Reference #18.4d560e17.1778590985.1513ffec
https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.4d560e17.1778590985.1513ffec
Reference #18.4d560e17.1778590985.1513ffec
https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.4d560e17.1778590985.1513ffec
Philadelphia Eagles offensive lineman Fred Johnson faced damning allegations from a pregnant ex-girlfriend.
Alyssa Okada said in a video posted to her TikTok account on Friday that Johnson kicked her out of their home to pursue other women on a dating app while she was eight months pregnant.
“Just a quick question. Hypothetically, if a man were to kick out his eight-month pregnant girlfriend and unborn daughter and to then be on Hinge the very next day looking for women to ‘have fun with,’” she said. “Hypothetically, you would not think that that type of man is a good man or good father. You would probably not think that that type of man has integrity, or morals or any form of decency, right? Because I’m just trying to see if we’re all on the same page.
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!

Fred Johnson #74 of the Philadelphia Eagles exits the field during an NFL wild card playoff game against the San Francisco 49ers at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pa., on Jan. 11, 2026. (Cooper Neill/Getty Images)
“And, furthermore, hypothetically, if these women were to be aware of the fact that this man has an eight-month pregnant, now, ex-girlfriend and child on the way and still decide they want to speak to and have fun with him, hypothetically, you would think that kind of woman also has no absolute respect for herself, no integrity no morals and no decency, hypothetically.
“If, hypothetically, those situations were true, those would be some pretty s—y f—ing people in my opinion. But just wondering what you guys think.”
Okada was seen with pink suitcases in her backseat as she recorded the video. The clip garnered more than 4.2 million views on the social media platform.
She followed up with another video on Monday.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
“I just truly think it’s time that people stop blaming women for the partners they choose and start blaming partners for pretending to be something that they’re not,” she added. “I am so used to people’s judgments and opinions and whatever they want to say about what I share on the internet but what I’ve realized is that there are so many people quick to say ‘Well, what did you do in the situation?’ or ‘You knew what you were getting yourself into,’ or ‘you knew who you picked.’ That is not true.
“No woman ever knowingly goes into a situation thinking this person is going to hurt me, this person is going to lie to me, this person is going to turn out to be a completely different person than the one he is showing me. I think it’s really sick that people put the blame on women for truly just believing in and trusting the man that they fell in love with. That’s just something I continue to see and truly it hurts to see the way women are consistently invalidated and blamed for somebody else’s actions.

Fred Johnson of the Philadelphia Eagles looks on against the Las Vegas Raiders at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia on Dec. 14, 2025. (Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)
“At the end of the day having a kind heart or having love for somebody and hope in your heart and just being truly hopeful that the person they’re showing you is truly who they are, should not be something that is then held against you at the end when they completely take their mask off and are an entirely different person than the one that you fell in love with.”
Johnson didn’t directly respond to the allegations, but fired off a cryptic message on his Instagram Stories, according to the New York Post.
“The hardest flex isn’t revenge,” one message read. “It’s watching someone who tried to destroy you realize you survived without ever mentioning their name.”
Okada posted a gender reveal video in January and announced in December the two were expecting a baby.
“God ain’t bring me this far just to leave me,” Johnson added on his Instagram Stories. “This to shall pass.”

Fred Johnson of the Philadelphia Eagles looks on from the sideline during the national anthem before an NFL wild card playoff game against the San Francisco 49ers at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pa., on Jan. 11, 2026. (Cooper Neill/Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Fox News Digital reached out to Johnson’s reps for comment.
Johnson joined the Eagles before the 2023 season. He was on the team for their Super Bowl win against the Kansas City Chiefs to end the 2024 season. He also played for the Cincinnati Bengals and Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Cyber-Crime
Six-minute supply chain blitz pushed 84 malicious versions with credential theft and disk-wiping code
An attacker has published 84 malicious versions of official TanStack npm packages, with the impact including credential theft, self-propagation, and complete disk wipe of an infected host.
The attack is part of a wave of attacks across npm and PyPI, continuing the Mini Shai-Hulud campaign. Supply chain security company Socket reports that other compromised packages include the OpenSearch client, Mistral AI, UiPath, and Guardrails AI.
Malicious npm packages for TanStack, an open source application stack, were published between 19:20 and 19:26 UTC on May 11. The attack was detected and reported within 30 minutes by StepSecurity, triggering incident response and npm deprecation. GitHub published a security advisory at 21:30 UTC, including a list of affected packages.
TanStack founder Tanner Linsley published a postmortem describing how the attacker used a malicious commit on a fork to create a pull request on the TanStack repository, causing scripts to auto-run and build the malware. This poisoned the GitHub Actions cache in what Linsley said is a variant of a known GitHub Action vulnerability discovered in 2024. The malware then extracted the npm OpenID Connect (OIDC) token, used for trusted npm publishing, from runner memory using the same code used to compromise tj-actions in an attack last year.
No TanStack maintainers were compromised.
StepSecurity has a detailed analysis of the attack, noting that the payload “reads files from over 100 hardcoded paths” including those that may contain cloud credentials, SSH (secure shell) keys, developer tool configuration files, crypto wallets, VPN configurations, messaging credentials, and shell history. Shell history may contain tokens and passwords pasted into the terminal.
Security researcher Nicholas Carlini warned the payload “installs a dead-man’s switch… as a system user service.” The service checks whether a stolen GitHub token has been revoked and, if it has, runs a command to wipe the local disk completely.
Socket’s write-up includes recommended actions such as rotating all secrets on any affected system. GitHub’s advisory suggests “any developer or CI environment that ran npm install, pnpm install, or yarn install against an affected version on 2026-05-11 should be considered compromised.”
The Mistral AI has also been reported reported on GitHub, and at the time of writing, the Mistral AI project is quarantined on PyPI.
This attack is still evolving and will likely have a far-reaching impact. It confirms again that running everyday commands like npm install is unsafe, that for all their efforts major package repositories including npm and PyPI are still not secured, and that software development is now best done in isolated, ephemeral environments. ®
Markets took a severe beating on Tuesday, hammered by a toxic mix of surging crude oil prices, a rupee in freefall and unrelenting foreign selling — all against the backdrop of a geopolitical situation that shows no sign of cooling. What made this session stand out was not just the scale of losses, but their breadth: not a single major sector closed in the green.
“…bears have gained control in the near term…the index now appears headed towards the gap-fill zone of 23,080–23,100,” said Virat Jagad, Senior Technical Research Analyst at Bonanza, pointing to the next major support area after Nifty decisively breached the 23,500 mark.
The Nifty 50 closed at 23,379.55, down 436.30 points or 1.83 per cent — its steepest single-session decline since March 30, 2026 — while the Sensex shed 1,456 points or 1.92 per cent to settle at 74,559.24. The index opened with a gap-down at 23,722.60, hit an intraday high of 23,757.55 in early trade, before sellers dragged it to a session low of 23,348.40. The close near the day’s low told its own story. The broader market fared even worse — Nifty Midcap 100 fell 2.54 per cent and Nifty Smallcap 100 tumbled 3.17 per cent, reflecting widespread risk aversion well beyond blue-chip counters. Market breadth was heavily skewed, with 463 of the Nifty 500 stocks closing in the red.
Fueling the rout was Brent crude, which climbed above $107 a barrel as stalled US–Iran negotiations — with Donald Trump publicly dismissing Tehran’s latest proposal as “garbage” and describing ceasefire prospects as being on “massive life support” — kept supply disruption fears firmly alive. The Strait of Hormuz, a critical global energy artery, remained effectively at a near-standstill. For India, a heavily oil-import-dependent economy, elevated crude translates directly into a wider current account deficit, higher inflation and pressure on forex reserves — concerns that have been amplified by Prime Minister Modi’s recent remarks flagging the economic strain from elevated import bills.
The rupee bore the brunt of this anxiety, slipping to a fresh record low of 95.63 against the US dollar — down roughly 40 paise in the session — as FII outflows intensified and dollar demand surged. “…if oil prices continue to rise, USDINR can push higher, though RBI intervention is expected at elevated levels,” noted one analyst, with immediate resistance pegged at 96 and support at 95.
IT stocks emerged as the session’s biggest casualty, with Nifty IT declining nearly 4 per cent. Beyond the macro headwinds, the sector faced a sector-specific shock: OpenAI’s announcement of “The Deployment Company,” a new enterprise AI implementation unit backed by the acquisition of consulting firm Tomoro, stoked fears that AI majors are moving aggressively into territory long held by Indian IT firms. Infosys, TCS, HCLTech and Tech Mahindra were among the hardest hit. Nifty Realty and Consumer Durables also posted sharp losses. On the other end, ONGC and Hindalco managed to buck the trend, with upstream oil companies widely seen as beneficiaries of elevated energy prices.
India VIX climbed a further 3.92 per cent to close at 19.28, building on a 10 per cent spike from the previous session, keeping option premiums elevated and market participants firmly on edge.
“…market sentiment is likely to remain fragile until there is greater clarity on geopolitical developments and stability in energy prices,” said Siddhartha Khemka, Head of Research, Wealth Management, at Motilal Oswal Financial Services.
Eyes now turn to India’s April 2026 retail inflation data, due from MoSPI, which will be closely parsed for signals on the RBI’s rate trajectory at a time when crude and currency pressures are already stoking inflation concerns. Any meaningful progress — or further breakdown — in US–Iran talks will likely set the tone for the sessions ahead.
Published on May 12, 2026
The Trump administration’s decision to restrict use of federal funds for fentanyl test strips, in what officials described as a “clear shift away from harm reduction”, could have fatal consequences, experts and critics have warned.
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (Samhsa) issued an open letter in April ordering an end to the use of its funding for all substance testing strips, including fentanyl, xylazine and medetomidine, the latest novel street drug to wreak havoc across the US.
The letter claimed that testing strips facilitate “illicit drug use” and are “incompatible with federal laws”.
But the move could substantially reduce the availability of drug-testing strips for people at risk of overdose amid an ever-changing drug supply, harm reduction advocates warned.
“It’s going to kill people,” said Maia Szalavitz, a New York Times columnist and the author of Undoing Drugs: The Untold Story of Harm Reduction and the Future of Addiction. “God forbid you should have a safe supply of something that might get you high.”
She described the pro-abstinence US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, as “somebody who represents himself as being in recovery” but is in fact “the worst thing that has happened to the addictions field for decades and decades”.
Use of federal funds to purchase fentanyl test strips was first permitted in 2021 by the Biden administration in an effort to reduce overdose deaths from the inadvertent consumption of the potent synthetic opioid fentanyl, which drug dealers mix into heroin with other drugs to increase their profits.
At the time, the interim Samhsa leader said the decision “will save lives”. But, the new administration has a more anti-drug ideological bent, said Szalavitz.
“What we keep hearing from the administration is that they believe that fentanyl test strips promote drug use,” said Daniel Fishbein, policy manager of federal affairs for the Drug Policy Alliance advocacy group. “Based on the research that I’ve reviewed, that’s simply not the case.”
However, in the National Drug Control Strategy published last week, the White House offered a completely different view – suggesting a fragmentation of views and influence across the administration. “Rapid test strips and similar technologies that detect fentanyl and other drugs are an important tool that should be legal,” it said.
Yet in light of the Samhsa guidance, some states have already paused statewide purchasing and distribution of fentanyl test strips to comply with the new guidance, which Fishbein described as a “180-degree turn” after Samhsa said in July that its funding could be used in such a way.
“These are tools that can be used to help people make more informed decisions about their drug use,” he added.
Emanuel Sferios, the founder of non-profit DanceSafe, a leading supplier of testing strips, said the move was an attack on the philosophy of harm reduction, which acknowledges that people will take drugs and therefore the most rational and humane course of action is to ensure they do so as safely as possible.
When Biden allowed federal grant recipients to use funds for fentanyl test strips, which cost less than a dollar each, DanceSafe’s sales swiftly quintupled, he said.
“We now have these reactionary, anti-drug authoritarians in control who don’t see the value of harm reduction and how the approach has saved so many lives,” said Sferios, who now heads the non-profit Grassroots Harm Reduction, another test strip distributor. “In those small places where you can still find heroin, these are absolutely lifesaving strips.”
It is generally difficult for people who use drugs to find pure heroin on the streets of the US, given the widespread introduction of the more dangerous opioid fentanyl, which even in tiny quantities can kill people with no opioid tolerance.
Now, after the flesh-destroying drug xylazine was mixed into the supply several years ago, the potent sedative medetomidine – which has excruciating withdrawal symptoms – is becoming more prevalent.
But medetomidine withdrawal can lead to a heart attack, and some people who use drugs may not have been aware the sedative was in their system had it not been for the test strips available at harm reduction hubs across major cities.
“Three programs that purchase [test strips] from us are scrambling right now to get other funding sources,” said Sferios. “This is going to be very significant.”
The Kentucky Harm Reduction Coalition was reportedly informed it would be losing a $400,000 federal grant. It distributed almost 50,000 fentanyl test strips in the first three months of the year and only has a month’s supply left.
Congress only recently recognized the value of drug-testing strips in a December law signed off by Donald Trump. The Support for Patients and Communities Reauthorization Act authorizes state and tribal opioid response grantees to facilitate “access to products used to prevent overdose deaths by detecting the presence of one or more substances, such as fentanyl and xylazine test strips”.
“The new guidance is a violation of congressional intent,” said Fishbein. “Test strips are supported by Congress as a public health tool.”
Last year, the president issued an executive order which also banned the use of federal grant funding on safer drug-consumption facilities, which first opened in the US in 2021 in New York City. Within two years, they had reversed 1,000 overdoses.
“No HHS funding can be used to support ‘overdose hotlines’ that have a primary function of facilitating illicit drugs use by providing people using drugs a virtual or telephonic companion while they are using drugs,” the Samhsa letter said.
The Biden administration was applauded for backing some public health measures which contributed to a significant decline in overdose deaths, by 26% from 2023 to 2024. But even while almost 80,000 people die from overdoses each year, Samhsa has cut $350m in addiction and overdose prevention funding since Trump came to office.
In recent weeks, however, Trump surprised drug reform advocates in issuing an executive order to accelerate research and widen access to psychedelic therapies, while removing cannabis from the strictest drug control bracket.
A HHS spokesperson said access to overdose reversal medications such as naloxone was being expanded and that it was critical that taxpayer funds went on “effective, commonsense solutions that have been proven to keep people out of an endless cycle of addiction and save lives and moves them into a life of recovery”.
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Researchers recently recovered 42 lost pages from Codex H, one of the world’s most important early New Testament manuscripts.
Codex H, short for Codex Hierosolymitanus, is a palimpsest — meaning parts of the manuscript were reused and rewritten over the centuries.
Researchers were tipped off after discovering the manuscript had been re-inked, leaving faint mirror-image traces of the original text.
RARE MEDIEVAL BIBLE RETURNS TO ISRAEL FOR PUBLIC EXHIBIT AFTER CENTURIES-LONG JOURNEY
Then they used modern technology, including multispectral imaging, to recover “ghost” text that isn’t visible to the human eye.
The discovery was announced by the University of Glasgow in an April 24 press release.

Researchers have recovered 42 previously lost pages from Codex H, an early New Testament manuscript that contains a copy of the Letters of St. Paul. (Damianos Kasotakis; Fine Art Images/Heritage Images via Getty Images)
“The fragments show how 6th-century scribes corrected, annotated and interacted with sacred texts,” the university noted in its release, with the physical state of the manuscript revealing “how sacred works were reused and repurposed once they fell into disrepair.”
The text, which does not contain any new scripture, dates back to the sixth century and is a copy of the Letters of St. Paul.
It was disassembled in the 13th century at the Megisti Lavra monastery on Mount Athos, Greece.
‘UNEXPECTED’ ROMAN-ERA DISCOVERIES UNEARTHED IN BIBLICAL CITY MENTIONED IN BOOK OF REVELATION
Since then, its pages have been scattered across libraries in Europe, with only fragments of the original manuscript surviving, including some held by the University of Glasgow.
It was within these fragments that a team of researchers identified the lost pages, including ancient chapter lists, which “differ drastically from how we divide these letters today,” the university said.

The text was originally disassembled in the 13th century at a monastery on Mount Athos in Greece. (Damianos Kasotakis)
Codex H’s significance stems in part from its rarity, said Garrick Allen, a University of Glasgow professor who led the project.
“It’s an important witness to the text of Paul’s Letters in a period where we don’t have that many manuscripts,” the professor told Fox News Digital, referring to the sixth to ninth centuries.
ANCIENT CHRISTIAN MONASTERY COMPLEX REVEALS LIVES OF BYZANTINE MONKS BEFORE ARAB CONQUEST
The practice of marking up biblical texts dates back centuries, much as readers still do today — and Codex H preserves over 1,000 years of annotations.
“Manuscripts of the New Testament and other literature were often annotated and marked up by scribes and readers,” Allen noted.
“We have recovered [these pages] due to the unintended results of a medieval conservationist.”
Codex H, for example, includes “over 70 corrections to the text itself by a scribe who compared its text against another manuscript,” the professor said.
The manuscript also contains “many annotations by at least 15 later readers who left their marks through prayers, poems, grammatical notes and other information.”
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER
“These types of notes are not unusual but, because Codex H had such a long life in many forms, its pages attracted many interested readers — and these annotations are often the only tangible evidence left that these anonymous people existed,” said Allen.
As for why the manuscript was disassembled, Allen suggested it likely “reached the end of its working life.”

The recovered pages from Codex H offer new insight into how the Letters of St. Paul were copied and studied. (Early Manuscripts Electronic Library, Monastery of Great Lavra)
“Six hundred to 700 years is a long time for a book to be kept in working order, even though we know that at least one person attempted to conserve it during this period through re-copying,” he said.
“In a remote location like Mount Athos in a period where parchment was very expensive to produce, it makes sense that the monastery reused this manuscript to keep up other books in their library.”
CLICK HERE FOR MORE LIFESTYLE STORIES
Ironically, breaking the manuscript apart helped preserve it, Allen noted — its pages were reused inside other books and eventually spread across European collections.
“The book was re-inked in its entirety at some point in its working life, meaning that someone rewrote over the existing text … in an attempt to keep the book usable for a new generation,” said Allen.
“This process makes me optimistic that many ancient manuscripts still have much more to tell us about the people who made and used them.”
“Eventually, the book was disbound and reused as binding material and flyleaves when librarians at the Megisti Lavra monastery on Mount Athos repaired other books in their collection. It’s this repurposing of this ancient book that led to its continued existence.”
The most surprising part of the discovery, Allen said, was the sense of awe in reading biblical texts that “no longer exist.”

The discovery reveals new details about how early Christian scribes copied and corrected the Letters of St. Paul. (Damianos Kasotakis; Leemage/Corbis via Getty Images)
“We have recovered [these pages] only due to the unintended results of a medieval conservationist,” the expert said.
“This process makes me optimistic that many ancient manuscripts still have much more to tell us about the people who made and used them.”
That progress is being driven in part by advances in imaging technology, Allen added.
TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ
“Although each manuscript is by definition unique and presents its own challenges, we think that we’ve developed a model for working with challenging manuscripts like palimpsests at a larger scale,” he said.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
“When manuscript and biblical scholars work closely with imaging specialists, data scientists, monastic communities, museums, and other local partners, we can really make progress in our understanding of these important documents.”
Reference #18.490dde17.1778588188.367dc805
https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.490dde17.1778588188.367dc805
SP chief Akhilesh Yadav has reacted to the objectionable remarks of Samajwadi Party leader and Hamirpur MP Ajendra Singh Lodhi. Kannauj MP, who was on Prayagraj tour, disagreed with Lodhi’s statement. However, he commented on the statements of Bharatiya Janata Party leaders.
Akhilesh said- There should be decorum in the language used in politics. We have never supported this kind of language or behavior against anyone. As far as the Prime Minister is concerned, such comments should not be made against him. But have you ever heard the statements of BJP leaders or Chief Ministers?
The former UP CM said, have you seen the records of statements given by BJP MPs and leaders in Rajya Sabha and Lok Sabha? We do not support what was said by our MP or Ajendra Lodhi. However, if someone said something out of emotional pain and during that time inappropriate language was used, then that language was definitely not appropriate.
A case has been registered against Samajwadi Party MP Ajendra Singh Lodhi and his unknown supporters for making indecent remarks on Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Police gave this information on Tuesday. According to police sources, this case was registered at Mahoba city police station on the intervening night of May 11 and 12 on the complaint of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) district media in-charge Satyendra Pratap Gupta.
Rakesh, accused of NEET paper leak, arrested from Dehradun, was absconding for a long time
SP MP from Hamirpur-Mahoba seat Lodhi and his supporters submitted an 11-point memorandum to the electricity department on Monday, in which issues including power cuts and problems related to smart meters were raised. Gupta alleged that Lodhi’s march to the government office blocked roads, disrupted traffic and disrupted the work of government employees. He also alleged that Lodhi called Modi an ‘anti-national’.
Donald Trump is heading to China this week. If his guest list is any clue, he wants to discuss technology with Xi Jinping, though perhaps after the war in Iran.
On Monday, news broke that outgoing Apple CEO, Tim Cook, as well as SpaceX and Tesla CEO, Elon Musk, would join the US president. Other guests from the tech sphere include Meta’s recently appointed president, Dina Powell McCormick; Sanjay Mehrotra, CEO of computer memory maker Micron; Chuck Robbins, CEO of longtime telecom giant Cisco; and Cristiano Amon, CEO of semiconductor maker Qualcomm, according to a White House official.
Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s CEO – who is close to Trump but criticized the US’s limitations on chip sales to China in an April interview, saying that he didn’t want a “loser mentality” to cost the US its edge in AI – will not be joining the president. A major deal on semiconductors seems less likely without the world’s most important chip maker, though an announcement from Micron seems possible.
In Cook, Trump likely also wants to bring a friendly, familiar face to high-stakes negotiations. Apple’s iPhone 17 has proved enormously successful in China, boosting the company’s quarterly earnings to their highest point ever. Apple still manufactures most of its products in China, though it has moved a significant percentage of those operations to India and Vietnam. In Apple’s announcement of Cook’s retirement, the company highlighted his diplomatic skills and said his responsibilities would include dealing with leaders around the world, so visits like this may become a mainstay of his schedule in the future.
Whether Trump’s trip will foster a flurry of tech deals, as his Middle East visit did in May 2025, will have to be seen. But while Trump trots out the US’s best and brightest business people – products of his hands-free policy for fostering technological innovation – his administration is taking cues from China’s more stringent approach to AI. China’s laws require AI companies to submit their models to Beijing for review on both security and political sensitivity grounds. The stringent policies prohibit not only threats to national security but also the generation of content that Beijing finds objectionable.
In the same vein, the White House is getting more involved in the work of frontier labs in the US. Trump is mulling an executive order that would require AI companies to submit their newest models for White House review. The administration has already announced deals with a growing number of big players in the field for national security reviews of their latest releases, including Google DeepMind, Microsoft and xAI last week. The reviews will be conducted by the Center for AI Standards and Innovation (CAISI), part of the US Department of Commerce. The Pentagon’s standoff with Anthropic continues in court over the startup’s qualms about military usage and the bureau’s designation of the company as a supply chain risk. Vice-president, JD Vance, has requested that Anthropic not expand access to its powerful cybersecurity-focused model Mythos beyond its initial list of partners, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Reference #18.530dde17.1778592397.2b42b592
https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.530dde17.1778592397.2b42b592