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Hundreds of fungi species threatened with extinction: IUCN

by Benjamin LEGENDRE

Deforestation, farming and climate-fuelled fires are driving increasing threats to fungi, the lifeblood of most plants on Earth, the International Union for Conservation of Nature warned Thursday.

At least 411 fungi face extinction among the 1,300 varieties whose conservation status is well understood, according to the latest update of the IUCN's authoritative "Red List of Threatened Species".

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'Selling miracles on the side': Rachel Maddow calls out WH official's 'YouTube evangelism'

MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow called attention to the head of President Donald Trump’s White House Faith Office, whom she flagged for continuing to peddle religious articles and other “supernatural blessings.”

“Are you feeling the itch to send this U.S. government employee, the head of the White House Faith Office, $1,000 or more? If so, congratulations, because that is how you get all this stuff, including the ‘special year of blessing’ and ‘a long life’ and ‘taking your sickness away’ for the low, low price of $1,000,” Maddow said sarcastically.

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'Where's my First Amendment rights?' Republican wants quieter town halls

WASHINGTON — Republicans on Capitol Hill are laughing off — publicly, at least — the angry voters who keep storming their town hall meetings from coast to coast.

“I'm not worried about it,” Rep. Ralph Norman (R-SC) told Raw Story. “It helps that Democrats are showing their colors.”

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'Hegseth is a liar': Experts erupt over new revelations on Signal war plans scandal

Revelations that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth shared plans that detailed the exact timing of planned military attacks over a Signal group chat created a firestorm of criticism from national security experts on Wednesday.

National security attorney Bradley Moss took to BlueSky to run down why Hegseth's claim that no classified information was sent over the channel simply doesn't hold water.

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'Peddle hoaxes': Pete Hegseth issues vulgar statement about leaked 'war plans' screenshots

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who's in the middle of the Signal messaging app scandal that inadvertently revealed an impending military strike to a journalist, made an angry post on social media Wednesday once again denying that "war plans" were revealed.

"So, let’s me get this straight," Hegseth began on Wednesday.

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Hegseth's Signal leak is 'raising serious questions' as 'rookie mistakes' pile up: NYT

According to a report from the New York Times, Pete Hegseth's tenure as defense secretary can, at best, be described as a series of "stumbles," with the latest scandal over blurting extraordinary sensitive attack details in an unsecured Signal chatroom possibly being the last straw.

As the Times' Helene Cooper and Eric Schmitt reported, that Hegseth "... started his job at the Pentagon determined to out-Trump President Trump, Defense Department officials and aides said," and that has led to nothing but push-back from the president, members of Congress and officials in the Pentagon.

As more and more revelations trickle out on how The Atlantic editor -in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg was invited into the Signal chat where high-level administration officials joked and shared details about the surprise attack on Houthi rebels, a great deal of the ire has been directed at Hegseth.

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Retired Maj. Gen. Paul D. Eaton, who served in the Iraq war explained, "My father was killed in action flying night-trail interdiction over the Ho Chi Minh Trail. And now, you have Hegseth. He has released information that could have directly led to the death of an American fighter pilot.”

The report notes that Hegseth's tenure has been riddled with "rookie mistakes" as Senator Roger Wicker, Republican of Mississippi, recently commented with, national security expert Kori Schake of the American Enterprise Institute adding, "Secretary Hegseth is trying to figure out where the president’s headed, and to run there ahead of him ... He’s not yet demonstrated that he’s running the department.”

Peter Feaver, a military expert at Duke University suggested the Signal chat bombshell "raises serious questions about how a new accountability standard might apply: How would he [Hegseth] handle a situation like this if it involved one of his subordinates?”

"On Monday, Mr. Hegseth left for Asia, his first trip abroad since a foray to Europe last month in which he was roundly criticized for going further on Ukraine than his boss had at the time." the Times reported. "He posted a video on social media of himself guarded by two female airmen in full combat gear as he boarded the plane at Joint Base Andrews. The show of security was remarkable. Not even the president is guarded that way as he boards Air Force One."

You can read more here.

'That's not how it works': MSNBC host buries Mike Waltz's new security screw-up blame game

Donald Trump's national security advisor's attempt to spread blame for the massive security breach during an appearance on Fox News on Tuesday night got a thorough beat-down on MSNBC Wednesday morning.

As the Trump administration attempts to weather a firestorm over The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg being allowed access to a Signal chatroom littered with Trump's inner circle discussing an upcoming attack on Huthis, adviser Mike Waltz ran to the safe space of Laura Igraham's show where he tried to pin the blame of Goldberg for something he is ultimately responsible for.

As he told Fox's Ingraham, "I’m not a conspiracy theorist, but of all the people out there, somehow this guy who has lied about the president, who has lied to Gold Star families, lied to their attorneys, and gone to Russia, hoax, gone to just all kinds of links to lie and smear the president United States, and he’s the one that somehow gets on somebody’s contact and then get sucked into this group."


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He then added, "I didn’t see this loser in the group. It looked like someone else. Now, whether he did it deliberately or it happened in some other technical mean, is something we’re trying to figure out.”

That led "Morning Joe" co-host Joe Scarborough to comment, "I mean, there's so much wrong there ––where to begin? First of all, you know, feeling the need to call a guy a scumbag and bottom feeder and all this other stuff. I mean, again, it just actually speaks to the culture, just the the sad culture there, number one."

"But also Laura, by the way, pushed, kept pushing him 'Well, wait a second,' you know, and he's saying 'We've got the best technical minds, we're going to get Elon Musk.' You don't need Elon Musk," the MSNBC host exclaimed. "You added it and then it's like, 'Okay, well the staff, it's not the staffer's fault, it's my fault. We don't know how he got there, maybe he put himself on.' He didn't put himself on there! That's not how it works. He added him or somebody in his office added him."

"Number two: I'm sorry, but I think if I were on a national security chain like that, I would be looking at every single number and say, "Okay, who do we have on here?" he added.

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Anybody check that?': MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow flags suspicious Trump gift from Putin

A portrait of President Donald Trump that special envoy Steve Witkoff hand-delivered to White House from Vladimir Putin was subjected to a brutal round of criticism from MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, who mocked the administration official as an example of a “tough guy genius.”

Maddow delivered the strong rebuke Tuesday during her show’s opening monologue as she also ripped into Witkoff for reportedly being inside the Kremlin as high-level administration officials traded top secret war plans on a Signal group chat. She began her takedown by first addressing Witkoff directly.

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'Big changes': Senate GOP plans to overhaul House budget as leaders 'nowhere near' deal

House and Senate Republicans are still "nowhere near" agreement on how to craft the sweeping budget bill to pass President Donald Trump's agenda, reported Politico — and the Senate leaders are considering "big changes" to what the House already passed, yet another complication in a process already full of hurdles.

"GOP senators made clear Tuesday they intend to revamp the House-approved framework for the sweeping domestic policy bill — most crucially, by likely tweaking the amount of spending cuts congressional committees would need to achieve to finance the package of tax cuts, border security enhancements and energy provisions," said the report.

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Pardoned J6-er with history of far-right extremism now stands guard at Tesla dealerships

A self-identified Three Percenter who received a pardon from President Donald Trump for his role in the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol showed up over the past weekend to oppose a protest against a Tesla dealership in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

A TikTok video posted by William F. Beals II shows him wearing a jacket with a Three Percenter patch while standing near the dealership on March 22, the same day that progressive activist group Indivisible Tennessee led protests at four locations across the state.

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Trump's CIA director links Biden to use of Signal for secret war plans chat

CIA Director John Ratcliffe is blaming President Joe Biden's administration for a conversation on an encrypted app that may have included classified intelligence information.

A bombshell report in The Atlantic revealed that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth shared classified war plans in a Signal chat that included a reporter among its membership.

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'Goofy' club DJ exposed as 'infamous' leader of notorious white power network: prosecutors

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Series: Inside Terrorgram:The Rise and Fall of an Online Hate Network

More in this series

Reporting Highlights

  • Sinister Influence: An easygoing DJ led a dual life as an online propagandist for white supremacist hate and, prosecutors say, inspired followers to kill LGBTQ+ people and people of color.
  • Producer of Hate: For years, Matthew Allison took advantage of lax moderation on the social media platform Telegram to churn out videos — around 120 in total — celebrating white terrorism.
  • A Free Speech Defense: Allison has said he is a video “artist” and does not hate anyone. He denied inciting people to commit violence and plans to fight his case on First Amendment grounds.

These highlights were written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

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'I will always be honest': Republican shamed over 'false' promise on Medicaid

“On Feb. 25, I voted yes on a budget resolution that protects Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid while cutting some spending elsewhere.”

Rep. Nick LaLota (R-NY), in a YouTube video posted March 4, 2025

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