Presumptuous Politics

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Axios: Trump Holds Situation Room Meeting on Iran

US President Donald Trump, flanked by Secretary of State Marco Rubio (L) and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (R), speaks during a cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on March 26, 2026.

President Donald Trump held a Situation Room meeting Saturday morning to address rising tensions in the Strait of Hormuz and ongoing nuclear talks with Iran, according to Axios, citing U.S. officials.

 

The meeting comes as the fragile ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran is set to expire within days, with no confirmed timeline for the next round of negotiations.

Iran signaled a renewed threat to the key shipping corridor Saturday and carried out attacks on vessels in the region.

The move followed Trump’s recent suggestion that a deal to end the conflict could be imminent.

One senior U.S. official told Axios that absent progress, hostilities could restart in the near term.

Top administration officials attended the meeting, including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.

Also present were White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, envoy Steve Witkoff, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, and Joint Chiefs Chairman Dan Caine, according to the report. The White House declined to comment.

Diplomatic efforts have continued through intermediaries.

Pakistani Army Chief Asim Munir recently hosted talks in Tehran aimed at bridging differences between the two sides, and Trump has spoken directly with both Munir and Iranian officials, Axios reported.

Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said it has received updated U.S. proposals and is reviewing them, though no response has been issued.

A source familiar with the negotiations told Axios that tensions flared again after both sides made headway on key issues, including uranium enrichment and Iran’s nuclear stockpile.

Speaking Saturday at the White House, Trump accused Iran of testing limits, saying the country "got a little cute" and warning that Tehran "can’t blackmail us."

He added that discussions remain active and said he expects to know soon whether the talks will move forward.

© 2026 Newsmax. All rights reserved.

 

Ilhan Omar's New Magic Filing Trick: $30M Disappears Faster Than Her Principles

In a stunning performance that would have any stage magician green with envy, the amazing sudden wealth of Democrat Representative Ilhan Omar (MN-05) has evaporated, like dandelion fluff on a windy summer's day.

The Squad member claims that the $30 million in wealth supposedly in the hands of her and her husband was just a mistake in accounting records.

Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., said she is not a millionaire and blamed a major accounting error after a congressional financial disclosure listing her assets as high as $30 million drew scrutiny from Republicans and a congressional watchdog.

An amended filing reviewed by The Wall Street Journal shows Omar and her husband’s assets were between $18,004 and $95,000, a sharp drop from an earlier disclosure that estimated their holdings between $6 million and $30 million.

"The amended disclosure confirms what we’ve said all along: The congresswoman is not a millionaire," Omar spokesperson Jacklyn Rogers told the Journal, adding that the filing was corrected "as soon as the discrepancy was identified."

 

Uh huh.

Now, from (let's be fair) between $8 million and $30 million, to somewhere between $18,004 (seems oddly specific) and $95,000, that's quite a mistake. Any accountant making a mistake that grand should be discharged. Also, are we to believe that Ilhan Omar and her venture capitalist husband never saw the initial report, which was horrendously in error? Are we really supposed to believe that? Imagine your accountant coming to you with paperwork showing your net worth at $30 million - wouldn't you stop and say, "Hey, wait just a doggone minute here, I'm not that rich!"

Sorry, Ms. Omar, but my horse squeeze detector is off the scale right now.


Read More: Trump Slams Omar, Tlaib As 'Lunatics' Screaming at SOTU

Furious Ilhan Omar Demands Probe After Her Radical SOTU Guest Is Arrested—She Might Look Familiar to You


Remember, her husband is still facing serious questions about his business and his business associates.

A longtime Democratic operative who worked for top party figures before jumping into private ventures with the now-husband of Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., Tim Mynett, is back in the spotlight as swindling allegations resurface and Congress investigates Omar's skyrocketing net worth via her husband's companies, according to her financial disclosures.

William Hailer and Mynett, who met working for now-Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison when he was in Congress, were both political operatives before they turned to venture capitalism and the wine industry. Hailer was a senior advisor to former Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez and also has an extensive history working for Ellison, who was the DNC co-chair. Between consulting fees and reimbursements, Hailer raked in over $250,000 advising the DNC and Ellison, according to FEC filings.

Here's the onion:

Through these business ventures, which include wine and cannabis, Hailer left a trail of fraud and swindling allegations tied to eSt Ventures, which was co-founded by Hailer and Mynett, and the subsequently formed Badlands Fund, which was created to control another investment fund that the pair also created called Badlands Ventures.

Uh huh.

Now, even a rabid leftie like Ilhan Omar is entitled to due process, which in her case would seem to be a Congressional investigation into her sudden wealth - and its even more sudden evaporation. Now, the world of venture capital and high finance isn't a world I've ever moved in, not when I have to take a look at our bank balances before dropping $200 worth of diesel fuel into my pickup. But this sure smells fishy to me. This whole thing, an "accounting error" that amounted to tens of millions, the fact that wasn't noticed by Rep. Omar and her husband, who had to know they weren't really that rich, and now the sudden resolution?

I'm not buying it.

 

Another Day, Another Journalist Steps on a Rake in an Attempt to Take Out FBI Director Kash Patel

We watched on Thursday as the entertainment zine "Variety," and CNN international anchor Christiane Amanpour, 

Christiane Amanpour | 2014 Cable Hall of Fame Honoree 

crashed and burned in their attempts to own Secretary of War Pete Hegseth.

Pete Hegseth - Wikipedia 

 However, legacy media is committed to its mission to take out the Trump administration cabinet, especially the ones they really cannot stand: like Hegseth and FBI Director Kash Patel. The end result of these quixotic campaigns is the media beclowning themselves, as "The Atlantic" has now done.

On Friday night, The Atlantic released an anonymously sourced hit piece on Patel titled, "The FBI Director Is MIA: Kash Patel has alarmed colleagues with episodes of excessive drinking and unexplained absences." The article begins with an anecdotal story about Patel supposedly losing access to his computer, and freaking out so much that he assumed he had been fired. It rambles on with "people familiar with the matter" sourcing, peppered with quotes from people who actually matter: like White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt and Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche.

Mmmkay.

But Patel, according to multiple current officials, as well as former officials who have stayed close to him, is deeply concerned that his job is in jeopardy. He has good reasons to think so—including some having to do with what witnesses described to me as bouts of excessive drinking. My colleague Ashley Parker and I reported earlier this month that Patel was among the officials expected to be fired after Attorney General Pam Bondi’s ouster, on April 2. “We’re all just waiting for the word” that Patel is officially out of the top job, an FBI official told me this week, and a former official told my colleague Jonathan Lemire that Patel was “rightly paranoid.” Senior members of the Trump administration are already discussing who might replace him, according to an administration official and two people close to the White House who were familiar with the conversations.

Fridays are usually the day when politicians and government departments and agencies throw out the news and information that's forgettable or that they don't want anyone to notice. Director Patel, and people who actually work alongside him, did notice this naked attempt at teardown, and quickly pushed back. 

Benjamin Williamson, Assistant Director of the FBI Office of Public Affairs wrote to the fauxnalist who authored the hit piece:

Top to bottom, this is one of the most absurd things I've ever read. Completely false at nearly 100% clip. And with a two hour deadline.

Copying my colleague Erica. We'll get you some more thorough responses.

Patel posted an image of this correspondence with the message, "see you and your entire entourage of false reporting in court."

see you and your entire entourage of false reporting in court... But do keep at it with the fake news, actual malice standard is now what some would call a legal lay up. https://t.co/MfbHH8OtLv pic.twitter.com/kw5U3LrfMM

— FBI Director Kash Patel (@FBIDirectorKash) April 18, 2026

You would think between the embarrassment (to The Atlantic) over Signalgate, and their made up "suckers and losers" mess, that The Atlantic would quit while they were behind. But apparently not. Litigator Jesse R. Binnall even corresponded with The Atlantic before the hit piece dropped, giving detailed accounting on exactly what the article got wrong. Binnall warned that should they move forward to publish the article without correcting the record, they would be subject to legal action.

This is the letter we sent to The Atlantic and Sarah Fitzpatrick

The Fallout From the Epstein Files - The Atlantic 

BEFORE they published their hit piece on FBI Director @FBIDirectorKash. They were on notice that the claims were categorically false and defamatory. They published anyway.

See you in court. pic.twitter.com/Ke8cqNh8hY

— Jesse R. Binnall (@jbinnall) April 17, 2026

Williamson's colleague Erica Knight wrote a detailed breakdown on just how this nonsense came about. According to Knight, every other D.C. publication were privy to these rumors and allegations. Some had had them pitched directly to them, and gave it a hard pass. But The Atlantic? They said, "Hold my beer."

The Atlantic published a "bombshell" on Director Patel tonight that every real DC reporter chased, couldn't verify, and passed on.

Here's reality. Since being sworn in, Director Patel has taken a grand total of 17 days off — half as much time off as Comey and Wray — and he…

— Erica Knight (@_EricaKnight) April 17, 2026

The Atlantic published a "bombshell" on Director Patel tonight that every real DC reporter chased, couldn't verify, and passed on.

Here's reality. Since being sworn in, Director Patel has taken a grand total of 17 days off — half as much time off as Comey and Wray — and he spends twice as much time in the office as either of them ever did. The so-called "intoxication incidents" The Atlantic breathlessly reports have happened exactly ZERO times. Under his tenure: 67,000 arrests nationwide. Violent crime arrests up 112%. Murder rate down 20%. 1,800 criminal gangs dismantled. 2,200+ kilos of fentanyl seized — enough to kill 178 million Americans. 300 human traffickers arrested. 6,200+ missing children recovered. 1,700 online predators arrested — a 490% increase. 8 of the Top Ten Most Wanted captured, double the previous four years combined. 1,000+ agents redeployed from DC bureaucracy back to field offices chasing criminals.

The Atlantic's "reporting"? Fabricated stories about "breaching equipment" that was never requested. Intoxication claims with not a single witness willing to put their name on one. A paragraph — I'm not kidding — about the FBI Store not carrying "intimidating enough" merchandise. Every serious DC reporter passed on this. Sarah Fitzpatrick and Jeffrey Goldberg printed it anyway.

Knight ended with an affirmation of what Patel said: "lawsuit is being filed."  


Read More: Hot Takes: Stolen Valor Is Alleged After 'Journalist' Takes Her Hegseth Derangement Syndrome Too Far

The Press Proves Secretary Hegseth Right About Being ‘Pharisees’ With a Failure of Biblical Proportions


The sad reality: The Atlantic has money to burn and lawyers on speed dial willing to do their bidding. Their only care is how much mileage they can get out of their fake scandals and false narratives, especially when it comes to furthering their Trump Derangement Syndrome. 

Clint Brown, Patel's "Sherpa" during his FBI confirmation process, responded on X to the article's author, and in so many words said exactly what is stated above. 

Your anon sourced story is BS.

Oh and by the way, it was no pressure campaign that got Kash confirmed. He did his homework, studied every brief I wrote him (and I wrote them all personally). If I sent him material at say 2am, he would respond with questions by 3am. He was always available and never hard to reach. Ultimately, he addressed any concerns senators had. He studied the law enforcement issues in each of their states and came prepared with plans, ideas, and questions for addressing the unique law enforcement needs of each state. THAT is who Kash Patel is and it’s why the FBI  has been so effective in the last year. 

I’ve never once seen him over drink. Not once. You are spinning that narrative because you know POTUS doesn’t view that favorably, even admitted as much in your story. 

And I’m not hard to find. Pretty obvious why you didn’t reach out to me for comment.

Hey @S_Fitzpatrick I was Kash Patel’s Sherpa on the transition. I spent nearly all day everyday with him for 3+ months and have been with him frequently since.

I have never seen the type of behavior that you’re describing from him.

Your anon sourced story is BS.

Oh and by the… https://t.co/hwWnUrYrKT pic.twitter.com/T0EUhyKbq0

— Clint Brown (@DissidentClint) April 18, 2026

If this was such a bombshell as the author claimed, then Journalism 101 dictates at least two credible sources to corroborate your claims, especially when that type of verification is readily available. It appears the FBI Office of Public Affairs, and people like Clint Brown, were more than willing to share credible information with The Atlantic for the story. But pushing out an email for comment from a high-ranking government official just two hours before publication is clearly an attempt at ambush. The Atlantic wasn't looking for anything credible, they were simply trying to get another notch on their belt.  

As my colleague Brad Slager aptly put it: "Emotionally rushing hit pieces out eclipses the use of pragmatic thought."

Obviously.

Like Hegseth, Patel not only laughs in their faces, it's a clear indicator that he's doing his job.

Memo to the fake news - the only time I’ll ever actually be concerned about the hit piece lies you write about me will be when you stop. Keep talking, it means I’m doing exactly what I should be doing. And no amount of BS you write will ever deter this FBI from making America…

— FBI Director Kash Patel (@FBIDirectorKash) April 18, 2026

 

The Enigma of JD Vance

The Enigma of JD Vance

The sitting vice president is hard to figure out.

Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL)

Senator Tuberville: No truce over military blockade on abortion 

 said the other day that nearly 80 million people specifically voted for Donald Trump, and thus it was incumbent on Republicans to pass the SAVE America Act and other legislation that the president supports. Tuberville was right about Trump: many, if not most, of those who voted in 2024 for Donald Trump did so because of the man. Whereas some people vote based on party, independent of the candidate, Donald Trump is the main draw for many voters. Whether it be his colorful ways, supportive family, fighting style, blunt presentation, reliability with friends and allies, little dance, or other features, there is simply nobody like Donald Trump. The stock market is reaching highs, the Iranians are assessing massive damage, tariff revenue is enormous, the armed services reached their recruiting goals five months early, etc. The U.S. and the world are different and, for many, better due to the actions of Donald Trump.

So what happens after Trump? The basic thinking is that JD Vance is the heir apparent of MAGA and the obvious choice to run in 2028. Some people whisper that Vance will take the family over country route and not actually run. There are other Republicans who might have an eye on the prize, though Marco Rubio 

Marco Rubio Adds a New Title Under Trump: Interim National Security Adviser  - The New York Times 

has consistently said that he will not run if Vance chooses to do so. So what about JD Vance? Nobody can be a Trump II. Fine. But is JD Vance a good fit for the tens of millions who supported Donald Trump, the man and his policies?

Before the vice president left for Pakistan recently in order to talk to the Iranians, he gave a quick interview on the tarmac in Hungary. There had been an open point on Lebanon and the ceasefire. Iran claimed that the two were intertwined as the Iranians are desperate to save their decades-long, hundreds of billions of dollars investment in the Shiite terror group, Hezbollah. The U.S. said that Israel stopping its military campaign in southern Lebanon was never included in the 15-point ceasefire document. What struck me was a comment that Vance made on the subject. In the interview, he said that the issue of a Lebanese ceasefire was one of misunderstanding, but he went on to say that the negotiations should not fall over Lebanon, “which has nothing to do with them [the Iranians].” My “uh-oh” sensor went off. Now I appreciate that it is hard to give a cogent interview while halfway on one’s way home, but the question is whether JD Vance really meant what he said. Lebanon is everything to Iran. I recently saw an interview with Ayatollah Khomeini on an Air France flight back to Iran. He was asked what he felt returning to his homeland. His answer: “Nothing.” His only goal was to spread Shia Islamic teachings and terror, and if Tehran was a good place to set up his office, so be it. Lebanon has been the graveyard of dozens of IRGC generals and officials. Not surprisingly, when the beepers exploded, the Iranian ambassador to Lebanon was seriously injured. Why would he have a beeper meant for Hezbollah operatives?

More recently, at a TPUSA event last week, JD Vance spoke. Ben Shapiro

Ben Shapiro - Wikipedia 

 noted that his response to the young audience was troubling.

 Essentially, he stated that okay, you may not like our being friends with Israel, but there are so many other things that you do like, such as beating up Iran, raising wages, etc., that you should judge us on the whole and join us going forward. I have seen at other TPUSA events with Vance and other Republican stars where they skirt the Groyper arguments against Israel (“attacking Christianity!” “making a genocide!” “the USS Liberty!”) and say, yeah, let’s talk about other stuff that you like. All of the calumnies thrown at Israel by the Groyper-Tucker Carlson wing of the party are lies. There have been no Israeli attacks on Christian sites, with the Christian population of Israel the only one growing in the Middle East. There was no genocide in Gaza, with the population growing and over 80 percent of those killed identified by Hamas as their operatives. The Liberty attack was a mistake; Israel apologized and paid reparations. Hey, did we hear anything from these clowns about the Muslim Kuwaiti pilot who whacked three American F-15Es at the start of the current war?

Do you know how not anti-Christian Israel is? After the Kotel or Western Wall was closed to prayers for the duration of the shooting war, it finally opened after the ceasefire took hold. Several family members went to the Old City to pray at “the Wall.” They were not allowed to enter the Old City. Why? Because it was the Saturday on which local Christians have their Fire Ceremony, so access to the Old City was denied to non-Christians. My wife tried to get in at several points, but the walled city was blocked off to all but Christians and residents of the Old City. Now, does that sound like anti-Christian bigotry? I remember similar events from the past and being rerouted due to a Christian march in the Armenian Quarter. What I just wrote, Vance should have cited. He should have fought back against the strong Groyper, Jew-hating movement infesting TPUSA and younger Republicans. But he chose to punt: Okay, you may not like our Middle East policies, but how ‘bout them tax cuts? The GOP has a Jew-hating problem imported from the Left/Muslim nexus. It’s no coincidence that Tucker Carlson has high praise for Qatar, Islam, and Muslim cities being superior to Western cities. Vance said that Theo Von was the go-to podcaster. A doorknob is more knowledgeable than Von. Von asked Joe Rogan how much longer Israel will “let us stay alive.” And this is Vance’s guy?

So is JD Vance the real deal? Nobody is going to be Donald Trump, and there is no point trying to compare any potential 2028 candidate with a model that they made one copy of and then destroyed the mold. We should be grateful for Donald Trump’s forceful leadership in an age of wet noodles, but we must realize that just as George H. W. Bush was no Ronald Reagan, the next president will not tell a rally that he is going to bomb the s**t out of America’s enemies. Vance may not run, or he may be bested by someone else in the party. But if Vance is the nominee and he can’t get his head around Israel as a good country and not a genocider or starver of the millions, then he will lose some of the MAGA base. The U.S.-Israel relationship is based on respect, and I have heard only praise from Pete Hegseth and Adm. Brad Cooper regarding Israel’s full participation in the war against Iran. While the Gulf states do little, Israel dropped 18,000 munitions prior to the ceasefire. Where is the praise of a true ally while the Europeans hide in the sand? Where is the counter to Groyper anti-Israel lies? Silence here is not golden.

One can’t expect a guy who grew up in the Rust Belt to have the knowledge and experience with Jews that a New York real estate developer has. Donald Trump grew up among Jews, and he learned respect from his father, who did not take rent from Holocaust survivors who could not afford it. I don’t believe for a minute that JD Vance is an antisemite, and even if he won’t divorce himself from Tucker Carlson’s hatred, I know that he is a friend of Israel and the Jewish people. I don’t think he fully understands the region, and I hope that he is a quick learner.

 

This Radio Chatter From the Iranian Attack on an Oil Tanker Is Crazy

This Radio Chatter From the Iranian Attack on an Oil Tanker Is Crazy

Accounts on social media have managed to find audio from the Indian oil tanker that was targeted by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps while crossing the Strait of Hormuz.

Audio of the Indian oil tanker Sanmar Herald pleading with Iranian forces to stop shooting at it in the Strait of Hormuz this morning. pic.twitter.com/7Y5n7Jb7o0

— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) April 18, 2026

The captain of the Indian vessel pleaded with the Iranians to stop firing upon their ship, and attempted to remind them that they were the ones who granted clearance to the vessel in the first place. The attack on the Indian vessel led to their government summoning Iran’s ambassador to India, Mohammad Fathali, to demand answers for why their ship was subject to strikes despite receiving clearance.

 

— Randhir Jaiswal (@MEAIndia) April 18, 2026

Iranian Ambassador to India Mohammad Fathali leaves from Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) in New Delhi after he was summoned by Indian Government over Iranian Navy firing at two Indian vessels even after giving the clearance to move at Strait of Hormuz. pic.twitter.com/zL8Q3mhnBF

— Aditya Raj Kaul (@AdityaRajKaul) April 18, 2026

BREAKING: India is expected to summon Iran's ambassador after the IRGC fired on Indian vessels in the Strait of Hormuz this morning, including a supertanker carrying 2 million barrels of Iraqi oil, despite having given the vessel clearance to pass.

— The Hormuz Letter (@HormuzLetter) April 18, 2026

Another radio message from the Iranians appears to have been relayed to all ships in the region, warning them that they are not permitted to pass through the Strait.

Audio recording from the IRGC’s message to tankers on the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. pic.twitter.com/liEFQRsdEK

— HFI Research (@HFI_Research) April 18, 2026

Reuters is reporting that Iran is broadcasting this VHF message: "Attention all ships, regarding the failure ⁠of the U.S. government to fulfil its commitment in the negotiation, Iran declares the Strait of Hormuz completely closed again. No vessel of any type or nationality…

— Phil Stewart (@phildstewart) April 18, 2026

Thankfully, no one was hurt in the incident.

 

11th scientist death emerges in string of missing, dead officials with access to US secrets

Eskridge may be the 11th scientist who has vanished or died in recent years.

The 2022 death of Amy Eskridge, a Huntsville, Alabama–based researcher, has now resurfaced online as the 11th case in a growing list of scientists who have died or disappeared under unusual circumstances.

Her death has drawn renewed attention after at least 10 other recent cases involving individuals tied to U.S. military, nuclear and aerospace research have prompted questions about whether any pattern exists.

President Donald Trump said Thursday he had "just left a meeting" on the issue and vowed answers within days, calling the situation "pretty serious."

"I hope it’s random, but we’re going to know in the next week and a half," Trump told reporters.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote on X Friday that the White House's investigation will leave "no stone unturned." 

"In light of the recent and legitimate questions about these troubling cases and President Trump’s commitment to the truth, the White House is actively working with all relevant agencies and the FBI to holistically review all of the cases together and identify any potential commonalities that may exist," Leavitt said.

"No stone will be unturned in this effort, and the White House will provide updates when we have them."

An exhibit of the F-1 engine at the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center

An F-1 engine used on NASA’s Saturn V rocket is displayed at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., a hub for aerospace and defense research where Amy Eskridge lived and worked. (Carol M. Highsmith/Buyenlarge/Getty Images)

While officials have not confirmed any connection between the cases, the overlap in timing and the individuals’ ties to advanced research fields has fueled growing public attention and speculation.

Eskridge died June 11, 2022, in Huntsville, Alabama, at the age of 34, according to obituary records. Her death has been reported as a self-inflicted gunshot wound, though limited official details have been publicly released.

Eskridge co-founded the Institute for Exotic Science and described her work as focused on experimental propulsion concepts, including what she referred to as "antigravity" research.

"We discovered antigravity, and our lives went to (expletive) and people started sabotaging us," she said in a 2020 interview with Youtuber Jeremy Rys. "It’s harassment, threats. It’s awful.

"If you stick your neck out in public, at least someone notices if your head gets chopped off," Eskridge added. "If you stick your neck out in private, they will bury you. They will burn down your house while you’re sleeping in your bed, and it won’t even make the news." 

In the same interview, she described what she characterized as escalating pressure surrounding her work.

"I have to publish because it’s only going to get worse until I publish," she said, adding that the situation was "getting more and more aggressive."

Melissa Casias

Melissa Casias is another of the 11 scientists whose deaths or disappearances are now being scrutinized.  (Sierra Casias)

Michael David Hicks

Michael David Hicks is another of the scientists who went missing or died under mysterious circumstances.  (Fox News)

In presentations and interviews, Eskridge also suggested that researchers working on unconventional technologies could face pressure to move their work out of the public domain, describing what she saw as a pattern in which scientists who reported breakthroughs would "disappear" from public work or stop publishing.

Eskridge’s death is being cited alongside cases involving retired Air Force Maj. Gen. William "Neil" McCasland, NASA scientist Monica Jacinto Reza, contractor Steven Garcia, astrophysicist Carl Grillmair, Massachusetts Institute of Technology physicist Nuno Loureiro, NASA engineer Frank Maiwald, Los Alamos–linked employees Melissa Casias and Anthony Chavez, NASA researcher Michael David Hicks and pharmaceutical scientist Jason Thomas.


The Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) told Fox News Digital it is investigating the deaths and disappearances. 

"NNSA is aware of reports related to employees of our labs, plants and sites and is looking into the matter," a statement from the department said. 

At the same time, there is no publicly available evidence linking Eskridge’s death to those cases, and authorities have not indicated any connection between her work and the circumstances of her death.

Her case has also become the subject of speculation in online and alternative technology communities, where some commentators have raised questions about the circumstances surrounding her death. Those claims, however, remain unverified and are not supported by official findings.

 

Mamdani’s Tax Scheme Crumbles as New Yorkers Demand Real Solutions

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Muslim 

 Zohran Mamdani’s grandiose tax plan is collapsing under its own hubris, and patriotic New Yorkers are finally seeing the smoke and mirrors for what they are: political theater dressed up as fiscal policy. What was sold as a bold raid on “the rich” has run headlong into reality — resistance from Albany, skepticism from the City Council, and sober budget analysts who say the numbers don’t add up.

The centerpieces of Mamdani’s proposal — a 2 percentage-point income surcharge on New Yorkers making over $1 million and a massive corporate tax hike — sounded good at rallies but require state approval and complex legal gymnastics to implement. Those aren’t local talking points; they’re concrete policy moves that experts and legal memos have repeatedly warned would be difficult to execute and easy to game.

Worse for Mamdani, Governor Kathy Hochul and other state leaders have publicly cooled on his plan, leaving the mayor’s signature promises stranded without the Albany support he needs. You don’t need to be a bureaucrat to understand the lesson: you can’t unilaterally tax your way out of a budget shortfall when the state holds the pen on the law.

Back in the city, the City Council has pushed back with a competing savings plan and blunt calls to avoid new property levies, forcing Mamdani into the uncomfortable position of defending threats to homeowners he promised to protect. Independent budget analysts and the city’s own fiscal office have flagged that his numbers rely on Albany saying yes and on optimistic revenue estimates that haven’t materialized.

 

Conservative analysts have been vindicated in warning that such tax fantasies would do real harm — driving businesses and high earners out of the city, hollowing out the tax base, and saddling working families with higher costs in the long run. Critics from across the spectrum note the revenue projections are shaky and that threatening property-tax hikes as a bargaining chip only reveals weak leadership, not competence.

Hardworking New Yorkers deserve more than sermonizing and stunt politics; they deserve fiscal discipline, accountable leadership, and policies that grow opportunity instead of punishing success. If Mamdani truly cares about the city, he’ll stop playing populist games, work with Albany and the Council on real reforms, and stop waving a wrecking ball at the very people whose jobs and investments keep New York alive.

New Developments in Charlie Kirk Murder Case Spark National Outrage

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A massive update in the Tyler Robinson case has the nation watching as prosecutors continue to move aggressively after the September 10, 2025, killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University. Robinson was arrested days after the shooting and has been charged with aggravated murder and related offenses; state authorities have signaled they will seek the death penalty given the circumstances of the attack. Americans deserve the truth, and law-and-order conservatives will insist on a full, transparent prosecution that delivers justice for a brutal, political killing.


 

 

Saturday, April 18, 2026

CartoonDems

 








Trump Says He Trusts Iran to Honor Deal

Trump says US very close to a deal with Iran

President Donald Trump said Friday that he trusts Iran to follow through on its commitments, signaling a notable vote of confidence even as tensions between the two countries have persisted.

Asked by ABC News whether he believes the Iranians can be relied upon to honor their obligations, Trump answered yes. He did not elaborate.

The president also suggested that Iran may be reaching a point of fatigue, hinting that such a shift could influence its behavior on the global stage.

 

"I think they've had it. I think they've had enough," Trump said. "That can happen to anybody.

"Even people like you and I can say, 'I've had enough.'"

Iran said Friday it had fully reopened the Strait of Hormuz to commercial vessels, but Trump said the American blockade on Iranian ships and ports "will remain in full force" until Tehran reaches a deal with the U.S., including on its nuclear program.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi 

Iranian foreign minister says Tehran willing to enter indirect negotiations  with US | The Times of Israel 

posted on X that the crucial waterway, through which about 20% of the world's oil is shipped, was now fully open to commercial vessels, as a 10-day truce between Israel and the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon appeared to hold.

The president's expression of trust stands out against the backdrop of years of strained relations between Washington and Tehran.

Trump has previously taken a hard-line stance on Iran, often criticizing its leadership and policies while emphasizing economic pressure and deterrence measures.

Direct talks between the U.S. and Iran last weekend were inconclusive, as the two nations could not agree about Iran's nuclear program and other points.

Trump suggested a second round of talks could happen this weekend.

"The Iranians want to meet," he said in a brief telephone interview with Axios. "They want to make a deal.

"I think a meeting will probably take place over the weekend."

On his negotiating team, Trump said: "Steve [Witkoff] and Jared [Kushner] will be going out, and maybe JD [Vance]. Haven't spoken to JD about that yet," ABC News reported.

The president said talks would take place only in Islamabad.

"I'm not interested in going to countries that didn't help," he said.

 

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