Society's ChildS


Propaganda

Pentagon press corps whine about access restrictions and required escorts despite them being part of American history

pentagon
The U.S. Wartime Censorship Office restricted content flows abroad and the War Department regularly censored journalist's articles with sensitive material — neither of which the modern Pentagon has proposed.

Much of the Pentagon press corps has condemned new policies instituted by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to curb the publishing of sensitive and classified information, but in fact, such restrictions are a longstanding American tradition, dating at least back to the Second World War.

Since taking the helm at the Pentagon, Hegseth has implemented several rounds of new restrictions on the press corps reporting on the military, including banning reporters from entering certain areas without an escort, barring them from offices of senior military leaders, and informing reporters of the Pentagon's prerogative to protect sensitive information.

That last requirement, which the secretary officially ordered last month, drew condemnations from the Pentagon Press Association (PPA) and legacy media as an assault on their profession and the First Amendment.

Comment: The tantrums continue. Straight Arrow news reports:
Media outlets refuse Pentagon press policy; must sign or surrender badges

[...]

News outlets must agree and sign by 5 p.m. ET Tuesday or hand over their press badges. Thus far, The Washington Post, The New York Times, CNN, The Wall Street Journal, NPR, Reuters, The Atlantic, The Guardian, Newsmax and The Washington Times all say they won't sign.

Matt Murray, the Washington Post's executive editor, said, "The proposed restrictions undercut First Amendment protections by placing unnecessary constraints on gathering and publishing information."

Fox News, the former employer of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, has not indicated whether it will sign the pledge.

[...]

News organizations ... called the new policy a gag order, saying it violates First Amendment rights and muzzles reporting on how a nearly $1 trillion department spends taxpayer money.

The New York Times' Washington bureau chief, Richard Stevenson, said, "The public has a right to know how the government and military are operating."

Pentagon's response

Following backlash from news outlets, reporters and press freedom advocacy groups, Pentagon Press Secretary Sean Parnell issued a statement.

He said media outlets "have decided to move the goal post." Parnell insisted the policy merely requires an acknowledgment, not an agreement. He also reminded journalists that access to the building is a "privilege, not a right."

Hegseth also got involved in the conversation, sharing a post on X that said, "Pentagon access is a privilege, not a right."


Additional Pentagon changes

The new policy is the latest change to press coverage at the Pentagon. Back in February, the Pentagon sent a memo saying it would regularly rotate news organizations out of dedicated office spaces. The change forced NBC News, The New York Times, NPR and Politico out of their office spaces.


Good. The press should not be cozy with those they are supposed to be keeping tabs on.
pentagon media workspace
© Kristina Wong/Breitbart NewsLegacy news outlets are being vacated from their workspaces in the Pentagon to give to other news outlets. The middle office, currently occupied by NPR News, will now go to Breitbart News.



Media movement within the building has also changed, according to The Wall Street Journal. It said for decades, reports with identification badges had broad, unfettered access to nonclassified areas of the Pentagon. Media officials could walk the halls and visit officials' offices.

However, earlier this year, the agency limited where reporters could go without escorts. Hegseth reiterated these new rules on X, saying, "The 'press' does not run the Pentagon — the people do. The press is no longer allowed to roam the halls of a secure facility."

Other media limitations

The Pentagon is not the only federal building making changes to media access. This year, the Trump administration also took control of seating arrangements at White House briefings, adding new spots for what they call "new media" outlets, such as podcasters.

Some news organizations, including The Associated Press and The Wall Street Journal, have been barred from attending certain events.



Fire

Massive Mystery Fire Engulfs Defense-Linked Factory In Russia's East

Novosibirsk factory fire
There are reports that a large fire has broken out in Novosibirsk at a factory that manufactures electronics and microchips for the Russian defense industry.

It's unclear whether a drone from Ukraine was behind the blaze, or whether it was a sabotage incident, or possibly an accident, which the cause of the fire being under investigation. The location is in southern Siberia.

Novosibirsk lies a huge distance from Ukraine, far east of Moscow, and northeast of Kazakhstan's border.

The warehouse which has clearly suffered total destruction is reportedly part of a defense-linked electronics and microchip manufacturing plant in the city.

Dollars

Records reveal Mamdani NYC mayoral campaign took in $13,000 in illegal foreign donations

mamdini new york city mayor campaign illegal donations
© Robert MillerMamdani’s campaign has so far failed to return 88 foreign donations.
Lefty socialist and mayoral frontrunner Zohran Mamdani's campaign quietly took in nearly $13,000 in potentially illegal foreign donations — including one from his mother-in-law in Dubai, The Post has learned.

At least 170 of the nearly 54,000 contributions to the leading Democratic candidate's campaign came from donors with addresses outside the United States, an examination of NYC Campaign Finance Board records found.

Only US citizens or permanent legal residents are allowed to contribute to political campaigns and political action committees under federal, state and city law, and candidates are expected to return any of the illegal donations. Violators who knowingly accept foreign donations could face hefty fines and imprisonment.

But so far, the campaign has failed to return 88 of the foreign donations worth a total of $7,190, records showed.

Comment:


Roses

Two people dead in Dartmouth highway plane crash, one injured on ground

dartmouth plane crash
© David CurranThe crash occurred October 13, 2025, at approximately 8:15 a.m. near the Reed Road exit, near Dartmouth Ma, resulting in a fire, according to state police, and the highway is closed in both directions
Two people on board a small plane that crashed on the median of I-195 in Dartmouth Monday morning have died, and one person on the ground sustained injuries, according to Massachusetts State Police.

The identities of the victims have not yet been disclosed by state police, pending next-of-kin notifications.

The person who was injured on the ground was transported in a passenger car to Saint Luke's Hospital in New Bedford.

The extent of this victim's injuries are unknown, according to state police.

The crash occurred at approximately 8:15 a.m. near the Reed Road exit, resulting in a fire, according to state police, and the highway is closed in both directions.

Attention

Social contagion: Suicide rates among Gen Z have spiked over past decade

face in hands
© Unknown'Anguish'
Suicide rates among Gen Z adults have unnaturally increased in the U.S. over the past ten years according to new figures.

Axios notes that there has been a 16.4 percent increase in suicides among the demographic between 2014-2024.

The locations where the rise is most prominent, the report notes are in the South and the Midwest, with black and Hispanic men, accounting for a huge 85 percent of the increase.

A Stateline analysis of data also shows that Georgia experienced the largest increase in suicide rates over the past decade, among 18 to 27-year-olds, with the state's suicide rate in the age group increasing by a massive 64.9 percent.

North Carolina and Texas both saw a 41 percent increase in suicide rates, while Alabama had a 39 percent spike, and Ohio a 37 percent increase.

Alaska recorded the highest suicide rate among Gen Z, standing at 49 percent per 100,000 people, an increase of more than a third since 2014.

Cheese

Vivek Ramaswamy explains America to legacy Americans

Vivek Ramaswamy
© trendradars.com
In a full face of conspicuous make-up rendering him three shades lighter than normal, current candidate for Ohio governor Vivek Ramaswamy took the stage at a Montana State University Turning Point USA to offer legacy Americans a lecture on the defining characteristics of the country his parents immigrated in the 1970s:
"So what does it mean to be an American in the year 2025? It means we still believe in those ideals of 1776. It means we believe in merit, that the best person gets the job regardless of their genetics, that you are judged not on the color of your skin but on the content of your character and your contributions. It means we believe in the rule of law. And I say this as the proud son of legal immigrants to the United States. That means your first act of entering this country cannot break the law. It means we believe in free speech and open debate without censorship, whether you're Nick Fuentes or Alex Jones or Jimmy Kimmel. It means that words are not violence, that violence is violence. And violence is never an acceptable response to words. It's not just about our constitutional principles... That's America. That's who we are. It's about our constitution, but it's about even more than that. It's about a culture that is distinctive to our nation. It means we believe in accountability. It means that we are courageous, that we are brave, even heroic, when called upon to serve our country, that we take bold risks. Sometimes we fail, but we still pick ourselves up and do it again. It means we don't view hardship as the same thing as victimhood. Because hardship from time to time is what teaches us who we really are. It means we are ambitious, to achieve the things we taught to believe were impossible."
Aside from the littering of platitudes, that's arguably a decent speech on lofty American values — one of praise that, to be fair, one would never get from anyone on the left.

Che Guevara

'Homeless Industrial Complex' under fire for alleged ties to Antifa networks

antifa
A joint investigation by the Discovery Institute and Capital Research Center reveals taxpayer-funded pathways supporting far-left extremism.

A newly released report by the Capital Research Center, in collaboration with the Discovery Institute, asserts that radical organizations, particularly those aligned with Antifa, are infiltrating mainstream American institutions via a complex network of nonprofits, activist groups, and philanthropic foundations. Reporter Jonathan Choe presented the report to President Donald Trump on Wednesday during a roundtable on Antifa.

The 176-page report, titled "Infiltrated," alleges that left-wing movements are leveraging established nonprofit structures and grant channels to push political and social agendas that include defunding police, promoting disruptive protest tactics, and destabilizing confidence in civic institutions.

Comment:






Compass

Poastocracy

DOJ Community Relations Service racism crime
DOJ Community Relations Service
Trust The Plan/Always Chimp: a new kind of 'community relations service'

Whenever there's a horrific interracial attack of the black-on-racist variety, there's a familiar script that we've all gotten so used to that it has become a kind of liturgy. It goes something like this: a multiple felon, frequently let out early on parole, breaks into a pretty young blonde college student's house, rapes her, strangles her to death, mutilates her body, and is found wandering outside with his shirt soaked in her blood, shouting "I just wanted to kill that white bitch!" In the atrocity's aftermath, the girl's bereaved father holds a press conference. Looking dolefully into the camera, he intones, "In this time of loss for our family, please do not use our grief to turn this into a racial issue. This horrible tragedy is an isolated incident, committed by a troubled young man with mental health issues. As Christians we are called upon by God to forgive, and we hope that he gets the help he needs. Don't look back in anger."

This script is so familiar that it has engendered a pervasive background of frustrated despair throughout that subset of the population that has retained some modicum of sane instinct in the face of postmodern antinaturalism. What is wrong with white men? Have they all been castrated? Are they just golden retrievers, with their instincts for self-preservation and familial loyalty completely bred out by a thousand years of living in a high trust society? Have they been MKULTRAed so deeply that they can't see what's happening even when it comes for their own children? It's all over, man, there's no saving these people, they deserve everything that's coming for them, etcetera, etcetera. The responses from the online right to the don't-make-this-about-race liturgy have become as familiar as the liturgy itself, almost a part of the performance.

Passport

Man fighting for Russia burns his UK passport

aiden minnis
British citizen Aiden Minnis, a decorated soldier in the Russian army, has burned his UK passport on video, declaring support for Moscow.

Minnis posted the clip on X last week, explaining that London is moving towards "new anti-terror legislation" that would allow them to "withdraw and revoke citizenship from anyone that participates in anything they deem as a threat to their country."

"So consider my passport revoked, consider it rescinded, and consider it... I do not want it anymore. You can kiss my ass. So, f*ck you, Great Britain. And Slava Rossiya," he said, setting the document ablaze.

The upper chamber of British Parliament is set to review a proposed expansion to the Deprivation of Citizenship Orders Bill next week. The legislation aims to prevent a person deprived of British citizenship from regaining it in an appeal process.

Explosion

'Great loss': No survivors from blast at Tennessee explosives plant, sheriff says

explosion Accurate Energetic Systems
The aftermath is seen following an explosion at Accurate Energetic Systems in McEwen, Tennessee.
Workers who were inside a Tennessee explosives manufacturing plant at the time of a "devastating blast" on Friday are presumed to be dead, authorities announced on Saturday.

"I can tell you that more than 300 people have been through almost every square inch of this facility, and at this time, we've recovered no survivors," Humphreys County Sheriff Chris Davis said during a press conference on Saturday.

Davis added, "We can assume that they are deceased at this time."

The explosion occurred Friday morning at Accurate Energetic Systems in McEwen, located about 50 miles west of Nashville.

Davis said the search has now transitioned into a recovery effort.