update - Trump threatens invasion of Nigeria to wipe out Boko Haram

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Kristi Noem denies blatant fact on detention of US citizens


Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem denied the indisputable fact that U.S. Citizens had been "arrested or detained" as part of President Donald Trump's deportation operations.

During a Thursday press conference in Indiana, Noem insisted that ICE agents carrying out deportations would "continue to operate and will continue to do this work until there is no longer anybody out on our roads and in our communities that's here illegally."




When pressed about the detention of U.S. Citizens, the secretary flatly made a false statement.

"There's no American citizens have been arrested or detained," she said. "We focus on those that are here illegally. And anything that you would hear or report that would be different than that is simply not true and false reporting."




Earlier this month, ProPublica found more than 170 cases of U.S. citizens being detained during raids and protests this year.

"About two dozen Americans have said they were held for more than a day without being able to phone lawyers or loved ones," the outlet noted. "While the tally is almost certainly incomplete, we found more than 170 such incidents during the first nine months of President Donald Trump's second administration."

Many more reports have documented the arrest of Americans, with many describing their experiences.

DHS does not track how many U.S. citizens are held by immigration agents.
 

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Trump orders ‘blatantly racist’ overhaul of refugee system, groups say


After freezing refugee admissions and cutting off funding to groups that support them, Donald Trump’s administration is now drastically reducing the number of refugees admitted into the United States each year — and handing most of those limited slots to white South Africans.



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White House proposals previously reported by The Independent were formally added to the federal register on Thursday.

Refugee admissions will now explicitly prioritize Afrikaners for resettlement, and the ceiling for admissions has been radically reduced from 125,000 people to only 7,500 for the next year.

The move represents a stark break from a refugee policy informed by humanitarian needs, not ideology or identity, according to refugee resettlement groups.

“This decision doesn’t just lower the refugee admissions ceiling. It lowers our moral standing,” said Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, president of Global Refuge, one of the nation’s largest resettlement organizations.

“At a time of crisis in countries ranging from Afghanistan to Venezuela to Sudan and beyond, concentrating the vast majority of admissions on one group undermines the program’s purpose as well as its credibility,” she said.



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Human Rights First called the move “blatantly racist” and a “new low point” in U.S. foreign policy.

“Turning our back on hundreds of thousands of truly at-risk refugees fleeing religious, political, and other forms of persecution defies decades of bipartisan support for welcoming the vulnerable, from Vietnamese to Afghan allies,” said the group’s president Uzra Zeya.

“Let’s call this what it is — white supremacy disguised as refugee policy,” added Guerline Jozef, director of immigration advocacy group Haitian Bridge Alliance. “At a time when Black refugees from Haiti, Sudan, the Congo, and Cameroon are drowning at sea, languishing in detention, or being deported to death, the U.S. government has decided to open its arms to those who already enjoy global privilege.”

The White House did not provide a reason for the drop in admissions, but the notice in the federal register states that the figure is “justified by humanitarian concerns or is otherwise in the national interest.”



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The document does not mention any other specific groups to be admitted besides white South Africans.

“Other victims of illegal or unjust discrimination in their respective homelands” will also be considered for admission into the country as refugees, but the document does not provide any detail on what that entails.



The White House is also capping refugee admissions to 7,500 within the next year, marking a sharp drop from 125,000 in the previous year (AFP via Getty Images)
The overhaul also appears to strand thousands of refugees who are being vetted for entry or have already completed extensive background checks. The number of now-stranded refugees who had already been approved to enter the United States, with confirmed travel plans to resettle in the country, is now larger than the entire refugee program.


“It is egregious to exclude refugees who completed years of rigorous security checks and are currently stuck in dangerous and precarious situations,” according to Sharif Aly, president of the International Refugee Assistance Project.

“America’s refugee program was built to reflect our values, and the thousands of individuals we’ve closed our doors to represent thousands of missed opportunities of people who could have strengthened a local community or economy,” Aly said.



Trump administration officials began welcoming white South Africans into the United States as refugees earlier this year, and the State Department is expecting to resettle thousands more within the coming months (AP)
Trump directed an overhaul of the nation’s refugee admissions program earlier this year to study whether allowing refugees into the country was even in the interest of the United States.

The president is required to notify Congress about changes to the program, but lawmakers were not consulted.


“This bizarre presidential determination is not only morally indefensible, it is illegal and invalid,” top Democrats on the House and Senate judiciary and immigration committees said in a joint statement.

Shortly after Trump entered office in January, the administration abruptly canceled previously arranged refugee flights.

Over the last several months, the administration has also slashed financial aid and healthcare coverage for refugees, and the president’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act restricts refugees from eligibility for Medicaid, Medicare, children’s health insurance and emergency food assistance.

In May, a group of 59 white South Africans were admitted to the United States as “refugees,” and the United States “essentially extended citizenship” to them, Trump said at the time.

The State Department is reportedly planning to resettle 2,000 Afrikaners by the end of October and then another 4,000 by the end of November.


At least 700 Afrikaners are being processed for imminent resettlement in the United States at the end of the government shutdown, following dozens of Afrikaners who were already admitted to the country as refugees earlier this year.
 

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1761916728435.png

BREAKING: Kash Patel gets caught red-handed "grifting off the American public" by abusing a $60 million FBI jet and taxpayer money for a wrestling date night with his much younger girlfriend.

And the corruption gets so much worse... According to FBI whistleblower Kyle Seraphin the public flight logs for Patel’s plane — identified as N708JH — show that it landed at Pennsylvania’s State College Airport on October 25th at 5:40 PM EST. That's the same day that the 45-year-old Patel's 26-year-old girlfriend Alexis Wilkins performed as a country music singer at the Real American Freestyle pro-wrestling event at Penn State. It would have been bad enough if Patel had just burned through expensive jet fuel on the public dime to watch his girlfriend perform, but the logs also show that his jet left the Penn State airport at 8:03 PM and then landed in Nashville soon after.

Nashville is where Wilkins lives. In other words, Patel jetted in for a concert date night with his girlfriend, then the two of them hopped on the plane and headed back to her place. One imagines them laughing and clinking champagne glasses in the clouds, delighting as they burn through gas paid for by hardworking American teachers, plumbers, and janitors.

“We’re in the middle of a government shutdown where they’re not even gonna pay all of the employees that work for the agency that this guy heads,” Seraphin said on his podcast. “And this guy is jetting off to hang out with his girlfriend in Nashville on our dime?” Seraphin added that Patel is clearly "grifting off the American public," an apt description for just about every action taken by every member of this historically corrupt administration. “He flew a $60 million aircraft to go hang out. Is that gross to anybody else?” asked Seraphin.

Under official government policy, FBI directors need only repay the cost of a commercial coach ticket when they use their jets for personal use — often leaving a margin of thousands of dollars to be footed by taxpayers.

Ironically enough, Patel previously slammed FBI Director Christopher Wray “jetting off out on tax payer dollars while dodging accountability for the implosion of the FBI on his watch" and called him a “#GovernmentGangster."

The sick irony here is that Trump and his Republican cronies claim to be targeting government "waste, fraud, and abuse" when in reality they're multiplying it tenfold. When Democrats retake power we need to a launch a full audit into every expenditure during the Trump years.
 

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Trump official told DOJ lawyers to 'disregard federal court orders'


A veteran Justice Department lawyer has claimed he was fired after refusing to play along with officials in President Donald Trump’s administration who wanted to bend the truth — and maybe even the law — to support Trump’s hardline immigration agenda.

What the DOJ lawyer was told to do

When 60 Minutes‘ Scott Pelley reached out to Emil Bove — President Donald Trump’s former personal criminal attorney who was made a top official at the Justice Department before then becoming a federal judge — Bove claimed Erez Reuveni’s account was full of “falsehoods” and “distortions.” By: MEGA

When 60 Minutes‘ Scott Pelley reached out to Emil Bove — President Donald Trump’s former personal criminal attorney who was made a top official at the Justice Department before then becoming a federal judge — Bove claimed Erez Reuveni’s account was full of “falsehoods” and “distortions.” By: MEGA© Knewz (CA)
According to Erez Reuveni, the fired acting deputy director of the Department of Justice’s immigration section, top Trump appointees suggested they’d be willing to defy federal court orders if that’s what it took to support the president. In an interview with 60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley, Reuveni described a stunning moment inside the Justice Department. He said Emil Bove — then the department’s third-ranking official before Trump later elevated him to a federal judgeship — told senior DOJ leaders they might have to ignore court rulings if judges tried to block deportation flights to El Salvador. According to Reuveni, Bove didn’t mince words. “Bove emphasized, those planes need to take off, no matter what. And then after a pause, he also told all in attendance, and if some court should issue an order preventing that, we may have to consider telling that court, ‘f*** you.'”

It was ‘like a bomb had gone off’

60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley spoke with whistleblower Erez Reuveni, a 15-year Justice Department attorney, about the pattern of troubling behavior the career DOJ lawyer said he witnessed before he was fired. By: 60 Minutes/CBS

60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley spoke with whistleblower Erez Reuveni, a 15-year Justice Department attorney, about the pattern of troubling behavior the career DOJ lawyer said he witnessed before he was fired. By: 60 Minutes/CBS© Knewz (CA)
Reuveni shared more from the meeting with 60 Minutes. “We were told at this meeting that over the weekend [these deportations were happening], the president of the United States would be signing a proclamation invoking something called the Alien Enemies Act. This is a wartime law from 1798 invoked three times in the nation’s history, during the War of 1812, World War I and World War II.” As Pelley explained to 60 Minutes‘ audience, “The Alien Enemies Act allows rapid expulsion from the U.S. of the citizens of enemy nations during a war. But without a declared war, Trump used it against more than 100 Venezuelans that the government said were terrorists. They were to be denied their right to be heard by a judge” and flown to El Salvador. Reuveni said he was stunned upon hearing this information. “I felt like a bomb had gone off. Here is the No. 3 official using expletives to tell career attorneys that we may just have to consider disregarding federal court orders,” he alleged.

Why Reuveni was fired

“It is the highest, most egregious violation of a lawyer’s code of ethics to mislead a court with intent,” fired Justice Department attorney Erez Reuveni told 60 Minutes. By: @60Minutes/CBS/YouTube

“It is the highest, most egregious violation of a lawyer’s code of ethics to mislead a court with intent,” fired Justice Department attorney Erez Reuveni told 60 Minutes. By: @60Minutes/CBS/YouTube© Knewz (CA)
Reuveni — who, during his 15-year tenure at the DOJ argued on behalf of Trump’s so-called “Muslim ban” during the president’s first term — revealed why he was fired. According to Reuveni, he’d been instructed to tell the court that Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an illegal immigrant the Justice Department confirmed had been — by mistake — deported and sent to an El Salvador prison — was a terrorist and member of the MS-13 gang. “I respond up the chain of command, no way. That is not correct. That is not factually correct. It is not legally correct. That is, that is a lie. And I cannot sign my name to that brief,” Reuveni said.

Legal experts react

President Donald Trump praised his former criminal attorney Emil Bove when he nominated him for a judgeship on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, describing Bove as “SMART, TOUGH, and respected by everyone” and someone who “will end the Weaponization of Justice [and] restore the Rule of Law…” By: Will Oliver – Pool via CNP / MEGA

President Donald Trump praised his former criminal attorney Emil Bove when he nominated him for a judgeship on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, describing Bove as “SMART, TOUGH, and respected by everyone” and someone who “will end the Weaponization of Justice [and] restore the Rule of Law…” By: Will Oliver – Pool via CNP / MEGA© Knewz (CA)
The bombshell claims in the 60 Minutes interview sparked appalled reactions on social media from legal experts and others. “If you care about JUSTICE in the United States, you MUST watch this frightening @60Minutes segment about the LAWLESSNESS now at the Trump Justice Dept. They LIE to judges. They BREAK their oath to uphold the Constitution. They are a clear and present DANGER to the Republic,” Larry Sabato, a veteran political forecaster, wrote on X. Added civil rights attorney Leslie Proll, “Emil Bove is now an appellate court judge for life, thanks to 50 Senators who knew every last bit of this. Trump never should have nominated his law-defying, corrupt personal attorney to the federal bench. But Bove sure as h*** shouldn’t have been confirmed. Utterly despicable.” Maureen Langloss, a lawyer-turned-writer who’s now editor-in-chief at Split Lip Magazine, called Reuveni’s revelations “absolutely appalling,” adding, “Emil Bove should be disbarred, not sitting as a federal judge. Please watch this. This is so important.” Lawyer John W. Thurston commented on X, “I’ve been lawyering for a couple of decades. I cannot emphasize how big of a deal this is. Please watch.” Shai Franklin, a former non-profit executive with extensive experience in government relations, referenced what was previously the archetypal government scandal in his comment on X, writing, “We are now at least two orders of magnitude beyond Watergate.”
 

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Noem says foreigners can’t drive as she defends truck drivers audit


Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem defended the Trump administration’s new restrictions on the issuing of commercial drivers licenses for non-American truck drivers, claiming they are “endangering our citizens.”

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy last month announced restrictions around who is eligible for commercial driver’s licenses, requiring non-citizens to undergo a stricter set of rules — including possessing an employment-based visa and undergoing a federal immigration status check.



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“Putting these foreigners in tractor trailers…becomes extremely dangerous,” Noem said at a Thursday press conference, speaking in front of two massive trucks. “I have driven semis over many, many years and 18-wheelers and understand they're difficult to stop, maneuver, you have to have a skillset but also communication with those around you.”

“Putting them behind the wheel of these tractor trailers weighing tens of thousands of pounds loaded with explosive fuel down the highway endangers every single citizen that is on our roads,” she added.

As part of “Operation Midway Blitz,” 223 immigrants were arrested, 146 of whom were truck drivers, in Indiana on Thursday, she said. Over 40 of the drivers had been issued commercial drivers licenses.

“If you are here driving on our streets illegally and our highways, you are endangering our citizens, and your days are numbered,” Noem said.




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In a press release about the Thursday arrests, Homeland officials said: “In recent months, we’ve seen a disturbing pattern of criminal illegal aliens driving commercial vehicles on American roads, directly threatening public safety and resulting in senseless loss of life.”

The arrested drivers “overwhelmingly” received their licenses from “sanctuary states” such as California, New York and Illinois, Homeland Security Secretary said.

This week, Duffy threatened to pull $160 million in federal funds from California, claiming the state is illegally issuing commercial drivers licenses to non-citizens.

“Gavin Newsom cares more about giving illegals commercial drivers licenses than he does citizens of his own state and the safety of Americans. It’s shameful,” Duffy told Fox Business Sunday. “He’s been lying about what he’s been doing and we’re going to fight tooth and nail to make sure we hold states like California accountable.


Noem, standing in front of two large trucks, announced 146 truck drivers were arrested in Indiana, claiming that the drivers had ‘overwhelmingly’ received licenses from California, New York and Illinois (REUTERS)

Noem, standing in front of two large trucks, announced 146 truck drivers were arrested in Indiana, claiming that the drivers had ‘overwhelmingly’ received licenses from California, New York and Illinois (REUTERS)
Her announcement came as Illinois Democratic Governor JB Pritzker urged Noem and DHS to “pause all of their federal agents’ operations for the entirety of the Halloween weekend” in Chicago.

The city has been the target of President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown for weeks; masked federal agents have been carrying out raids across the Windy City while a lawsuit plays out to determine whether Trump can deploy National Guard troops to Illinois.





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“Your operation has sown fear and division and chaos among law-abiding residents in our communities. If you are unwilling to cease operations and leave our city, can we at least agree that our children should not be victims, especially on Halloween?” Pritzker said Thursday.

Noem rejected Pritzker’s request.

"No, we're absolutely not willing to put on pause any work that we will do to keep communities safe. The fact that Governor Pritzker is asking for that is shameful," she said at the press conference.
 

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'Athletically allergic' ICE applicants weigh down Trump deportation campaign


Despite having close to two hundred new applicants, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is finding itself weighed down by unqualified candidates.

Immigration officials have stated that ICE wants to recruit 10,000 agents in addition to its already 6,000-person force.

‘ICE has received more than 175,000 applications, for 10,000 roles,’ Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Axios.



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Though the problem has not been with recruitment, it has been with how many of the applicants can pass a basic fitness test.

‘I mean, if you can't run a mile and a half, you probably shouldn't be a federal law enforcement officer,’ Trump’s Border Czar Tom Homan told the outlet.

The test: a 1.5-mile run, 32 sit-ups and 15 push-ups in 14 minutes or less.

Internally, the scope of the recruits’ failure has led to concern among ICE officials in charge of training.

Even the department’s leadership has privately vented about ‘a considerable amount of athletically allergic candidates,’ according to internal emails reviewed by The Atlantic.


White House Border Czar Tom Homan has been tasked by Trump to oversee the president's deportation efforts. However, ICE recruitment is being weighed down by physically unfit applicants

White House Border Czar Tom Homan has been tasked by Trump to oversee the president's deportation efforts. However, ICE recruitment is being weighed down by physically unfit applicants

A federal immigration officer awaits migrants outside of a New York courtroom

A federal immigration officer awaits migrants outside of a New York courtroom

A DHS video instructing trainees how to complete the fitness test

A DHS video instructing trainees how to complete the fitness test

ICE agents detain a protestor as other protesters try to stop them in East Side, Chicago, Tuesday, October 14, 2025

ICE agents detain a protestor as other protesters try to stop them in East Side, Chicago, Tuesday, October 14, 2025
At ICE's Georgia-based training facility, failing recruits have been an increasingly common site.

One out of three recruits fail the basic fitness test, four officials told the Atlantic.

'It’s pathetic,' one official said of the failing recruits.

The high failure rate prompted ICE leadership to reportedly change the way they approach fitness screenings, prompting them to suggest fitness tests at field locations before recruits get sent to training camp.



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'We all know the self-certification method has failed,' one ICE official reportedly lamented in an email with leadership.

To increase recruitment, ICE has offered generous incentives for recruits, like signing bonuses worth a full year's salary - around $50,000.

Recruits also spend much less time in training before being sent out to deal with migrants.

The amount of time ICE agents spend at training in Georgia has roughly been cut in half under Trump, reportedly falling from around 16 weeks to just 8 weeks.
 

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Report exposes ultra-rich inmates' new pathway to pardons


The super-rich have discovered that the new Donald Trump administration is happy to speak to lobbyists, including those fighting for pardons or clemency for those in prison.

NOTUS reported Friday that there are at least a dozen searching for freedom from the big house, using lobbyists to get to the president.


There is currently a former utilities executive, a scam PAC operator and a rapper looking to score release.

"Among them: Anne Pramaggiore, the former CEO of Illinois utility giant Commonwealth Edison, who paid Crossroads Strategies $80,000 last quarter for 'advising on public policy and legislative matters relevant to the pardon process,'" NOTUS reported.


Pramaggiore was part of a bribery scheme with the Speaker of the Illinois House and was convicted of nine charges before being sent to prison for two years. She then hired Crossroads Strategies to run a pardon effort.

JM Burkman & Associates were recruited because Jack Burkman and Jacob Wohl have a history with their own "illegal robocall scheme."



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Boosie Badazz, whose real name is Torence Ivy Hatch Jr., is using their company to fight for a pardon over gun charges he pleaded guilty to in August.

"The firm received $960,000 during the second quarter to '[seek] a federal pardon' for Joseph Schwartz, a former nursing home executive sentenced this spring to three years in prison for a $38 million tax-fraud scheme," the report added.

Tim McPhee, who pleaded guilty in August to a "multimillion-dollar investment scheme," is now paying them to lobby on "DOJ issues."

When NOTUS asked the company whether "DOJ issues" are pardons, they received no response.

"Efforts to connect with Vogel Group client Komal Patel, who in August hired the firm to lobby for clemency and paid $100,000 last quarter, were unsuccessful," too, the report said.

The son of Dr. Shallfdeen Amuwo is evidently in prison, and his father hired the Adomi Advisory Group to "lobby to commute the sentence," the documents showed.



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Trump ally Roger Stone is also getting in on the action, registering to be a lobbyist and scoring a nearly $50 million contract "as part of a deferred prosecution agreement with the Department of Justice to resolve charges of tax evasion" by so-called "Bitcoin Jesus" Roger Ver.

Trump's ex-bodyguard, Keith Schiller, registered to lobby for his company Javelin Advisors. Among the clients is Fred Daibes, who was convicted of bribing former Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and his wife. According to the documents, he's paying Schiller to acquire "executive relief."

Trump has been on a roll over his first 10 months in office, handing out pardons and commutations. There was a short pause between the last pardon and the commutation of former Rep. George Santos (R-NY). The report said it could be part of an effort to tamp down bad "optics" because there "might be [lobbyists] profiting from the pardon industry," NBC News reported last week.


NOTUS walked through a long list of those identified in lobbying reports who mentioned similar issues.

They had talked about going light on pardons so they could make a massive showing of "liberation" over the Fourth of July weekend, one person told NOTUS. But the plan never fully manifested.

Read the full report here.
 

mandrill

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Trump hit with 2nd major ruling forcing him to use emergency money to fund SNAP


A second federal judge in Boston on Friday told the Trump administration they are required to use emergency funding to keep Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, food benefits going despite pushback from Trump.

The decisions were made just minutes apart after a federal judge in Rhode Island said in an emergency hearing that the Trump administration and U.S. Department of Agriculture must release close to $6 billion amid the ongoing government shutdown, according to CNN. The Rhode Island judge said the funding must be distributed "in a timely fashion," and the administration must deliver an update by noon on Monday.



The close to $6 billion will not cover all the expenses for the program, it costs about $9 billion per month, and the judge said that the agency will have to agree to look to supplement additional funding so Americans relying on the program will get the funds.

Delays are still expected for SNAP recipients as states and the agency are distributing the funding.
 

mandrill

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Red state workers at risk for losing disability benefits as Trump admin rewrites the rules


t’s never been easy to qualify for Social Security disability benefits. Christopher Tincher knows this firsthand.

Tincher began his working life in a coal mine in Aflex, Kentucky, as a teenager in the 1980s. As mines across the region shuttered, he turned to scraping grills at a Hardee’s, then cleaning office buildings at night, then stocking shelves and changing tires at a Walmart in Arkansas. Later, he was hired by a nearby town’s wastewater department. Often, he had to wade into sewage to fix equipment and clean out feces, needles and tampons entering the treatment facility.




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In 2017, some of that liquid got into his work boots, which didn’t fit properly and had caused blisters to form. It soaked into his flesh, infecting his right foot all the way to the bone. Doctors cut his leg off below the knee so the infection wouldn’t spread.

Tincher was now a manual laborer on one leg, but he was denied disability benefits by the Social Security Administration the following year. On average, 65% of applicants are rejected, though some successfully appeal.

In Tincher’s case, it was partly because he was 48, and the agency’s rules give priority to disabled workers in their 50s, who are officially deemed to be nearing advanced age and therefore less able to switch careers or develop new skills.

Tincher got a prosthetic leg and went back to work, this time for a medical supplies delivery company. He did this for seven years, frequently in pain, he said. His other leg was almost always in a cast, due to further infected blisters and diabetic nerve damage, and his eyesight was rapidly deteriorating.




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This February, he applied for disability again. He was desperate; he was in a wheelchair, and he’d had to move in with his son’s family in Cabot, Arkansas, because he couldn’t pay the rent on his trailer. And there just weren’t other, less physically demanding jobs available locally for someone with his experience: “About the best job I could’ve got would’ve been a door greeter at Walmart, but I don’t think they have those anymore,” he said.

Tincher is now 55, and reaching that age marker helped him qualify, in June, for just over $1,500 a month in Social Security Disability Insurance benefits. A three-time Donald Trump voter, he was approved just in the nick of time.

That’s because the Trump administration is rewriting the disability eligibility rules, ostensibly to modernize the program, in ways that will make it even harder for aging blue-collar workers like Tincher to get benefits. Hundreds of thousands just like him would become ineligible for aid.




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These changes would fall disproportionately on some of Trump’s most loyal supporters in red states. Most affected would be 50- to 60-year-olds without a high school or college education who have, for decades, toiled in physically grueling jobs, including coal mining, logging, and factory and construction work. The five states where the highest proportions of people rely on these benefits are West Virginia, Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi and Alabama. Unlike New York, California and a few others, these states do not have their own disability insurance programs for workers to turn to amid federal cuts.

“The Trump administration does not think that simply being 50 years old is a disability,” said a senior administration official who would speak only on condition of anonymity. In the 1970s, when the current rules were written, the official said, many more jobs involved manual labor, but in the internet age that isn’t true anymore. Workers in their 50s with physical injuries are thus receiving disability benefits “when they don’t need to be,” given that they could get a more sedentary job in the modern economy.


The administration has also justified cuts like these on fiscal grounds: The federal budget deficit is massive, the Social Security retirement system could become insolvent in less than a decade and savings need to be found.

But the disability program is paid for, via payroll taxes, by its own trust fund, separate from the one for the retirement program. So reductions in disability payments would not help the retirement system stay afloat. Indeed, cutting eligibility for disability could result in more disabled workers claiming retirement benefits early, actuarial experts note, which would only increase pressure on the retirement system. Meanwhile, the money in the disability fund, which is projected to remain solvent through at least the end of this century, would just sit there, unused.

The Trump administration’s upcoming proposed regulation would make two hugely consequential changes to the Social Security Administration’s disability system, according to four SSA officials with knowledge of the plans. First, it would modernize the job listings that Social Security’s disability adjudicators and judges use to decide if there’s work available in the U.S. economy that a manual laborer could do despite physical impairments — like a low-skilled desk job at a computer or driving for Uber or DoorDash. Second, the new rule would almost entirely remove age as a criterion, in most instances making a 50-plus-year-old like Tincher no more eligible for assistance than a 20-something.


Under the current system, eligibility for benefits ticks up at ages 50, 55 and 60, as workers become more medically vulnerable and less adaptable. Disability adjudicators use a series of grids that consider an applicant’s age, work experience and education level to determine whether they may have the skills to do another, less strenuous job. (The adjudicators make a yes-or-no decision on eligibility; each person who qualifies then receives a set amount based on their lifetime earnings. Once the person starts receiving Social Security retirement benefits, they no longer receive disability payments.)

The regulation that would undo this framework is slated to be formally proposed by December, according to a federal bulletin, although that deadline could push into next year, multiple officials said. The draft, which is based in large part on a plan that the first Trump administration tried to enact in 2020 before running out of time, still needs to be reviewed and edited by the White House’s Office of Management and Budget. After that, it will undergo the standard process of allowing the public to submit comments and objections.


But in its current form, the regulation would slash at least 830,000 people’s eligibility for disability benefits, according to an initial estimate from the Urban Institute, an economic policy think tank. As many as 1.5 million could lose eligibility over the next decade, including the widows and children of workers. Disability attorneys and experts familiar with who most relies on the program contend that the numbers could be considerably higher.

Separately, the Trump administration is preparing a proposed regulation that would eliminate or sharply cut the Supplemental Security Income benefits of roughly 400,000 extremely poor and disabled people. This second regulation would reduce support for adults and children with severe disabilities who are living in low-income households, as well as elderly people living with their adult children on tight budgets.


Barton Mackey, a spokesperson for the Social Security Administration, confirmed in a series of emailed statements that the Trump administration is working on what he called “improvements to the disability adjudication process.” These changes would ensure that the disability system “remains current” and can be more efficiently administered, Mackey said, while also promoting “dignity in work.” (Mackey did not respond to a question about the change to the SSI program.)

Further “speculation on any proposed rule prior to it being published,” he said, “only serves to misguide public discourse and stoke fear in those who rely on disability benefits for economic stability.”

White House spokesperson Kush Desai, in response to detailed questions, said that “President Trump will always protect and defend Social Security for American citizens” and pointed to Trump’s recent remarks commemorating the 90th anniversary of Social Security.


Retirement benefits — the largest and most popular of Social Security’s programs — would not be cut under the new regulation. But union leaders and advocates for older Americans said that the likely changes to disability eligibility for aging workers would undermine the financial and retirement security of working-class people and their families. Those who are denied benefits in their 50s would be forced to draw down any savings they have, which could lead them to apply for Social Security’s retirement benefits at age 62 instead of 67. That, in turn, would diminish their and their spouses’ monthly benefit amount by up to 30% until the day they die. Losing eligibility for disability would also block these workers’ access to Medicare, which they’re currently eligible for at their age precisely because they’re disabled.

Disability benefits frequently save recipients from bankruptcy, foreclosure and homelessness, according to research by University of Chicago economists and others.


George Piemonte, a former president of the National Organization of Social Security Claimants’ Representatives, has spent 30 years working on disability cases across the South. He emphasized that that’s where these disability cuts would be most acutely felt. “They call it modernizing the program, but that’s political speak,” Piemonte said. “This is a matter of life and death. If these workers don’t get their benefits, some of them are not even going to live to retirement.”

Social Security officials under both Republican and Democratic administrations have long agreed that the disability program needs to be modernized in some practical ways.

For example, disability adjudicators continue to use a Dictionary of Occupational Titles, created in the 1930s and last updated in 1991, to determine whether there are jobs that exist in “significant” numbers in the national economy that an applicant with declining “residual functional capacity” could still do. The DOT, as it is called, is almost comically outdated: It includes “pneumatic tube operator” but not web designer. (Reporting by The Washington Post has helped bring attention to these issues in recent years.)


Under President Barack Obama, the Social Security Administration and the Bureau of Labor Statistics undertook a yearslong effort to replace the DOT with what would be called the Occupational Requirements Survey, an updated catalog of modern occupations as well as the levels of physical exertion and cognitive difficulty that each job can entail. Field economists surveyed employers across the country, asking how often their employees typically had to climb stairs or lift items of various weights and so on. That detailed dataset now exists, but it isn’t widely used yet; the new regulation would require its implementation.

“So, the technical part of all this has sort of already been accomplished,” said David Weaver, a former top Social Security Administration official who helped to develop the survey, known as the ORS, during the Obama years. (Weaver is now a professor of statistics at the University of South Carolina.)


“But,” he added, “conservative economist types want to also make it harder for certain workers to get disability benefits, which would be a policy choice.” The complexity of the potential changes — the draft of the Trump regulation is hundreds of pages long and has been called the “mega reg” by insiders — has helped to mask this, Weaver and others said.

“Simplifying and Modernizing the Disability Adjudication Process” is how Mark Warshawsky headlined his written remarks when he testified in 2023 before a congressional subcommittee examining the issue. Warshawsky, an architect of the disability overhaul during the first Trump administration as the deputy commissioner for retirement and disability policy at the Social Security Administration, testified that the current system wrongly “presumes a workforce with low levels of education which is largely involved in physical labor, works long hours, has little flexibility in work schedules, low adaptability, little access to assistive technology, never works from home, and retires early fairly often.” He also said that increasing eligibility starting at age 50 is not very scientific; for starters, it’s unfair to 49-year-olds. (Warshawsky, who is now a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, declined an interview request from ProPublica.)


Warshawsky was unable to get the disability regulation across the finish line before Trump lost the 2020 election. But Russell Vought, the powerful head of Trump’s Office of Management and Budget and one of the originators of Project 2025, picked up on this first-term agenda item and has pursued it again this year.

The disability restructuring was “Russ Vought’s No. 1 priority for the Social Security Administration from Day 1,” said Leland Dudek, who was acting commissioner of the agency from February to May. In February, Dudek said, his staff met with Vought’s staff on multiple occasions; together, they “dug up what was done four years ago,” he said, indicating that the new proposed rule will be similar to a 2020 draft that was leaked to the press. (The senior Trump administration official said that Dudek is “disgruntled” and that the disability changes are no more of a priority for Vought than the rest of the administration’s “deregulatory agenda.” In the past, Vought has publicly pressed for fewer veterans and others to receive disability benefits.)


To opponents of the forthcoming regulation, including many still inside the Social Security Administration, Warshawsky and Vought’s conception of the modern economy neglects the fact that workers like Tincher grew up in a different world. They started their working lives at a time when most people didn’t have personal computers, when it wasn’t as common to get a high school education and when physical labor offered a path to eventual retirement security. To switch the rules now pulls the rug out from under them just as they’re reaching their most vulnerable years, officials and experts said.

“I believe disconnects occur when more highly educated policy people do not fully understand or appreciate what workers in physically demanding, labor-intensive occupations, such as longshoremen, have gone through,” said Steve Rollins, who was deputy associate commissioner of the Social Security Administration’s Office of Disability Policy during the latter years of the first Trump administration and associate commissioner through the Biden administration. Rollins oversaw the agency’s work on modernizing the disability program from 2019 to 2024.


What’s more, vocational experts said in interviews, even if 50- or 60-year-old former coal miners or factory workers are denied the disability benefits they say they need, they’re still likely to retire early, a finding backed by recent research. After all, if they try to get a desk job — assuming one is available in their rural or exurban community — they may feel they don’t have the education or training for it, and they may also be subject to age discrimination in the hiring process. As Michelle Aliff, a certified rehabilitation counselor who testifies at Social Security disability hearings nationwide as an impartial vocational expert, put it: “An oil field roustabout in his 50s isn’t going to just sit down at a computer for work without additional training.”

The Trump administration’s plan to transform the U.S. disability system, once finalized, would interact with other cuts to the social safety net that the president and Republicans in Congress have already authored. For example, under legislation dubbed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and signed into law by Trump, work requirements will be added to Medicaid; people with disabilities will largely be exempt, but the best way to establish eligibility for that exemption is to qualify for Social Security’s disability program, which would become harder under the new rule. A disabled worker could instead turn to Obamacare’s individual exchanges for insurance coverage, but Republicans are allowing the tax credit that makes those premiums affordable to expire.


Tincher feels lucky he applied when he did. Being approved for disability has meant his copays are covered, he can finally afford groceries and he has time to help watch over his grandkids. Still, he also feels a tinge of guilt. “I wish every day I could still work,” he said. His dad, a coal miner, once told him to work until the day he died. “Having to ask for help is hard especially for men to do, men of my generation.”

All Tincher would say to the officials pushing the changes to the disability program, he said, is “you don’t know until you’re here, at this point in a working life.”
 

mandrill

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Trump threatens US military action in Nigeria over treatment of Christians


US President Donald Trump said on Saturday that he has asked the Defense Department to prepare for possible military action in Nigeria if the Nigerian government "continues to allow the killing of Christians."

The US government will also immediately stop all aid and assistance to Nigeria, Trump said in a post on Truth Social.
more


Trump said the US may "very well go into that now disgraced country, 'guns-a-blazing,' to completely wipe out the Islamic Terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities."

Nigeria vows to fight extremism after Trump adds nation to watch list
The Nigerian government on Saturday vowed to keep fighting violent extremism and said it hoped Washington would remain a close ally after Trump added the West African nation to a US watch list over what he said were threats to Christianity.

"The Federal Government of Nigeria will continue to defend all citizens, irrespective of race, creed, or religion. Like America, Nigeria has no option but to celebrate the diversity that is our greatest strength," its Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement.


Nigerian soldiers from the Multinational Joint Task Force against Islamist terrorists in Borno, northeastern Nigeria, July 5, 2025. (credit: JORIS BOLOMEY/AFP via Getty Images)

Nigerian soldiers from the Multinational Joint Task Force against Islamist terrorists in Borno, northeastern Nigeria, July 5, 2025. (credit: JORIS BOLOMEY/AFP via Getty Images)
"Nigeria is a God-fearing country where we respect faith, tolerance, diversity and inclusion, in concurrence with the rules-based international order," the ministry added.

On Friday, Trump said he was putting Nigeria, Africa's top oil producer and most populous country, on a "Countries of Particular Concern" list of nations the US finds have engaged in religious freedom violations, which also includes China, Myanmar, North Korea, Russia and Pakistan.



more

The Republican US president had designated the country a concern during his first term in the White House, but his Democratic successor Joe Biden removed it from the US State Department list in 2021.

"Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria. Thousands of Christians are being killed. Radical Islamists are responsible for this mass slaughter," he wrote in a social media post on Friday without offering any specifics.

A nation of more than 200 ethnic groups practicing Christianity, Islam and traditional religions, Nigeria has a long history of peaceful coexistence with mosques and churches dotting its cities.

But it also has a long history of violence breaking out between groups, in which religious differences sometimes overlap with other fault lines such as ethnic divisions or conflict over scarce land and water resources.

For 15 years, the extremist Islamist armed group Boko Haram has also terrorized northeast Nigeria, an insurgency that has killed tens of thousands of people, mostly Muslims.



more

Trump also asked the US House of Representatives Appropriations Committee to examine the issue and report back to him. A US congressional subcommittee held a hearing on Christian killings in Nigeria earlier this year.

Appropriations Committee Chairman US Representative Tom Cole, in an X post on Friday, said the designation "sends a strong message: the US will not ignore Christian persecution."
 

stinkynuts

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Jan 4, 2005
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Trump threatens US military action in Nigeria over treatment of Christians


US President Donald Trump said on Saturday that he has asked the Defense Department to prepare for possible military action in Nigeria if the Nigerian government "continues to allow the killing of Christians."

The US government will also immediately stop all aid and assistance to Nigeria, Trump said in a post on Truth Social.
more


Trump said the US may "very well go into that now disgraced country, 'guns-a-blazing,' to completely wipe out the Islamic Terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities."

Nigeria vows to fight extremism after Trump adds nation to watch list
The Nigerian government on Saturday vowed to keep fighting violent extremism and said it hoped Washington would remain a close ally after Trump added the West African nation to a US watch list over what he said were threats to Christianity.

"The Federal Government of Nigeria will continue to defend all citizens, irrespective of race, creed, or religion. Like America, Nigeria has no option but to celebrate the diversity that is our greatest strength," its Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement.


Nigerian soldiers from the Multinational Joint Task Force against Islamist terrorists in Borno, northeastern Nigeria, July 5, 2025. (credit: JORIS BOLOMEY/AFP via Getty Images)

Nigerian soldiers from the Multinational Joint Task Force against Islamist terrorists in Borno, northeastern Nigeria, July 5, 2025. (credit: JORIS BOLOMEY/AFP via Getty Images)
"Nigeria is a God-fearing country where we respect faith, tolerance, diversity and inclusion, in concurrence with the rules-based international order," the ministry added.

On Friday, Trump said he was putting Nigeria, Africa's top oil producer and most populous country, on a "Countries of Particular Concern" list of nations the US finds have engaged in religious freedom violations, which also includes China, Myanmar, North Korea, Russia and Pakistan.



more

The Republican US president had designated the country a concern during his first term in the White House, but his Democratic successor Joe Biden removed it from the US State Department list in 2021.

"Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria. Thousands of Christians are being killed. Radical Islamists are responsible for this mass slaughter," he wrote in a social media post on Friday without offering any specifics.

A nation of more than 200 ethnic groups practicing Christianity, Islam and traditional religions, Nigeria has a long history of peaceful coexistence with mosques and churches dotting its cities.

But it also has a long history of violence breaking out between groups, in which religious differences sometimes overlap with other fault lines such as ethnic divisions or conflict over scarce land and water resources.

For 15 years, the extremist Islamist armed group Boko Haram has also terrorized northeast Nigeria, an insurgency that has killed tens of thousands of people, mostly Muslims.



more

Trump also asked the US House of Representatives Appropriations Committee to examine the issue and report back to him. A US congressional subcommittee held a hearing on Christian killings in Nigeria earlier this year.

Appropriations Committee Chairman US Representative Tom Cole, in an X post on Friday, said the designation "sends a strong message: the US will not ignore Christian persecution."
This is nuts. He's becomeing a dictator with a thirst for for military power to conquer and destroy the world as he sees fit. First it was the deomocratic cities that he took over, now it's nuclear weapons, and attacking countries with black people. Because that's what is is. He knows htat his base will not object to attacking a country such as Nigeria. He just has a thirst for destruction and domination. This guy is sick in the head, and it's only escalating.
 
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nottyboi

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Trump officials move to military base housing designated for top uniformed officers


Stephen Miller, the architect behind President Donald Trump’s notorious immigration crackdown and the administration’s targeting of non-white people for arrest and deportation, is joining a growing list of senior Trump appointees shielded in military housing.

The Atlantic reports Miller, his wife Katie Miller, and their children fled to military housing after suffering protests and catcalls from voices in their affluent Washington, D.C. neighborhood and now benefit from U.S. military protection in addition to their personal security.




more

“Miller … who is known for his inflammatory political rhetoric, singled out the tactics that had victimized his family — what he called ‘organized campaigns of dehumanization, vilification, posting peoples’ addresses,’” reports the Nation.

Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem also moved out of her D.C. apartment building and into a home designated for the Coast Guard commandant on Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling after the Daily Mail described where she lived. And both Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth live on “Generals’ Row” at Fort McNair, an Army enclave along the Anacostia River, according to officials from the State and Defense Departments.

Another anonymous senior White House official moved to a military community after the assassination of Charlie Kirk, according to Nation writer Michael Scherer. However, so many Trump officials have made the move that they are now straining the availability of housing for the nation’s top uniformed officers.




more

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard’s request to move to McNair didn’t initially work out “for space reasons,” according to officials.

There is no record of this many political appointees living on military installations, and critics tell the Nation that it appears to be “blurring … traditional boundaries between the civilian and military worlds” as Trump makes “the military a far more visible element of domestic politics, deploying National Guard forces to Washington, Los Angeles, and other cities run by Democrats.”

John Hopkins University international studies associate professor Adria Lawrence told the Nation that housing political advisers on bases sends a message that one particular political party owns the military.

“In a robust democracy, what you want is the military to be for the defense of the country as a whole and not just one party,” Lawrence said.




more

University of Chicago political-science professor Robert Pape told the Nation that the threat of political violence “is real for figures in both major parties,” but noted that Trump has deliberately revoked the security details for several of his critics and adversaries, including former Vice President Kamala Harris and former national security adviser John Bolton — despite Bolton having been the target of an Iranian assassination plot.

Additionally, the isolation of sequestering yourself on a military base creates deep divisions between Trump’s advisers and the metropolitan area they govern.

“Trump-administration officials, who regularly mock the nation’s capital as a crime-ridden hellscape, now find themselves in a protected bubble, even farther removed from the city’s daily rhythms,” the Nation reports. “And they are even less likely to encounter a diverse mix of voters.”

Read the Nation report at this link.

Maybe some soldiers still in the closet will frag their sorry asses. lol
 
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