There could be one Giant reunion in the works for New York.Head coach John Harbaugh was asked about the team signing free agent wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr., and the coach did not dismiss the possibility.”The obvious pat answer would be you look at every option, and if Odell is an option, we’ll be looking at him for sure,” Harbaugh told reporters at the owners’ meeting on Monday.CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COMBeckham, 33, played under Harbaugh with the Baltimore Ravens in 2023 and was productive as a depth wide receiver. He caught 34 passes for 565 yards and three touchdowns.Harbaugh spoke about the relationship he has with the three-time Pro Bowl receiver.”He and I do talk. We do text,” Harbaugh said. “We’ve maintained a really great relationship. He’s one of my very favorite people in the world. It’s not like you don’t talk to guys on things like that. And certainly we have.””We’ll just have to see where it all goes, what’s best for him, what’s best for the Giants.”BROWNS OWNER GIVES OPTIMISTIC OUTLOOK FOR INJURY-RIDDLED DESHAUN WATSONBeckham won Offensive Rookie of the Year with the Giants in 2014, exciting fans with his electrifying play. After four seasons, three of which he made the Pro Bowl, the Giants signed Beckham to a five-year, $90 million contract extension in August 2018.After the season, then-general manager Dave Gettleman infamously said at a press conference the team didn’t sign Beckham to trade him. Gettleman traded him to the Cleveland Browns just over two months after that press conference.In five seasons with the Giants, Beckham played 59 games, catching 390 passes for 5,476 yards and 44 touchdowns.Beckham never recaptured that same form with the Browns, spending just two and a half seasons with them before they released him. The Los Angeles Rams signed Beckham after his release and he became a key part of their offense in the Super Bowl run, including scoring a touchdown in the big game before he tore his ACL.Beckham last played in the NFL in 2024 with the Miami Dolphins, playing in nine games and catching just nine passes for 55 yards. He did not play in 2025 and was suspended six games for performance-enhancing drugs.He played at the Fanatics Flag Football Classic earlier in March and played well. After the event, Beckham told reporters he hoped it would be a “starting point” toward an NFL return.Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Barack Obama Will Hate How Americans Are Comparing His Presidential Center in Chicago to President Trump’s Future Library in Miami
Screenshot of Barack Obama via English Speeches YouTube channel.
Narcissistic former President Barack Obama must be fuming after a sneak peek of the Trump Presidential Library was released online and immediately compared to his abomination.
As The Gateway Pundit’s Jordan Conradson reported, the Trump family announced on Monday that the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library is officially in the works.
Eric Trump, who is helping to build the library in Miami, Florida, shared an epic video preview of the massive building.
“These images have never been seen by the public — until today,” he said.
LOOK:
Meanwhile, Obama’s presidential center has been universally mocked for its hideous shape, dreary color, and indecipherable exterior text. The building resembles a giant prison center rather than an actual monument of greatness.
Americans noted the distinct differences between the two projects, and the verdict was incredibly brutal for Obama.
The side by side of Donald Trump’s Presidential Library in Miami and Barack Obama’s in Chicago is everywhere right now. One brings the luxury and towering presence while the other stays cold and plain. The contrast says it all about their visions! pic.twitter.com/D8S76VFHat
— Arkadalo ® (@Arkadalo) March 31, 2026
WOW
The future Donald Trump Presidential Library and Museum is shaping up to be an absolute masterpiece
Now compare that to the over-budget, taxpayer-draining monstrosity that is the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago.
Trump Library Obama Library pic.twitter.com/QF1l1pK71x
— Alec Lace (@AlecLace) March 31, 2026
LMAO! People are RUTHLESSLY comparing President Trump’s Library to Obama’s Library, saying the latter looks like a literal trashcan
I’d imagine Hussein’s having a few regrets about hiring those DEI architects right about now… pic.twitter.com/ev9w1vwKrg
— Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) March 31, 2026
Barry’s trash can is hilarious. Suits him perfectly – garbage!
— Tickle (@TickleTexts) March 31, 2026
I can’t unsee it pic.twitter.com/qWngTV3Ixg
— HunnyB (@HunnyBplus3) March 31, 2026
Looks like Obama hired the wrong people to build a tower pic.twitter.com/5EyZx4TLcK
— Kiss My Grits (@Reversequestion) March 31, 2026
Obama has the best looking County Jail!
— John Doe (@JohnDoeX928) March 31, 2026
OMG, look at the difference between Barack Hussain Obama’s presidential library and President Trump’s
Talk about beauty and the beast! pic.twitter.com/LUazWltew8
— Vince Langman (@LangmanVince) March 31, 2026
Compare the majestic future Donald J. Trump Presidential Library to the dystopian Barack Hussein Obama S-Hole!
The difference between the two presidencies illustrated perfectly! pic.twitter.com/LDQI3TspwG
— Jay Gatling (@apinionsvary) March 31, 2026
The post Barack Obama Will Hate How Americans Are Comparing His Presidential Center in Chicago to President Trump’s Future Library in Miami appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
ABLECHILD: Experimental Psychedelic Ketamine Cocktail Blamed in Wyoming Murder/Suicide
Experimental Psychedelic Ketamine Cocktail Blamed in Wyoming Murder/Suicide Republished with permission from AbleChild. It’s been more than a year since the horrific murder suicide carried out by Byron, WY., mother Tranyelle … Read more
The post ABLECHILD: Experimental Psychedelic Ketamine Cocktail Blamed in Wyoming Murder/Suicide appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
The Definition of Bigotry
Hostility toward interests that are remotely supportive of Israeli security policy is becoming the price of admission into national Democratic politics.
Verizon’s new offer gives federal workers relief amid pay freeze
Verizon is granting relief to federal workers. Thousands remain unpaid due to the U.S. government’s partial shutdown, now in its sixth week. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shut down on Feb. 14 after lawmakers failed to reach a funding agreement for the agency.Democrats refused to back DHS funding as they demanded reforms for immigration enforcement, after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers shot and killed two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. The U.S. Senate later agreed to pass a bill to fund most of the DHS (except ICE and U.S. Customs and Border Protection).”We’ve been clear from day one: Democrats will fund critical homeland security functions — but we will not give a blank check to Trump’s lawless and deadly immigration militia without reforms,” said Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer in a statement.The shutdown only impacts DHS employees, including the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), CBP, ICE, the U.S. Secret Service, U.S. Coast Guard, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency (CISA). The DHS workforce consists of more than 260,000 employees, and over 90% are classified as essential personnel, meaning they are required to continue working during the shutdown without pay. However, they must receive back pay once funding for the department is restored. ICE, CBP, and a few other DHS agencies have been receiving pay during the shutdown. President Donald Trump also recently ordered TSA workers to receive back pay. This move comes after hundreds of TSA workers resigned and thousands called out of work, leading to long lines at airports nationwide.Federal employees get unexpected help from VerizonAs TSA workers finally receive payment, thousands of DHS employees across different federal agencies continue to work without compensation. As the shutdown surpasses 45 days, the longest government shutdown in U.S. history, Verizon is giving federal employees one less thing to worry about: falling behind on bills. The carrier is offering to waive late fees for federal workers and to provide flexible payment arrangements. All customers have to do is call Verizon at 1-800-Verizon (1-800-922-0204) to request this relief, they will need to provide verification that they are a federal employee. This isn’t the first time Verizon has extended relief to customers during emergency events that threatened to impact their ability to pay bills.Related: Verizon raises price on key discounted offer for customersIn 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Verizon signed the Keep Americans Connected Pledge. This initiative asked broadband and telephone service providers not to terminate service for any residential or small business customers who were unable to pay bills due to pandemic disruptions.Also, between March 25, 2020, and April 30, 2020, Verizon granted its consumer and small-business postpaid customers 15GB of free 4G LTE hotspot data added to their wireless plans.Verizon prepaid customers and small-business postpaid metered customers also received 15GB of data added to their standalone or shared data plan, which was used for hotspot, smartphone, and other connected device use.
Verizon is extending relief to federal workers amid the partial government shutdown.Shutterstock
Federal workers navigate financial strain amid shutdown and new reliefVerizon’s latest offer comes at a time when DHS employees have been struggling to pay bills due to the partial government shutdown.On March 17, Doreen Greenwald, president of the National Treasury Employees Union, sent a letter to the House and Senate urging a bipartisan solution. She said thousands of DHS employees have had to resort to visiting food banks and taking other drastic measures to make ends meet as they miss their paychecks.“These frontline employees have had to wonder whether they’ll be able to pay their mortgage or buy groceries; a month of not knowing how long this shutdown will last,” wrote Greenwald in a recent letter to Congress. “Yet even with such uncertainty hanging over their heads, they still come to work every day to keep our country safe,” she continued.More Verizon News:Verizon CEO shifts gears after 2.25 million customers departVerizon plans to walk back controversial policy after backlashVerizon gets approval to make it harder for customers to leaveBefore Trump signed an executive order allowing TSA workers to begin receiving back pay, Aaron Barker, president of the American Federation of Government Employees Local 554, said during a March 16 press conference that many of these workers were struggling. He added that they were “coping with eviction notices, vehicle repossession, empty refrigerators, and overdrawn bank accounts” during the shutdown.Many called out sick because they couldn’t afford to commute to work, according to the AFGE. Some were even sleeping in their cars and at airports, while hundreds were forced to resign due to financial hardship. After the president ordered TSA workers to receive payment, AFGE National President Everett Kelley said in a statement on March 30 that while the union was grateful for the executive order to finally pay TSA workers, he stressed that all DHS employees need to be paid. “Congress needs to continue working to pass a real, bipartisan appropriations deal that funds DHS, pays all DHS workers, and keeps these vital agencies running,” said Kelley. “And they must pass the Shutdown Fairness Act so that no politician, of either party, can ever hold a public servant’s paycheck hostage again.”Related: T-Mobile quietly makes abrupt move as customer losses mount
Economic Confidence Jumps Unexpectedly Among Americans—But Concerns Rise Over Inflation
Views on the U.S. economy remained pessimistic.
France, Italy Are Latest NATO Allies To Break Ranks, Block US Military Flights For Iran War
France, Italy Are Latest NATO Allies To Break Ranks, Block US Military Flights For Iran War
First Spain, now France and Italy… France has blocked the United States from using its airspace to transport American weapons to be used in the war against Iran, a Western diplomat and two additional sources told Reuters Tuesday.
“The sources said the refusal, which happened at the weekend, was the first time France had done this since the start of the conflict in Iran,” Reuters has underscored.
USAF image
On the same day reports are emerging that Italy has denied the US military use of an airbase in Sicily – another rare first, though the Italian government is saying it’s primarily a matter of the Pentagon not following through on required authorization protocol.
A statement from Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni sought to calm the situation with Washington, denying that “critical issues or frictions” with international partners were unfolding, and saying that relations with the US remain “solid and based on full and loyal cooperation”.
Still, France and Spain are feeling Trump’s wrath, who issued the following in a Tuesday morning Truth Social post:
Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto has confirmed that “some US bombers” were denied landing at Sigonella – one of seven US navy bases in Italy. The complaint is that the US didn’t follow required permission protocol, and requested landing only while in the air and already en route to Sicily.
The statement from Meloni’s office had also alluded to matters of procedure, stating that Italy is “acting in full compliance with existing international agreements” – while underscoring that each request must be “carefully examined on a case-by-case basis, as has always been the case in the past.”
But the truth also is that American hegemonic action in the Middle East, and the Iran conflict in particular, is deeply unpopular among the Italian population, which has long had a strongly anti-war bent especially among the youth.
The Guardian writes, “The unpopularity of Trump in Italy has also started to erode the popularity of Meloni, who is ideologically in tune with the US president and has established good working relations with him.” However, she’s lately sought to distance her government from the war, having told parliament earlier this month there’s a growing dangerous trend of interventions “outside the scope of international law.”
🇪🇸🇮🇹🇨🇭🇫🇷 Spain, Switzerland, Italy and now France have closed either fully or partially their airspace to American military aircraft that are being used in the 3rd Gulf War, a sign displaying the growing rift between Europe and the U.S.
If countries in Central Europe start… pic.twitter.com/lFDxN7RgX9
— IowaGirl30🐺 (@LoneAlphaWolf) March 31, 2026
Bilateral defense agreements and NATO’s base sharing framework allows US access to key strategic hubs for US operations in the Mediterranean – however, Italian law and the aforementioned treaty requires parliamentary approval for anything outside that scope. This has provided a political ‘out’ for Meloni to be able to say the government is just following the law in denying certain US plane landings.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/31/2026 – 11:05
Pelosi won’t say if Democrats will impeach Trump if they retake power, but leaves door open
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi did not say whether Democrats would look to impeach President Donald Trump during an interview on Tuesday if they take back power in November, despite MS NOW’s Ali Vitali pointing to “corruption.”Vitali said during the interview that Democrats were reluctant to talk about potentially impeaching the president, and asked the former House speaker if she has seen Trump commit any impeachable acts in the second term.”Well, I think that, I’m not, that’s just not where we’re starting with this, but when we get power, we will have power to go there to do what we said we’re going to do, lower the cost of living. Some people say you should use other language, but lower the costs of living, A. B, fix what they have done to the health care system with their trillion dollars from Medicaid, half a trillion dollars for Medicare, and the money from SNAP. I do believe that food is medicine as well, especially for children, and again fight their corruption. So that’s what we’re setting out to do,” Pelosi responded.Vitali asked Pelosi again if she saw anything impeachable from Trump, citing “corruption” concerns from voters.SCHIFF THREATENS TO INVESTIGATE ABC, CBS FOR THEIR TRUMP SETTLEMENTS IF DEMS TAKE CONTROL OF CONGRESS”We have a convicted felon who’s president of the United States. That was then, this is now. I think, that that’s subject to review. But I don’t think that’s something, that’s not where you start. That’s what you have to do because of what he has done. That’s subject a great review. We had great review as to what were the grounds for impeachment. And that’s up to a new Congress to come to that decision. But the fact is that, people want to know what we’re doing for them,” she said.”You’re asking about what comes next. That’s up to the new Congress. And that’s up to them to decide where we go of reviewing what he’s done. And that requires power, all the kinds of things that build a case. It’s not just about, ‘I feel like doing this,'” she continued.The former House Speaker said she had no regrets about impeaching Trump in the first term.NANCY PELOSI STUMBLES ON CNN AFTER BEING PRESSED ON CALL-OUT AT SOTU OVER CONGRESSIONAL STOCK TRADINGPelosi announced last year that she would not seek re-election at the end of her term, which is set to end in Jan. 2027.Pelosi said in Dec. 2025 that there was not enough cause to impeach Trump during an interview with USA Today’s Susan Page.During the December interview with Page, Pelosi said that Trump gave Congress no choice but to impeach him in his first term.CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTUREAs she continued criticizing the Trump administration, Page asked if she could clarify whether she believed impeachment should be part of the party’s agenda.”If he crosses the border again,” Pelosi answered. “But that’s not an incidental thing. You say, ‘We’re going to do that.’ No, there has to be cause. There has to be reason. We had review. This was a very serious, historic thing.”
Mercado Libre shuts down Mercado Coin, ending its loyalty-driven crypto experiment
Starting April 17, users will no longer be able to buy, sell or earn cashback in Mercado Coin, but can sell, spend, or have the token converted to local currency.
Solar Stocks Surge As Energy Shock Revives Renewables Trade
Solar Stocks Surge As Energy Shock Revives Renewables Trade
Goldman analyst Adam Wijaya asked clients whether this year’s surge in SolarEdge, Enphase Energy, and other solar stocks is reviving a familiar trade: higher crude oil and natural gas prices in Europe and globally, strengthening the case for renewables as the energy shock sparks a return to coal switching.
“Are we back to running the 2022 playbook?” Wijaya asked in a note published Monday.
Wijaya said, “Certainly seems that way based on recent px action in residential solar.”
“SEDG is +79% YTD vs ENPH +18% and RUN -32%… oil + gas prices moving higher in Europe/globally + coal switching coming into the equation begs the question ‘do we start to see more renewables adoption in the EU given demand needs?'”.
SolarEdge shares are up 64% year to date, broadly tracking Brent crude and the European natural gas benchmark. The logic behind the trade is that higher fossil fuel prices improve the economics of alternative energy.
“As we start getting closer to midterm elections – some specialists asking questions around the ‘blue playbook’… ie which single stocks could have leverage to a policy shift in Energy focused on solar/wind/renewables.”
Potentially stronger demand for renewables comes as the Hormuz crisis forces countries to rethink energy security. With some power grid operators likely to switch to coal to keep the lights on, the shock is also reviving the conversation around adding more solar and wind to diversify grid mix.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/31/2026 – 10:55