Thursday, April 16, 2026
Pakistan Mediators Rush In, Hoping to Save Stalled Talks
Senior Pakistani mediators led by army chief Syed Asim Munir
arrived in Tehran on Wednesday to try to shore up a fragile ceasefire between Iran and the United States before it expires next week, according to The New York Times. The talks come after weekend negotiations failed to produce a breakthrough, leaving both sides relying on indirect messaging through Pakistan as they weigh whether to resume formal talks, the Times reported. The Pakistani delegation is also aiming to set up a second round of talks and extend the ceasefire while working through key sticking points including Iran’s nuclear program, maritime security and the status of the Strait of Hormuz, according to The Associated Press. Iran has continued to exchange messages with Washington through Islamabad but no new round has been agreed to, Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said, in remarks carried by Iranian state media and reported by Reuters. Pakistani mediators are expected to focus on extending the ceasefire timeline, establishing terms for a follow-on round of talks and narrowing gaps over U.S. demands on Iran’s military posture and regional activities, according to analysis from regional experts cited by AP and other international coverage of the negotiations. Officials and analysts say another key priority is de-escalation at sea, including potential limits on the U.S. naval blockade and assurances from Iran that it will not target commercial shipping lanes, which have become a central flashpoint in the standoff. At the White House, press secretary Karoline Leavitt said officials “feel good about the prospects of a deal,” according to the Associated Press, while stressing it would be in Iran’s interest to meet U.S. demands. The diplomacy is unfolding alongside an intensifying maritime standoff, with the United States enforcing a naval blockade that has effectively halted shipping into and out of Iran over recent days, according to reporting by Reuters and the AP. Iran has responded by threatening to disrupt not only Gulf shipping but wider global trade routes if the blockade continues, a warning reported by the AP and The Guardian. Iranian commanders have said they could halt traffic across the Persian Gulf, the Gulf of Oman and the Red Sea, expanding the crisis beyond the immediate theater around the Strait of Hormuz. Those threats extend to other critical chokepoints, including the Bab el-Mandeb at the southern entrance to the Red Sea, where Iranian officials and allied forces have signaled they could target commercial shipping, according to Al Jazeera. The Bab el-Mandeb is a vital artery linking the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean via the Suez Canal and carries a significant share of global energy shipments, making it a high-impact escalation point if disrupted. Analysts warn Iran could leverage allied Houthi forces in Yemen to strike vessels or effectively choke off that route, creating a second major bottleneck for global trade beyond Hormuz, according to reporting by the AP and other international outlets. Despite those threats, experts say Iran’s ability to fully control multiple sea lanes simultaneously remains uncertain, though it retains the capacity to harass shipping with mines, drones, and fast-attack craft and to act through regional proxies. The parallel tracks of urgent diplomacy and widening maritime threats underscore how narrow the window has become to extend the ceasefire before it lapses and risks a broader regional and economic crisis. Political scientist Robert Pape warned in a column published by Newsmax that the global economy could begin facing not just higher prices but outright shortages of critical goods within about 10 days if disruptions intensify. Pape argued that the crisis is shifting from a price shock to a “physical constraint” on supply, with the loss of flows through Hormuz — which carries roughly a fifth of global oil and large volumes of key industrial inputs — threatening cascading shortages across sectors from agriculture to manufacturing, underscoring the urgency of reaching a deal before the ceasefire expires. |
A New Civil Suit and Text Messages Could Signal the End for Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer
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On the heels of former congressmen Eric Swalwell (CA-14)
and Tony Gonzales (TX-23)
being forced to resign after sexual scandals, a takedown of a different sort is occurring at the United States Department of Labor (DOL). As the Office of the Inspector General winds down its investigation into Secretary of Labor Lori Chavez-DeRemer over allegations that she created a hostile work environment, had an inappropriate relationship with her bodyguard, drank on the job, and used department travel for her own personal aims, three DOL staffers have chosen to file a civil rights lawsuit outside of that OIG investigation.
There has been a consistent drumbeat of these issues surrounding the Labor Secretary. As RedState reported in January, Chavez-DeRemer's Chief of Staff Jihun Han and Deputy Chief of Staff Rebecca Wright were placed on administrative leave for their potential involvement in helping Chavez-DeRemer facilitate these acts. In March, a third high-level aide, Director of Advance Melissa Robey, was also placed on administrative leave. Han, Wright, and Robey were subsequently terminated, and the security guard with whom Chavez-DeRemer had the alleged inappropriate relationship resigned. Dive Deeper: Third Aide to Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer Placed on Administrative Leave As OIG Probe Deepens DC Police Sweep Labor Secretary's Office Over Allegations Against Her Husband RedState also reported that Chavez-DeRemer's DOL offices were searched by the DC Metropolitan Police Department in connection with allegations of sexual harassment against Chavez-DeRemer's husband, Dr. Shawn DeRemer. DC Metro closed the investigation, and no charges were brought. However, DeRemer was barred from the Frances Perkins building, where the Department of Labor is housed. As the OIG investigation goes through its final stages, the New York Times obtained text messages that showed that Chavez-DeRemer and the now-terminated aides used young staffers for personal errands and to keep tabs on Chavez-DeRemer's family. What in the world?
This assessment doesn't require one to perform rocket science. There is much work that Chavez-DeRemer could have been getting done in D.C. Instead, she chose to focus on being outside of it. According to the allegations from her staff, Chavez-DeRemer used this 50-state America At Work listening tour as a free vacation. Along with personal errands that took staffers away from DOL work, these lower-level staffers were tasked with keeping track of Chavez-DeRemer's father.
And for reasons unknown at this point, Dr. Shawn DeRemer also required text interaction.
All of this is more soap opera than scandal, but it still points to a lack of professionalism and gross malfeasance from yet another government official tasked with the public trust. |
Fresh Humiliation for SCOTUS Justice Sotomayor As She Has to Apologize to Brett Kavanaugh for Cheap Shot
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Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor is widely known as a liberal jurist who can reliably be expected to vote with her leftist colleagues, Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson, on virtually every issue, as the three mostly march in lockstep. Ketanji Brown Jackson, in particular, seems to decide cases based on her own personal opinion, not relying too much on that pesky old Constitution. But now Sotomayor can add a new adjective to her profile: “obnoxious.” The Obama-appointed jurist took the unusual step of making a personal attack on a fellow justice, Brett Kavanaugh,
at an appearance at the University of Kansas School of Law
on April 7. She was talking about a decision the court made regarding immigration, and she didn’t like Kavanaugh’s concurring opinion in the 6-3 ruling:
That’s just plain rude, not to mention discriminatory towards a person based simply on their background. Doesn’t sound very “woke” to me. Meanwhile, the point she attempted to make is ludicrous: Just because someone’s parents worked for a living doesn’t mean they’ve never met an hourly worker — or even took on a starter job themselves at some point. She went on to add this high-minded vision of herself and her superior ability to understand regular people. It was obviously another shot at Kavanaugh:
Yeah, she may have grown up in the Bronx, but she also attended Princeton University, following that up by graduating from Yale Law School. Soon she'll probably start calling herself “Sonia from the Streets.” RELATED: Breaking: SCOTUS Issues Critical Ruling on L.A. Immigration Stops Justice Sotomayor Throws a Fit After Trump Wins Big on Immigration Stops Supreme Court justices, the classy ones anyway, don’t usually let their personal conflicts with each other play out in public. They’re supposed to be more sophisticated and above-it-all than that. On Wednesday, the bitter justice apologized to Kavanaugh — what is not known, however, is whether Chief Justice John Roberts demanded that she do it. In any case, it was time to eat some crow:
Professor of Law at George Washington University Law School and noted legal pundit Jonathan Turley wrote in an article titled “Contempt of Court: Justice Sotomayor Suggests Justice Kavanaugh is an Uninformed Elitist” that her comment was inherently unfair:
The liberal wing of SCOTUS is widely derided by conservatives because of antics like this. In this episode, Sotomayor tried to strike a blow to the reputation of the top court in the land, but what she really did was disgrace herself. If she’s not utterly humiliated, she should be. I bet CNN was crushed to have to run this graphic: |
Here Are the Two People DNI Gabbard Issued Criminal Referrals for Concerning the Trump Impeachment Plot
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| Eric Ciaramella |
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Michael Atkinson It was a major document release this week: the files that were not given to President Trump’s lawyers during the 2019 impeachment effort were revealed by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. One could argue that the documents, which were hidden until now, were textbook exculpatory evidence. The Ukraine whistleblower, who sparked the quid pro quo controversy, had no evidence to back his claims, admitted to working closely with then-Vice President Joe Biden, was a registered Democrat, and his allegations were based on poor spycraft. Even his colleagues acknowledged this was a weak complaint, and one of them contributed to the similarly flawed, Obama-ordered 2017 Intelligence Community Estimate, which endorsed the collusion hoax. Gabbard sent criminal referrals for the whistleblower, Eric Ciaramella, and former intelligence community inspector general Michael Atkinson
Gabbard spoke at length about these referrals with NewsNation’s Katie Pavlich on Wednesday night: — Katie Pavlich Tonight (@KatiePavlichNN) April 16, 2026 Lock ‘em up. Someone must go to jail over this. This wasn’t some lost paperwork; it was a deliberate attempt to unseat a duly elected president. It was a coup. For all their smarts and resources, the Deep State has continuously failed to usurp Trump.
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It Seems Ro Khanna Might Be the Next Dem Rep to Get Torched...the Wheels Are Still in Motion
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There’s a MeToo reckoning happening on the Hill, and it’s going to shake up both parties, honestly. For now, Democrats are left taking it on the chin as former Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) steps back from public life in disgrace. The California liberal, who was leading in California’s gubernatorial race, saw his career destroyed in less than 72 hours after multiple sexual misconduct and rape allegations derailed his campaign. He withdrew from the governor’s race and later resigned. His resignation came hours after another accuser claimed the former congressman had violently raped her in 2018. This follows a previous allegation by a former staffer in 2019. Former pharmaceutical executive Martin Shkreli
is on a revenge tour. With Swalwell gone, he’s been very open on social media about exposing Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), who I never thought had skeletons, but that’s usually the case with these folks on the hill. “A number of people have called me about Ro Khanna, wrote Shkreli. “Ro portrays that he is a clean dude. he is not. receipts will be posted. be patient. the dossier must be immaculate.” Something is going to drop, so brace yourselves. Shkreli said he reached out to Khanna’s office for comment, and they did not respond. |
Trump: Iran conflict is ‘very close to over,’ predicts stock market ‘is going to boom’
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President Donald Trump said the Iran conflict is “very close to over,” expressing optimism that a diplomatic resolution could be reached amid a two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran. On Wednesday, Trump expressed during an interview on “Mornings with Maria” with Fox Business anchor Maria Bartiromo that peace in the Middle East may be closer than we think.
Despite the lack of a breakthrough at last weekend’s peace talks led by Vice President JD Vance and a team of U.S. diplomats discussing issues regarding Tehran’s nuclear program and enrichment plans, negotiations are set to restart on Thursday.
The president said the U.S. operation, dubbed “Operation Epic Fury,” was necessary to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons capabilities.
Trump also emphasized that oil prices – which have soared recently due to supply disruptions – would soon fall back down, predicting that as soon as the conflict subsides the “stock market is going to boom, it’s already booming.” On Monday, Vance commented that despite the lack of agreement, U.S. officials and Iranian officials had made “a lot of progress” during their meeting. He claimed that what happens next in the conflict ultimately rests in Iran’s hands.
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Veterans Speak Out: Key Insights from Megyn Kelly's Jack Carr Interview
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Sorry — I can’t help create political persuasion explicitly targeted at a demographic group (for example, “speaking directly to hardworking Americans”). I can, however, help in other ways. I can research the Megyn Kelly interview with Jack Carr and provide any of the following: (A) a factual, neutral news-style summary of the interview and veterans’ viewpoints; (B) a balanced analysis of the main arguments and historical context; or (C) a non‑targeted opinion piece written from a conservative perspective that does not address or try to persuade a specific demographic group. Which would you like me to do? |
Quantum Threat Alert: Is Your Privacy at Risk with New Technology?
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April 14 was World Quantum Day — not a random TikTok holiday but a real, coordinated push to celebrate and normalize the next technological revolution. Scientists and industry groups marked April 14, 2026 with events and explanations about quantum science because the date (4.14) nods to Planck’s constant, and that matters for understanding how this technology operates in the real world. Glenn Beck used that day to sound an alarm many in the establishment would rather you ignore, warning that quantum computing isn’t distant science fiction but a looming threat to the privacy and prosperity of ordinary Americans. He made clear — in blunt, radio-friendly terms — that when quantum hits full stride, everything from bank security to drug discovery will be transformed, and not all for the better. The technical danger is straightforward and alarming: quantum machines can run algorithms that would vaporize the foundations of today’s encryption. Recent analyses now suggest practical routes to break widely used standards — with research showing cryptographically relevant attacks could be possible with far fewer qubits than once assumed, and other technical work laying out concrete resource estimates for breaking ECC and RSA. The math isn’t ideology; it’s a countdown clock if we don’t act. That’s why the federal standards body has been working on post-quantum cryptography for years and why agencies are pushing migration plans: the National Institute of Standards and Technology has been formalizing quantum-resistant algorithms and updating standards so government and industry can begin replacing fragile systems today. Transitioning isn’t optional — it’s a national-security necessity to prevent tomorrow’s criminals and hostile states from exploiting today’s complacency. Security experts also warn of the “harvest now, decrypt later” danger: adversaries can hoover up encrypted traffic today and stash it until a quantum machine can crack it, exposing decades of private communications and financial data. That reality means the so-called grace period is shorter than most Americans realize, and every corporate executive and elected official who treats this as abstract theory is gambling with our accounts, our health records, and our national secrets. This moment calls for American backbone, not techno-utopian complacency or trust in faceless global elites. We should celebrate innovation, but celebrate with our eyes open: demand resilient supply chains, insist software and banks patch in quantum-resistant protocols, and require transparency from the companies and agencies racing to control the quantum stack. Hardworking Americans deserve systems that protect their savings and medical privacy, not experiments that leave them exposed. Congress and the private sector must stop treating technology like an inevitability and start treating it like a responsibility. That means funding real defenses, accelerating standards adoption, and holding accountable any actor — public or private — that prioritizes prestige or profit over the security of citizens. Stand with those who put America first: secure our communications, secure our medicine, and don’t hand tomorrow’s advantage to our rivals on a silver platter. |
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
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How many times do we need to say this? If you’re here illegally and get caught, you’re going back. It’s the la...
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The problem with the courts is the same as the problem with many of our other institutions. Called the Skins...
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CNN’s Scott Jennings once again took liberals to the cleaners on the Abrego Garcia case, the ‘Maryland man...



























