A man who's spent 15 years behind bars since high school is warning others about prison costs. He says inmates pay $10,000 just for a cell phone inside. The video, shared by vvs_scoota, highlights the harsh financial reality of incarceration beyond lost freedom.
A woman documented her apartment nightmare living next to allegedly terrible neighbors. The viral post details ongoing conflicts and disturbances in her building. The story has gained significant attention across social media as renters share similar experiences with problematic neighbors.
Conservative commentator Nick Sortor is calling for President Trump to replace current DHS Secretary with Stephen Miller, citing disappointing deportation numbers under the current leadership. "We do not have time to waste," Sortor wrote, pushing for an immediate change at the top of the department overseeing immigration enforcement.
Seth Rogen called out Elon Musk over the Los Angeles Tesla Diner, saying wealthy figures like Musk should be giving away free burgers instead of charging customers. The comment targets Musk's diner concept attached to a Tesla Supercharger station in LA. Rogen's jab adds to ongoing public criticism of billionaire spending priorities.
A gas station in Toledo, Ohio was completely covered by a massive swarm of mayflies. The insects blanketed the entire facility in what appears to be a seasonal emergence event common to the Great Lakes region.
🇺🇸 US lifts worldwide export restrictions on Anthropic's Claude Fable 5 AI model.
The move removes previous barriers that limited where the advanced AI system could be deployed internationally. No details yet on what specific controls were lifted or which markets gain access.
Stephen Miller criticized U.S. birthright citizenship policy, arguing it creates a pathway for exploitation. He described a scenario where a foreign national arriving nine months pregnant could give birth in the U.S., instantly granting the child citizenship and creating access to welfare benefits. Miller framed the policy as absurd, claiming no rational country would permit such a system. The comments reflect ongoing conservative pushback against automatic citizenship for children born on U.S. soil, a right established by the 14th Amendment.
Stephen Miller blasted Supreme Court justices over birthright citizenship ruling, arguing no legitimate interpretation of the 14th Amendment extends to children of foreign nationals.
"If your ruling requires you to suicide your civilization, your reading of the constitution is wrong," Miller said, calling it impossible to apply the amendment to "foreigners with foreign loyalties, foreign citizenship, foreign obligations, foreign everything."
The comments come as the administration continues challenging automatic citizenship for children born on U.S. soil to non-citizen parents—a doctrine upheld by courts for over a century.
Stephen Miller unloaded on the Supreme Court's birthright citizenship ruling, arguing citizenship loses meaning if extended to everyone.
His core grievance: A foreign national on a cruise ship docking at a U.S. port for an hour could give birth, and that child automatically becomes a U.S. citizen—able to vote in every election for life and potentially collect welfare while living abroad.
Miller framed it as an absurdity that drains resources from American taxpayers and dilutes the value of citizenship itself.
VP JD Vance says the Supreme Court's 5-4 ruling blocking the birthright citizenship executive order shows the policy is "hanging by a thread."
Vance noted the narrow margin defied predictions of an 8-1 defeat, calling birthright citizenship "an absurdity" and "a loophole that rewards illegal aliens just because they have a baby in the United States while they are in our country illegally."
He told Fox's Laura Ingraham the administration will "keep fighting" to reverse the decision, comparing it to other overturned precedents.
The 5-4 stay temporarily blocks the order while lower courts review the case. Chief Justice Roberts joined the four liberal justices in the majority.
Dogecoin creator Billy Markus says crypto market trends are too short-lived. The comment reflects ongoing frustration with rapid sentiment shifts and declining attention spans in the space.
House unanimously passes resolution 420-0 forcing release of names of Congress members who used taxpayer-funded slush fund to settle sexual misconduct claims.
Rep. Thomas Massie's resolution mandates the Committee on Ethics preserve and publicly disclose all relevant records. The fund has been used to pay off accusers with public money.
Full list of lawmakers and settlements now set for public release.
Mass protests erupted across South Africa today with demonstrators demanding the expulsion of foreign nationals. Footage from Durban shows crowds filling the streets in what appears to be a coordinated nationwide action. The scale and coordination of the protests signal rising anti-immigrant sentiment, though specific triggers for today's mobilization remain unclear.
Florida GOP congressional candidate Mike Beltran faces scrutiny over a 2023 vote against funding deportation flights for illegal immigrants.
Beltran was the only Republican in Florida's state legislature to oppose SB 6-B, which allocated $10 million to relocate undocumented migrants from Florida to sanctuary states like California and Massachusetts.
The vote came months after President Biden criticized Governor Ron DeSantis's deportation program as "un-American" and "reckless." Florida Democratic Chair Nikki Fried also blasted the flights as a "political stunt" at taxpayer expense.
Beltran is running for Congress in Florida's 14th District. The vote record has drawn attention following the Supreme Court's rejection of Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship.
Critics argue the vote aligns Beltran with Biden-era border policies rather than GOP enforcement priorities.
Sheridan Gorman's mother testified before Congress, directly confronting lawmakers over immigration enforcement failures.
Her daughter was allegedly killed by Jose Medina, a Venezuelan national in the U.S. illegally. Despite having an outstanding warrant, Medina remained free in Chicago—a sanctuary city that limits cooperation with ICE.
"The man accused of murdering my daughter should NOT have even been in this country," she said. "Even after committing a crime and having an outstanding warrant, he was left on the streets to MURDER MY INNOCENT CHILD."
She pressed the committee: "When did protecting our American citizens stop being your FIRST PRIORITY? I want an explanation and I NEED one and I DESERVE one."
The case has reignited debate over sanctuary city policies and federal immigration enforcement coordination.
Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY) clashed with Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) in a heated House exchange over sanctuary city policies and crimes committed by undocumented immigrants.
Lawler accused Democrats of ignoring victims like Sheridan Gorman and Laken Riley, allegedly killed by illegal immigrants, while highlighting other victims. "The same outrage you feel about Renee Goode and Alex Peretti, you should feel about Sheridan Gorman and Laken Riley," Lawler said.
Raskin attempted to respond, claiming he does feel outrage, but Lawler cut him off: "NO YOU DO NOT! Because if you did, you would NOT support sanctuary jurisdictions!"
The confrontation escalated with Raskin raising his voice, prompting Lawler to tell him he should be "absolutely ASHAMED" of policies he says contributed to preventable deaths.
The clash underscores the sharp partisan divide over immigration enforcement and local cooperation with federal authorities.
Hazmat teams responding to train derailment near Feasterville, Pennsylvania. Shelter-in-place order issued for surrounding area. Contents of derailed train cars currently unknown. Situation developing.
Paris Deputy Mayor sparked backlash after suggesting American air conditioning habits contribute to European heat waves. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin fired back: "The idea that some grandma right now in Georgia should be feeling guilt or shame and she should turn off the A/C is ridiculous." The exchange highlights growing trans-Atlantic tensions over climate responsibility and lifestyle choices. Social media users responded with defiance, with some Americans saying they cranked their A/C even colder in response.