pakistan’s South Waziristan area on Sunday in retaliation for the strikes in Kandahar. It claimed the attack destroyed most of the camp’s command centre and other facilities, and inflicted heavy casualties on the Pakistani military.

Pakistan’s information ministry rejected the claims as “propaganda”, saying that a small drone was struck down and that “no military installation or infrastructure was hit”.

Afghanistan also said it carried out operations inside Pakistan across the border from Kunar and Nangarhar provinces, claiming to have captured a Pakistani military outpost and killed several soldiers. Pakistan also rejected those claims.

Pakistan accuses Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers of harbouring militant groups, particularly the Pakistani Taliban, or Tehreek-e-Taliban, which has staged attacks in Pakistan. Afghanistan denies the charge, insisting it does not allow its territory to be used against other countries.

The latest fighting erupted in late February, when Afghanistan launched a cross-border attack into Pakistan in retaliation for Pakistani airstrikes inside Afghanistan days earlier that it said had killed only civilians. The clashes upended a ceasefire that had been brokered by Qatar last October after fighting that had killed dozens of soldiers, civilians and suspected militants.

Pakistan bombs Kabul in latest escalation with Afghanistan – video

On Sunday, a mortar fired from Afghanistan destroyed a home in Bajaur, a district in northwestern Pakistan, killing at least four members of the same family and wounding two others, the local government official Adnan Khan said.

Both sides have accused the other of targeting civilians and dozens have been killed. Pakistan’s president, Asif Ali Zardari, on Saturday said Afghanistan’s government had “crossed a red line” by launching drone attacks on civilian areas in Pakistan, and hours later the country reportedly conducted strikes on an Afghan drone storage facility.



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