Miley Cyrus Hopes for the Future on ‘Avatar’ Single ‘Dream as One’
Tag: administration
Treasury Secretary Bessent Hints at Income Limit on Trump’s Tariff Checks [WATCH]
Treasury Secretary Bessent Hints at Income Limit on Trump’s Tariff Checks [WATCH]
MIT scores legal win as federal court dismisses appeal in lawsuit claiming campus protests were antisemitic
“Gathering together in groups on campus, disrupting campus tranquility, and impeding travel for many students” is not antisemitic, the court ruled. The post MIT scores legal win as federal court dismisses appeal in lawsuit claiming campus protests were antisemitic appeared first on Boston. com.
Trump downplays concerns over proposed 50-year mortgages: ‘It’s not even a big deal’
President Donald Trump brushed off conservative backlash to his administration’s exploration of 50-year home loans, arguing the plan could slightly ease monthly payments amid soaring housing costs, even as critics warn it would trap buyers in decades of debt. During a Monday night appearance ..].
Heart-pounding video shows wild NYPD foot chase of armed suspect in the Bronx
A wild new NYPD video shows the moment cops chased down and arrested a 20-year-old man who was carrying a pair of loaded guns through the sidewalks and streets of the borough last week.
Trump Still Supports Ludicrous Fifty-Year Mortgages
During an interview with Fox News’ Laura Ingraham Monday, Trump defended the idiotic idea of 50-year mortgages for home buyers as a solution to make housing payments more affordable. The Trump administration placed an article in Politico which said White House staffers are fuming at Bill Pulte, the Federal Housing Finance Agency director, for putting this idea in Trump’s ear, to offset his lunacy. That rebuke didn’t last long. INGRAHAM: Housing costs are still out of reach, and another thing that your administration is trying to tackle is that for many Americans, the average age of first-time home buyers is now up to age 40, which is sad. TRUMP: I inherited that look, you have to understand right — INGRAHAM but let me get to the question, though, because your Housing Director has proposed something that has enraged your MAGA friends, which is this 50-year mortgage idea. So a significant MAGA backlash calling it a giveaway to the banks and simply prolonging the time it would take for Americans to own a home outright. Is that really a good idea? TRUMP: It’s not even a big deal. I mean, you know you go from 40 to 50 years INGRAHAM: 30 years — TRUMP And what it is you pay you pay something less from 30 that some people had a 40 and then that now they have a 50. read more.
Editorial: BBC’s jolly good fun against Trump stinks
The BBC is much like our NPR; they just keep the taxpayer cash coming and roll out all the dirt they need to make the arc of a story fit a pre-conceived narrative.
Donald Jr. makes the case he’s the ‘rightful heir to MAGA’ as speculation about 2028 grows
In their latest look at how the 2028 presidential election is shaping up on the Republican side of things, the Washington Post analyzes the early field, but says there’s room for ‘some surprises.’The standouts, they write, include Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State and one-time Trump foil Marco Rubio. Because Vance has “done little set himself apart from Trump,” they write, he is at the top of the list, according to September YouGov poll. Rubio, they write, is frequently mentioned as Trump’s successor, and even the president sees both Rubio and Vance as his heirs apparent.”Marco’s great,” Trump said, adding of Vance and Rubio: “I’m not sure if anybody would run against those two. I think if they formed a group, it would be unstoppable.”In what the Post describes as “the middle of the pack,” are Trump’s son Donald Jr., Ron DeSantis, the lame duck governor of Florida whom Trump publicly humiliated and eviscerated in the ephemeral 2024 Republican primary, and Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX), another one-time Trump enemy turned rabid loyalist. Donald Jr., writes the Post, “seems to be making the case that he’s the rightful heir to MAGA, saying recently of his desire to run: “That calling is there. I think my father has truly changed the Republican Party. I think it’s the America First party now, the MAGA party, however you want to look at it.”As for DeSantis, “His run as governor of Florida ends in 2027, so he will have to build momentum for a presidential run while out of public office,” the Post reports. And though Cruz is now a reliable Trump loyalist, the Post writes, “he has also been differentiating himself in small yet notable ways. Cruz blasted the Trump administration’s threats to cancel late-night host Jimmy Kimmel over protected speech as “dangerous as hell”, has warned against Trump’s tariffs, and recently said he can’t support Trump’s allegedly antisemitic pick for Kuwaiti ambassador. Then there are the “dark horses,” the Post says, including “Trump himself,” in reference to his taunts of an illegal third term, and Department of Homeland Security leader Kristi Noem, whom Trump considered as his vice president when she was governor of South Dakota. Noem, the Post says, has led the mass deportations which have “become one of Trump’s best-known and controversial policies, and Noem has owned it.”Another dark horse, the Post says, is health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has convinced Trump to regularly share “unfounded vaccine skepticism,” despite recently getting vaxxed himself. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard is another dark horse, as is Utah’s governor “Spencer Cox or another not-quite-MAGA candidate,” the Post says, adding that “Republican strategists expect someone like Cox or perhaps former U. N. ambassador Nikki Haley or even former vice president Mike Pence to run for president as an alternative to Trumpism.”.
Move over, 30-year mortgage. The Trump White House is working on a 50-year option to break the housing market gridlock
FHFA Director Bill Pulte confirmed Saturday, “We are indeed working on The 50-year Mortgage a complete game changer.”.
States are pushing for more scrutiny of antisemitism in schools
Tensions over the Israel-Hamas war have spilled into K-12 schools around the U. S., with advocates reporting a rise in antisemitism since the 2023 surprise attack on Israel.