Chinese woman evades warrant for vehicular manslaughter after horror wreck caught on camera A Chinese woman fled back to her homeland after allegedly killing her [more…]
Democratic challenger in pivotal Texas election portrayed pervert who masturbates in public in music video
The New York Post has uncovered a bizarre music video starring Bobby Pulido, an Emmy-winning musician who won the Democratic nomination for a U.S. congressional seat in Texas.
In the video titled “Dias de Ayer,” Pulido portrays several characters, including a gun-wielding gangster in the mold of “Scarface,” a pervert who pleasures himself in public spaces, as well as a gay male who is attracted to the pervert.
‘This freak is who Democrats chose to run in Texas?’
The embarrassing video from 2010 might complicate the campaign effort by the political neophyte.
The Post noted that he had made somewhat derogatory comments to users on social media implying that he might be gay.
“I can swear on the Bible that I’m not,” said Pulido in Spanish to questions about his portrayal of a homosexual in the video.
Pulido is hoping to unseat Republican Rep. Monica De La Cruz for the 14th congressional district in Texas. President Donald Trump won the district easily in 2024, and De La Cruz trounced Democratic opponent Michelle Vallejo by more than 14 percentage points.
Democratic polling found Pulido was trailing behind the incumbent by only three percentage points in September.
His campaign did not respond to a Post request for comment.
The Republican National Committee did have a comment on its official account on the X social media platform.
“This freak is who Democrats chose to run in Texas?” said the account.
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Bobby pulido campaign for texas, Pulido vs de la cruz, Dem masturbating video, Bobby pulido music video, Politics
Fed Chair Powell Live: Iran War To Increase Inflation Short Term
Get the latest US economy updates here!
Watch: James O’Keefe Goes Undercover As Homeless Person in Los Angeles to Expose Illegal Cash for Ballots Scheme
Leftist orgs and NGOs taking advantage of homeless problem by paying bums to sign ballot initiatives, as well as registering them to vote.
The science-backed power of collagen and vitamin C for youthful skin and overall health
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NY governor BEGS millionaires to move back to help fund welfare programs — after telling Republicans to flee to Florida
The governor of New York was reduced to begging the wealthy to move back to the high-tax state in order to help fund its social programs.
Democrat Gov. Kathy Hochul made the comments during a Politico forum in Albany on March 11 after the state legislature called for higher taxes.
‘They’re not going there because they have a nicer governor. … They’re going there because of the tax rate.’
“I need people who are high net worth to support the generous social programs that we want to have in our state,” said Hochul.
“There are some patriotic millionaires who stepped up. OK! Cut me the checks. If you want to be supportive, then maybe the first step should be go down to Palm Beach and see who you can bring back home, because our tax base has been eroded,” she added.
“So I philosophically don’t have a problem. It is, like, I have to look at the fact that we are in competition with other states who have less of a tax burden on their corporations and their individuals,” Hochul concluded.
Hochul is seeking to win re-election after she was elevated to the governor’s office because of the fall of Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D).
New York joins other states looking to tax the wealthy in order to fund their socialist schemes, including California, which is facing its own population exodus, and Washington state. Both states have experienced billionaires fleeing to other states with lower tax burdens.
“Wall Street businesses looking at Texas?” Hochul asked rhetorically. “They’re not going there because they have a nicer governor! I know that for sure! But they’re going there because of the tax rate. We have to be smart about this.”
RELATED: LA Times gets obliterated online for scolding people wanting to leave high-tax California
Hochul’s critics pointed out that she told conservative and Republican New Yorkers to leave the state in 2022 and go down to Florida, “where you belong.”
Ironically, just months later, she lamented that too many people were leaving the high-tax state to seek better opportunities elsewhere.
“We must and will make our state safe,” she said at her inaugural speech.
“And we must reverse the trend of people leaving our state in search of lower costs and opportunities elsewhere.”
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Ny gov kathy hochul, Hochul begs millionaires to stay, High tax proposal new york, Hochul vs republicans, Politics
Outgoing Counterterrorism Director Joe Kent To Join Tucker Carlson & Mark Levin Shows To Further Discuss Controversial Decision To Resign In Protest Of Iran War
Americans are very divided about Kent’s resignation and statement opposing war with Iran.
Marches for Leftist Civil Rights Icon Cesar Chavez Canceled Across Country Following Child Sex Abuse Scandal
Scandal deals major blow to liberals who revered Chavez as beloved left-wing activist.
Your smart thermostat is watching you — it knows your routine and when your house is empty
Thermostats have become so intelligent that they can build entire lifestyle portfolios on a homeowner simply by using the embedded technology that regulates and tracks heat and electricity.
Many smart thermostats are openly asking users for this information. But studies have also revealed that other knowledge, which no homeowner would want a stranger to know, can now easily be harvested and quantified.
A thermostat’s built-in motion sensors determine if a homeowner is home or away.
For example, an Ecobee smart thermostat, available on Amazon for $140, has been used to monitor sleep patterns over the course of a year. A 2022 study used six Ecobee sensors to track sleep time, wake-up time, sleep duration, as well as time spent at home. It also determined how those behaviors were influenced by weekends and seasonal weather.
This all came from the thermostat’s data, which can connect to Apple’s Siri, Amazon’s Alexa, and Google Assistant.
Google Nest thermostats can come equipped with a series of cameras, sensors, and more, as well as public-facing features like Home/Away Assist and Auto-Away. These features track whether the user is home or not and can do so in multiple ways.
The first option is to sync with the homeowner’s phone location. It asks for user location and address, and it even helps pinpoint the home on a map.
Auto-Away does not even need add-on sensors throughout the house to tell if the user is home. According to How to Geek, it uses the thermostat’s built-in motion sensors to make this determination.
The justification for the intimate invasion of privacy is to lower and limit heating or cooling usage when the user is not at home or to enable security features.
Ecobee also has passive motion sensors that can tell when a person is home or not.
RELATED: Creepy new laws will mean your car monitors you 24/7 — eyes, skin, even breath
Photo by Joan Cros/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Ecobee also utilizes a feature so it knows which rooms in a home are occupied. “Follow me” mode is an attempt to maximize energy efficiency by tracking the resident with sensors as he moves through rooms, and it adjusts the temperature accordingly.
At the same time, it tracks the amount of time spent in each room.
A 2018 study showed a 95% accuracy rating in terms of gauging home occupancy using a technology called WalkSense. The technology identified room occupancy, house vacancy, and even occupant activities.
The latter is helped by what is referred to as “load monitoring,” which is a fancy term for tracking what type of appliances a person uses by how much electricity he uses, another feature of smart home devices.
RELATED: Storm season is here. Yes, you need a better weather app.
Load monitoring works by applying a “signature” to an appliance by extracting data from its power signal. The signature is applied to the typical amount of energy usage from the appliance, which henceforth identifies the amount of power used by a dishwasher, washing machine, etc.
A February 2021 study proposed such a system that identified appliances with 98% to 99% accuracy.
Another study from 2017 even showed it was using load monitoring through a smart meter called Rainforest at the time.
Load monitoring is typically used with energy meter trackers like Sense Energy — installed on the electrical panel — but can be paired with home monitoring systems like Google Nest or Alexa, which either pair with or operate the smart thermostat.
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Return, Automation, Thermostat, Smart home, Smart thermostat, Smart energy, Homeowner, Tech
‘The party of hating dogs’: Liberals lose their minds after celebrity attends event to SAVE DOGS at Mar-a-Lago
Actress Katherine Heigl was in attendance at Mar-a-Lago last weekend where she posed for photos with Lara Trump and Jeanine Pirro. And while the left is not happy with seeing the actress there, it was at an event that raised $5.5 million for Big Dog Ranch Rescue.
“Liberals outraged, I told you about everything, including dogs. Dogs,” BlazeTV host Sara Gonzales comments, shocked. “They don’t like dogs. That’s how you know they’re not the party for you. They are the party of hating dogs, because there was a big fundraiser at Mar-a-Lago to rescue dogs.”
“Now everyone hates Katherine Heigl for going there and trying to raise money to save dogs,” she adds.
One X user wrote, “F**k her and anyone attending maga-lago for any reason,” while another wrote, “Supporting Nazis. So many orgs that aren’t run by white supremacists. This is a choice.”
However, Heigl wasn’t taking the attacks lying down.
“Animals don’t vote. The only room they don’t like is the euthanasia room at a shelter,” Heigl told Page Six in a statement. “They are completely at the mercy of us, and they have no voice of their own.”
“This event was about animal advocacy, something that has always been deeply personal to me,” she continued. “Anyone who knows me knows that protecting animals is one of my greatest passions.”
“The point is, animals, of course, do not knowingly vote,” Gonzales comments, adding, “They’re not involved in our politics. And the charity event raised $5.5 million for rescue dogs.”
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Sara gonzales unfiltered, Sara gonzales, The blaze, Blazetv, Blaze news, Blaze podcasts, Blaze podcast network, Blaze media, Blaze online, Blaze originals, Mar a lago, Katherine heigl, Leftist outrage, Leftism, Liberals, Trump derangement syndrome, Big dog ranch rescue
America’s next-gen weapons face a down-to-earth foe: The elements
Carl von Clausewitz framed war as a “continuation of politics by other means.” Weaponry, in this view, is an extension of state judgment, a tool pulled from the kit when the talking stops. Looking at the landscape of directed-energy weapons and autonomous subsea networks, one suspects the tools have begun to write their own script. The question is no longer just what we do with the tools, but what kind of world becomes thinkable and governable once they exist.
The new frontier is the management of latency, visibility, and energy at the very edges of the habitable world. It is a reorganization of politics around the capacity to see and the speed at which one can destroy.
The border is becoming a software-defined stack of sensing and response.
The visual theatricality of directed-energy weapons appeals to our desire for a clean defense. We hear of the Iron Beam, a 100kW-class laser system integrated into multitier defense arrays. The descriptions are intoxicating: an unlimited magazine, almost zero cost per interception, and the promise of reduced collateral damage. These defense systems promise to restore cost symmetry in the face of cheap, numerous drones that can saturate expensive missile defenses.
The technical reality is more mundane and perhaps more telling. These weapons of light remain stubbornly bound to the earth. A laser is a system of ordering: power generation, cooling, and software integration. It is also a prisoner of the weather. For all their speed-of-light elegance, lasers are degraded by the most common of things: rain, fog, and storms. Even when the technical feasibility is proven, the operational reality is constrained by the atmosphere itself.
If the sky is becoming a theater of light, the ocean is becoming a laboratory for a different kind of visibility. Historically, the undersea domain was the last holdout against panoptic ambitions: It was difficult to see, difficult to communicate through, and difficult to police. The Cold War depended on this opacity, on stealth and the difficulty of detection by sonar.
Now, the sea is being made a platform. Subsea drones, from small autonomous vehicles to the U.S. Navy’s Orca extra-large uncrewed undersea vehicle, are designed to make the underwater domain legible. The goal is a distributed fleet architecture, storing eggs in many baskets to ensure that no single loss is catastrophic.
RELATED: Yes, there’s an AI hive mind, and it’s making us dumber
Yuuji/Getty Images
Yet the physics of water remains punishing. While we take high-speed wireless for granted on land, the underwater acoustic channel offers only a few kilobits per second over a 10 km link. This scarcity of bandwidth forces a shift toward decision-making at the edge. A drone under the ice cannot call home for instructions but instead must interpret its own sensors and manage its own contingencies through a complex stack of perception, state estimation, and mission policy.
Reliability here is engineering for trust. In the extreme cold of under-ice operations, in which temperatures can sustain -35°C, there is no fail-safe of surfacing. The ice layer removes the luxury of escape.
The Arctic was once the site of exceptionalism, a region governed by cooperation, science, and the explicit exclusion of military security from the mandate of the Arctic Council. That story is ending. As the sea ice declines, this environment is being revealed as a corridor for commerce and surveillance.
The IPCC suggests the Arctic may be practically free of sea ice in September at least once before 2050. The U.S. Department of Defense is more aggressive, suggesting an ice-free summer could arrive by 2030. This melting makes minerals, fisheries, and choke points like the Bering Strait newly available for military and commercial ordering.
The map is being redrawn by infrastructure as much as by diplomacy. Finland and Sweden have joined NATO, shifting the alliance geography of the North. The U.S. Air Force maintains a North Warning System of 49 radars, a logistical feat that requires sustaining sensors and fuel in an austere environment. In this theater, sovereignty requires infrastructure: keeping the sensors on, the parts moving, and the communications flowing.
The cost of latency here is strategic. Because geostationary satellites do not sufficiently support high-latitude operations, there is a frantic move toward low-Earth-orbit constellations to provide the connectivity required for modern command and control.
We are witnessing a shift in the nature of the border. It is becoming a software-defined stack of sensing and response. NATO now treats the ocean floor, the hidden architecture of cables and pipelines, as a critical space that must be monitored by AI and sea drones. It is the defense of the material substrate of digital life. Technologically mediated violence produces a new kind of border politics, in which the decisive terrain is invisible, found in electromagnetic spectra, sonar inference, and satellite coverage gaps.
In this world, we are always operating under imperfect information. We return to Clausewitzian friction, though today we call it packet loss, acoustic noise, or navigation drift. We find ourselves at the edge of the habitable world, watching the ice melt and the sensors blink, waiting for the speed of light to solve a problem that remains stubbornly human.
Tech
AIPAC suffers loss in congressional race, millions of dollars squandered helping Chicago mayor’s ally
Several super PACs linked to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee reportedly poured over $20 million into multiple House primary races in Illinois in hopes of advancing favored candidates or at the very least kneecapping candidates critical of Israel.
Some of the groups’ investments paid off.
‘There’s no gray lines as it relates to their beliefs.’
For instance, Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller — a beneficiary of nearly $4.5 million in ad spending from the AIPAC-linked group Affordable Chicago Now — defeated former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. in the Democrat primary for the state’s 2nd Congressional District.
In the Democrat primary for the 8th Congressional District, former Rep. Melissa Bean, another beneficiary of spending by an AIPAC-aligned group, also came out on top, beating Junaid Ahmed, a leftist whom AIPAC faulted for centering “his campaign on attacking Israel.”
However, Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin, a candidate who ran in the 7th District Democrat primary to replace retiring incumbent Rep. Danny Davis, turned out to be a bad investment.
With 90% of the votes in, the Associated Press called the race for state Rep. La Shawn Ford, a Democrat with a history of tax fraud who secured 23.9% of the total vote. Conyears-Ervin, one of only handful of candidates who said in a WBEZ-FM survey that she did not oppose sending U.S. military aid to Israel, trailed behind with 20.5% of the vote.
RELATED: Jesse Jackson Jr.’s political comeback fails miserably after he served prison time
John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service/Getty Images
The United Democracy Project, an AIPAC super PAC established in 2022, poured nearly $5 million into positive ads for Conyears-Ervin, reported Politico.
Austin Weekly News reported that the AIPAC group’s intervention in the race was criticized by many of the other 13 candidates, including Ford, who was backed by the retiring incumbent.
“I’ve also had meetings with the very people that’s spending this money,” said Ford. “They want you to say ‘yes’ to everything that they have requests for. There’s no gray lines as it relates to their beliefs. It’s a yes or no. … ‘Don’t have a conversation, that this is what we want. We want you to vote with us in Washington 100% of the time, and we want to control our member,’ and that’s what this is about. And I refused that type of relationship.”
Ford suggested further last month that “this money dwarfs, or tries to dwarf, the voice of the voters in the 7th Congressional District, and it would tell you immediately who this candidate will be beholden to. Follow the money.”
Kina Collins, one of the leftist candidates defeated on Tuesday, said last month that it was “not going to help [Conyears-Ervin’s] case that AIPAC is backing her.”
While AIPAC’s support may have negatively affected Conyears-Ervin’s chances, she also had plenty of baggage. For instance, she reportedly agreed in September to pay a $30,000 fine to resolve charges brought by the Chicago Board of Ethics.
Conyears-Ervin, an ally of Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson (D), was accused of misusing city resources and retaliating against whistleblowers — allegations she denies, reported WTTW.
Conyears-Ervin’s race was among the Illinois primaries regarded as a test for AIPAC. The lobbying group characterized the night as a win overall, however, stating, “Illinois voters rejected half a dozen anti-Israel candidates across several heavily Democratic open-seat races. These results further demonstrate that campaigns defined largely by opposition to AIPAC, our members, and the values we represent continue to fall short on election night.”
The group added, “Although Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin did not advance, AIPAC congratulates State Representative La Shawn K. Ford on his win. The pro-Israel community is proud to have helped defeat Kina Collins, who has voiced anti-Israel views over multiple election cycles.”
Ford — who was indicted on 17 counts of bank fraud but ultimately pleaded guilty in 2014 to only a single misdemeanor charge of tax fraud — will face off in the general election with Republican nominee Chad Koppie, a farmer and retired Delta Airlines pilot whose “main goal is trying to ban abortion.”
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Illinois, Conyear-ervin, Aipac, Foreign influence, Elections, Chicago, La shawn ford, Democrat, Primaries, Congress, Israel, Brandon johnson, Politics
Alcoholics Anonymous saved my life; now I fear it’s dying out
I went to an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting the other night, a meeting I have gone to sporadically over the years. It’s in a big church and tends to average around 200 people every Saturday night.
I was immediately surprised at the sparse attendance. This is something I have been seeing a lot lately. I was just at a meeting the week before that was half its normal size.
The idea of a person having a ‘drinking problem’ feels almost quaint now that most major American cities are full of drug-addicted zombies wandering the streets.
It’s not unusual for attendance at AA meetings to ebb and flow. One meeting will get hot for a while. Then it will die down and another meeting will become popular.
Also, COVID has had a lingering affect on AA meetings. People got comfortable doing Zoom meetings, and now they don’t want to leave their homes.
*******
I got a coffee and took a seat. The first of the night’s three speakers went to the podium.
He was from Texas. It was very entertaining to hear his accent and his crazy drinking stories. The next woman bottomed out in Los Angeles while working in the film business. The third person was a local guy and told his story of basically being in the grip of alcohol from age 13 onward.
That sober life
I’ve been sober for a long time. So I know how AA stories go. They’re all different, but at their heart, they are all the same. Also, there’s a certain AA language people use to describe their experiences. There’s a rhythm to the stories.
It’s all very familiar and routine for me. It’s a nice feeling to settle in and listen to your fellow drunks describe their experiences.
But sitting there this time, a dark thought came over me. I wondered if AA was getting old in some way. If I’m in my 60s, and this meeting felt like the perfect way to spend a Saturday night, what would it feel like to a younger person? Probably very old-fashioned.
AA’s glory days
AA began in the 1930s. It caught on immediately. Over the decades, it literally saved millions of lives and vastly improved millions of others.
In theological circles, many consider Alcoholics Anonymous to be the most profound and important spiritual movement of the 20th century.
But what now? Can it continue indefinitely?
I considered who founded AA in the first place: white Christian men, most of them professionals. Of course, AA evolved and adapted as it grew, quickly including women, younger people, and other ethnicities and social classes.
But it still bears the marks of its beginnings. And institutions with those kinds of roots tend to get targeted and harassed by leftist activists — even the most benevolent ones.
RELATED: When ‘live, laugh, love’ means ‘pour me another’
Matt Cardy/Tatyana Larina/Getty Images
First they came for …
So far, no one has accused AA of being sexist or racist or “white supremacist.” But it seems possible the left could find something wrong with it.
Not to mention that AA is a lot like church. There are prayers and talk of God, and many meetings actually take place in church basements.
And we all know how socialist/communist countries dealt with churches in the past. They shut them down.
I doubt that will happen, but the left could certainly try to discredit AA. Or file lawsuits against it, as with the Boy Scouts. The Boy Scouts were just minding their own business, until they were obliterated by lawsuits brought by the radical left.
To drink or not to drink
Another consideration: Is alcoholism still a major problem in our society? I mean, it obviously can be. But is it as bad as fentanyl? Or meth?
It usually takes years of drinking to seriously damage your body. Our new super-addictive street drugs can kill you in a week.
The idea of a person having a “drinking problem” feels almost quaint now that most major American cities are full of drug-addicted zombies wandering the streets.
In recent years, alcohol seems to have faded as the recreational intoxicant of choice. Think of how popular alcohol was in the 1940s and 1950s. Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin’s ever-intoxicated “Rat Pack” became the symbol of suave masculinity. The idea of a man not drinking was unthinkable. That’s what men did. They drank.
But not any more. Oh, men still drink. They drink Evian water out of their $30 water bottles.
Teenagers under the influence
And what about teenagers? Do they still drink? I’m sure they do. But not like the generations before them.
When I was in high school, everything we did was combined with alcohol from freshman year onward. That was what we did at social gatherings. That was how we talked to girls.
When you picture contemporary teenagers’ social lives and leisure activities, you see them online. On their phones. Gaming. Posting. Texting.
I don’t remember “reading” as being something I was good at when I was drunk. Or typing on a tiny keyboard.Maybe that’s why Adderall is so popular now. It sharpens your mental skills instead of blurring them.
Into the future
I am not suggesting I want Alcoholics Anonymous to age out or become irrelevant. I love AA. It saved my life. It gave me a life. The friends I made there will be in my heart until the day I die.
But the world is experiencing rapid change. And it seems inevitable that this will affect AA. I hope it can adapt and survive and continue into the future.
Because I, for one, still need a place to go when I’m feeling unsettled and overwhelmed. Where I can drink some bad coffee, lean back in my seat, and enjoy the company of my fellow alcoholics.
Lifestyle, Aa, Alcoholics anonymous, Sobriety, Blake’s progress
White House offers concessions to end DHS shutdown — but Dems still choose illegal aliens over unpaid American TSA agents
President Donald Trump’s administration has offered several concessions to persuade lawmakers to restart funding for the Department of Homeland Security, but Democrats continue to refuse to compensate Transportation Security Administration personnel.
The White House and Democratic lawmakers have remained in a negotiation stalemate since the DHS shut down on February 14.
‘If this continues, it’s not hyperbole to suggest that we may have to quite literally shut down airports – particularly smaller ones if callout rates go up.’
Border czar Tom Homan and the White House director of legislative affairs, James Braid, wrote a letter dated March 17 to Republican Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Katie Britt of Alabama, detailing the administration’s offered concessions.
The letter, which was shared by the Daily Wire, explained that the “majority” of Democrats’ demands “would make it impossible to fully protect American citizens from dangerous criminal aliens and expose law enforcement and their families to increasing threats of violence.”
“In other words, they would prioritize illegal aliens above American families,” it reads.
The letter detailed how Homan ended the surge operation in Minnesota, canceled Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s roving patrols, updated protocols for dealing with unlawful agitators, deployed body-worn cameras, and enhanced cooperation with local law enforcement.
RELATED: Spring break blues: DHS highlights outrageous airport conditions amid Democrat shutdown
Tom Homan. Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images
Homan and Braid stated that the White House has offered to codify several improved guidelines, including expanding the use of body-worn cameras, limiting immigration enforcement activities in certain sensitive locations, increasing the oversight of detention centers, and requiring officers to visibly display their identification.
Despite the administration’s efforts to negotiate, Democratic lawmakers repeatedly failed to make a good-faith effort to compromise, according to Homan and Braid.
“The Administration has worked in good faith to again reach bipartisan agreement on full funding for the entire Department of Homeland Security and institute common-sense operational improvements to federal immigration enforcement operations that enhance the safety of American communities,” the letter reads.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) accused the White House of not taking the negotiations seriously.
“The issue is, they’re not getting serious,” Schumer stated. “The key issues of warrants when you bust into someone’s house, the key issue of identity of police and no masks, they haven’t budged on those.”
RELATED: ‘Is it even REMOTELY reasonable?’ Scott Jennings demolishes liberal CNN panel on DHS funding feud
Photographer: Mark Felix/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Meanwhile, TSA agents missed their first full paycheck last week. An estimated 366 TSA agents quit last month, NBC News found.
A TSA spokesperson told Fox News that the national callout rate jumped to 10.19% on March 15, compared to 2% before the shutdown.
“If this continues, it’s not hyperbole to suggest that we may have to quite literally shut down airports — particularly smaller ones if callout rates go up,” acting Deputy TSA Administrator Adam Stahl told the news outlet.
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News, Immigration, Illegal immigration crisis, Illegal immigration, Tom homan, Trump, Trump administration, Trump admin, Donald trump, James braid, Transportation security administration, Tsa, Department of homeland security, Dhs, Dhs shutdown, Adam stahl, Politics
Capitol Hill Chaos: Gabbard Grilled On Iran, DHS Drama, And SAVE Act Marathon Unfold
On the Senate floor, debate entered its second full day on the SAVE America Act – which would mandate proof of U.S. citizenship for voter registration and [more…]
