US News

'It’s a bad look!' Pete Hegseth uses unprecedented meeting to bash 'fat generals'

During the unprecedented and surprise meeting of hundreds of admirals and top U.S. military officials in Virginia Tuesday, Defense Department Secretary Pete Hegseth railed against what he characterized as a scourge of “fat troops” and “fat generals and admirals,” and announced a series of new physical fitness standards all military members must adhere to going forward.

“If the secretary of War can do regular, hard [physical training], so can every member of our joint force,” Hegseth said, speaking at the event in Quantico, a giant American flag behind him.

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'It's just ghoulish': Trump insiders buried for point scoring off tragedies

After singling out Vice President J.D. Vance for repeatedly pouncing on shooting tragedies and trying to blame Democrats on the left, MSNBC host Joe Scaborough extended criticism to encompass the far right-wing for not only lying about the events, but trying to score political points.

Noting that the conservative CATO Institute has provided data showing the overwhelming number of domestic attacks have come from right-wing extremists, the “Morning Joe” co-host went on an extended rant.

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'I’d call that a target': Retired admiral sounds alarm over grave Hegseth 'security risk'

With hundreds of admirals and top U.S. military leaders called to Quantico, Virginia by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth for a surprise meeting on Tuesday, one retired Navy admiral is sounding the alarm on what he argued was a grave “security risk” posed by the unprecedented meeting.

The gathering is expected to be attended by President Donald Trump alongside other senior Trump administration officials, and was described by Trump as “a very nice meeting talking about how well we’re doing militarily.” For retired admiral James Starvridis, however, the concentration of so many U.S. military leaders could pose a serious safety threat.

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'He has lost it': Outrage as Trump posts 'deeply racist' AI video of Democratic leaders

President Donald Trump took to social media Monday night to share a deepfake video depicting House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) with a handlebar moustache and a sombrero, and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) calling himself and Democrats “woke pieces of s---” — a post that drew immediate outrage from critics and lawmakers alike.

Set to the well-known “Mexican hat dance” song, the video sees Schumer – whose voice and likeness are convincingly recreated likely using generative artificial intelligence – say that Democrats want to allow unrestricted immigration because Americans don’t like Democrats.

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Hegseth gets 'frank feedback' as military's highest-ranking officer balks at new strategy

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is proposing a new National Defense Strategy — and is running into a wave of opposition that includes Donald Trump’s hand-picked choice as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

According to a report from the Washington Post, when Hegseth meets with the U.S. Armed Forces leadership at the highly controversial gathering at a Marine Base in Quantico, Virginia on Tuesday, his new proposal to reorder the Pentagon’s priorities is casting a cloud over the meet-up.

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Newt Gingrich gripes over Dem shutdown threat — but brags about doing it himself twice

Former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich returned to the political arena Tuesday to warn Democrats not to shut down the government — while bragging about how he did the same thing twice.

Gingrich was writing in the New York Times as Congress approached a midnight deadline to pass a spending bill — with no deal in sight.

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Jimmy Kimmel delivers brutal putdown as JD Vance weighs into suspension saga

Late night host Jimmy Kimmel clapped back at JD Vance Monday after the vice president attempted to claim Kimmel’s short-lived ousting was a result of poor ratings and not his own administration’s threats — a claim Kimmel called a “fairytale even a five-year-old wouldn’t believe.”

Kimmel’s ABC show was briefly suspended this month after the late-night host made comments about President Donald Trump's reaction to the killing of right-wing influencer Charlie Kirk, and after Federal Communications Chair Brendan Carr threatened to pull ABC’s license: “We could do this the easy way or the hard way,” Carr said.

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Trump gloats over huge YouTube settlement: 'All banned conservatives should be paid!'

President Donald Trump went on a midnight gloat after winning a massive settlement with YouTube over his post-Jan. 6 ban from the video platform.

After YouTube agreed to pay him $24.5 million, all of the Big Tech companies have now settled lawsuits the president filed against them in 2021 over bans imposed in the wake of the deadly U.S. Capitol riot. Trump shared an AI-generated post calling for other conservatives to be paid for their own bans from social media platforms.

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'Drunk with power': Author tells how Chief Justice John Roberts 'corrupted' Supreme Court

Twenty years ago this week, John Roberts was sworn in as chief justice of the Supreme Court, at 50 years old.

On that day, Lisa Graves “wept.” As chief counsel for nominations with the Senate Judiciary Committee from 2002 to 2005, she anticipated Roberts’ commitment to “advancing a right-wing political agenda through the judiciary,” she writes in her new book: "Without Precedent: How Chief Justice Roberts and His Accomplices Rewrote the Constitution and Dismantled Our Rights."

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'Offends them': Analyst warns top military brass is seething over Hegseth 'waste of time'

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's planned meeting with the top brass of America's military Tuesday is facing strong pushback from within the ranks, according to one columnist.

David Rothkopf, columnist for The Daily Beast, spoke with the outlet's executive editor, Hugh Dougherty, on a new episode of its podcast about the planned meeting between Hegseth and military leaders. NBC News reported on Sunday that President Donald Trump also plans to appear at the meeting to tell the leaders "how well we're doing militarily."

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'Covering every base': Analyst warns Trump's latest order 'more dangerous than it looks'

A high-profile progressive analyst warned on Monday that President Donald Trump's latest executive order is "more dangerous than it looks."

Progressive YouTuber Brian Tyler Cohen discussed Trump's executive order targeting the left-wing group Antifa on the latest episode of his podcast, "Brian Tyler Cohen." The order was signed shortly after the death of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, who was killed during a speech at a Utah university earlier this month.

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'Never seen that before': Ex-Air Force Secretary aghast at Hegseth's loyalty purges

Former Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall expressed his alarm on MSNBC's "The Weeknight" over Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's mass meeting with generals, who have been summoned from all over the world.

But he also had a few words of optimism that, whatever the Trump administration is doing to put political pressure on the military, the generals are professional enough to serve their country.

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'Save your tears': White House fires back at pop superstar using her own lyrics

The White House didn't take kindly to pop superstar Ariana Grande's criticism of President Donald Trump.

Grande reshared a post on Sunday night to her Instagram Stories, questioning whether MAGA fans have actually benefited from Trump 2.0. The post originally came from activist Matt Bernstein and asked Trump voters: "It’s been 250 days. Now that immigrants have been violently torn from their families and communities have been destroyed, now that trans people have been blamed for virtually everything and live in fear, now that free speech is on the brink of collapse for us all — has your life gotten better?”

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