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Gov. Ron DeSantis (R., Fla.) might be the next president of the United States. Maybe he won't be, but at the very least he knows how to throw a baseball like a normal adult man. Alas, the same cannot be said about the current president, Joe Biden, and his Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama. → Read More
Another member of "The Squad," a consortium of radical left-wing Democratic lawmakers, has been caught funneling campaign money to her male lover. → Read More
We compiled some of the most poignant examples of journalists expressing love for their fellow journalists in 2022. May you, dear reader, be so lucky as to find someone who loves you the way these journalists purport to love each other, and may you in turn love them the way Jeffrey Toobin loves himself. → Read More
What happened: Vincent Lloyd, professor director of Africana Studies at Villanova University and author of Break Every Yoke: Religion, Justice, and the Abolition of Prisons, wrote an essay about his experience as "a black professor trapped in anti-racist hell." → Read More
What happened: Colin Kahl, the Biden administration's under secretary of defense for policy, outed himself as an obnoxious hipster nerd by posting a list of his top 40 albums of 2022, a year in which U.S. national security officials were presumably working hard to address the Russian invasion of Ukraine. → Read More
What happened: Colin Kahl, the Biden administration's under secretary of defense for policy, outed himself as an obnoxious hipster nerd by posting a list of his top 40 albums of 2022, a year in which U.S. national security officials were presumably working hard to address the Russian invasion of Ukraine. → Read More
What's happening: President Joe Biden, 80, will deliver the State of the Union address at 9 p.m. before a live audience in Washington, D.C. Why it matters: It doesn't. → Read More
What's happening: President Joe Biden, 80, will deliver the State of the Union address at 9 p.m. before a live audience in Washington, D.C. Why it matters: It doesn't. → Read More
Many people are freaking out (for the wrong reasons) over something Reuters journalist Patricia Zengerle reported on Twitter. "So there's indoor smoking on the House side of the Capitol now that the Republicans have taken control," she wrote earlier this week in a tweet that has been viewed more than 5.5 million times. → Read More
In a critical boost to President Joe Biden's reelection prospects, the Food and Drug Administration has approved a new Alzheimer's drug that "may modestly slow the pace of cognitive decline," according to the New York Times. → Read More
You are exclusively invited to give us your money in exchange for a rare limited edition digital collectible trading card by the Washington Free Beacon. → Read More
The House Ethics Committee on Wednesday announced that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D., N.Y.) is the target of a bipartisan probe but declined to reveal the specific allegations being investigated. → Read More
Liberal activists lost their minds on Sunday when Elon Musk tweeted that his "pronouns are Prosecute/Fauci." Celebrity snitch and Curb Your Enthusiasm actor Alexander Vindman, for example, compared the immigrant billionaire to "Geobbles"—presumably a reference to Nazi propaganda guru Joseph Goebbels. Rep. Dean Phillips (D., Minn.) wrote that Musk should be ashamed of himself because Dr. Anthony… → Read More
Former president Donald Trump often said he was "the best thing to ever happen" to the Washington Post and other mainstream news outlets. → Read More
Taylor Lorenz and other journalist influencers often complain about the challenges of "being a woman online," but they have never had to endure the trauma of being a soccer skeptic during the World Cup. → Read More
The Atlantic published an article criticizing Ron DeSantis, the Florida governor who cruised to reelection by almost 20 percentage points and is widely expected to challenge former president Donald Trump for the Republican nomination in 2024. → Read More
What happened? MSNBC did it again. The left-wing network invited Al Sharpton, a notorious anti-Semite, on Morning Joe to explain why his fellow anti-Semites shouldn't be given a public platform. Seriously? Yes. Why? Because Al Sharpton supports the Democratic Party and the Democratic Party supports him. What did he say? Sharpton was asked to discuss reports that former […] → Read More
Rep. Ted Budd (R., N.C.) will be the next U.S. senator from North Carolina. The congressman and gun-store owner defeated Democrat Cheri Beasley on Tuesday in the race to succeed retiring senator Richard Burr (R., N.C.). → Read More
What happened: Several days before President Joe Biden accused his Republican opponents of condoning political violence, someone fired a bullet into the family home of a GOP congressional candidate in North Carolina. → Read More
What happened? MSNBC's Morning Joe invited Al Sharpton to discuss his thoughts on Adidas cutting ties with Kanye West in response to the rapper's blatantly anti-Semitic comments. "'Do you have a moral compass?' every company ought to ask," Sharpton said after slamming Kanye's "intentional" anti-Semitism. → Read More