🎯 Success 💼 Business Growth 🧠 Brain Health
💸 Money & Finance 🏠 Spaces & Living 🌍 Travel Stories 🛳️ Travel Deals
Mindset Shifts. New Wealth Paths. Limitless Discovery.

Fly Above the Madness — Fly Private

✈️ Direct Routes
🛂 Skip Security
🔒 Private Cabin

Explore OGGHY Jet Set →
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Mad Mad News

Live Above The Madness

The Blaze

JD Vance slaps down Republican senators anonymously quoted in ‘hit piece’ by ‘dumbest journalist in Washington’

March 27, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

Vice President JD Vance issued a fiery response to what he called a “hit piece” in the Jewish Insider that claimed to document criticisms of Vance from Republicans in the U.S. Senate.

The article at the Jewish Insider said that various senators were wary of the comments Vance made in the private text thread that was accidentally leaked to the Atlantic editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg. Vance said in the thread that he opposed the strike on the Houthi militants in Yemen.

‘These seven cowardly neocons attacking JD anonymously are genuine p***ies.’

The Insider quoted one senator on the record and several others anonymously.

“JD is consistent on this. He does not like to see the deployment or the projection of American power outside of a direct threat to the United States,” said Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina. “He’s at least consistent on that. I disagree with him, but he is consistent.”

“A number of Republican senators are very concerned about [his foreign policy views],” said another GOP senator. “They think it’s quite revealing. It reveals a mindset that I’m sure is perplexing to our European allies.”

Another senator said that President Donald Trump must be disappointed in his VP pick, while another said the debate and disagreement were healthy for determining the best foreign policy.

“It was shocking to me that he didn’t see the need to strike back when they struck our naval vessels,” said another senator. “That’s not a British problem or a European problem. Frankly, them striking our friends in Israel is more than enough justification. It’s the Tucker Carlson view of how to use military power.”

When contacted for a comment, Vance’s office referred to a statement from Donald Trump Jr.

“These seven cowardly neocons attacking JD anonymously are genuine p***ies. If they really feel this way, then they should at least be man enough to put their names to these quotes,” Trump Jr. said, according to the Jewish Insider. “The fact that they are too cowardly to do that is exactly why I’m so happy that these RINOs are a dying breed in our party — whether they realize it or not.”

Vance reiterated the point on his social media account.

“This morning, @JoshKraushaar ran a hit piece against me in Jewish Insider, which has become an anti-JD rag. It has many problems, including seven anonymous quotes from cowardly Republicans,” wrote Vance.

He went on to identify a mistake in the piece identifying the wrong terror group that attacked Americans in January.

“Now, you might say this is evidence of Kraushaar being the biggest hack in Washington, and you *may* be correct. Another very plausible explanation is that he’s the dumbest journalist in Washington,” Vance continued.

“Either way, shocking an error like this could get through his vaunted editorial process!” he added.

The Insider issued a correction in accordance with the vice president’s mockery.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Appeals court blocks DOGE records-grab ordered by lower court

March 27, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

A federal appeals court on Wednesday blocked a lower court’s order seeking records from the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency regarding its plans to significantly reduce the size of the federal government.

Earlier this month, United States District Judge Tanya Chutkan directed the DOGE to turn over the documents in response to a lawsuit filed by 14 Democratic-led states, headed by New Mexico. Additional plaintiffs included Arizona, California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.

‘That should be the end of this ill-conceived challenge.’

The states’ lawsuit claimed that the DOGE and Elon Musk violated the U.S. Constitution’s Appointments Clause and separation of powers, arguing that Musk was not confirmed by the Senate. The states aimed to block the DOGE from accessing several government systems and terminating federal employees.

The complaint requested records from the department as part of the discovery process.

“Defendants argue that the ‘inner workings of government’ are immaterial to an Appointments Clause claim,” Chutkan wrote in her decision. “The court is not convinced, but that is a legal issue appropriate for resolution after fulsome briefing. At this stage, it is sufficient that Plaintiffs’ discovery requests intend to reveal the scope of DOGE’s and Musk’s authority.”

She noted that the plaintiffs’ requested materials “seek to identify DOGE personnel and the parameters of DOGE’s and Musk’s authority—a question central to Plaintiffs’ claims.”

Chutkan ordered the DOGE to produce recordings concerning “agencies, employees, legal agreements, or data management systems” pertaining to the states. The judge gave Musk and the DOGE until April 2 to comply.

On Wednesday, a three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit temporarily blocked Chutkan’s order, suggesting she first rule on the Trump administration’s motion to dismiss before moving to discovery.

Chutkan canceled a Thursday status hearing following the appeals court’s ruling.

The administration’s motion to dismiss argued, “By the Complaint’s own terms, the States agree that Elon Musk ‘does not occupy an office of the United States’; they allege only that he wields ‘de facto power.'”

“That should be the end of this ill-conceived challenge,” it read. “The States’ contrary view rests on conflating influence and authority.”

The White House has insisted that Musk is not the head of the DOGE but a senior adviser to President Donald Trump.

Despite facing an onslaught of litigation, the DOGE has not slowed its cost-cutting efforts. On Wednesday, the DOGE applauded the Department of Labor for terminating $557 million in “America Last” grants, totaling $237 million in savings.

According to the department, the wasteful awards included $10 million for “gender equity in the Mexican workplace,” over $12 million for “worker empowerment in South America,” $5 million for “elevating women’s participation in the workplace” in West Africa, more than $4 million for “assisting foreign migrant workers” in Malaysia, $3 million for “enhanc[ing] social security access and worker protections for internal migrant workers” in Bangladesh, another $3 million for “safe and inclusive work environments” in Lesotho, and $6.25 million for “improving respect for Worker’s rights in agricultural supply chains” in Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Glenn Beck investigates JFK files, reveals chilling taped confession that alleges LBJ plot in assassination

March 27, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

Amateur sleuths, politicos, and others hoping to glean new insights from the latest trove of unredacted John F. Kennedy files were likely frustrated if they dove into the archives in search of names that might satisfy the lingering questions of who — if not Lee Harvey Oswald — actually assassinated the president and who else may have been involved in the murder plot.

Blaze Media co-founder Glenn Beck underscored in his “Glenn TV” Wednesday Night Special that while the JFK files are disappointing if approached with questions of who, questions about what — “What has been going down? What are they trying to protect? What is the source of most of this mess?” — yield illuminating answers.

Beck and his team, aided in part by artificial intelligence, parsed through the JFK files with the “what?” type of questions in mind, testing long-standing theories, highlighting patterns of institutional abuse, and identifying the significance of certain previously unreleased files.

Over the course of the special, Beck zeroed in on
what-centric documents that should put to bed any remaining doubts that the CIA is (or at least until recently has been) an unchecked, meddlesome, and dangerous organization willing to interfere in American elections, businesses, and media reports.

Going beyond the archives, Beck
handily demonstrated with a replica of the rifle Oswald supposedly used in 1963, along with the appropriate “CIA bullets,” that the single-shooter narrative is plausible. Beck also spoke to Shane Stevens, the grandson of Billie Sol Estes — a Texas businessman with alleged ties to Lyndon B. Johnson — about an expert-authenticated recording in which an alleged associate of LBJ accused him of hiring a hit man to take out Kennedy.

— (@)

While the audio recording and Stevens’ commentary fuel more
who-questions, Beck made clear that the contents of the JFK files, the substance of which is not always readily apparent, nevertheless reveal much about the intelligence community of Kennedy’s time — one that proved capable of routine wrongdoing, was familiar with Oswald, and grew more brazen in the months following the president’s slaying — as well as the practices they wanted to keep hidden.

Off the reservation

Beck covered a lot of ground in his Wednesday special, discussing, for instance:

  • new evidence of the bad blood between JFK and the CIA that was brought to a boil after the 1961 Bay of Pigs fiasco;
  • the parallels between Kennedy’s counter-moves against the CIA in the early 1960s and President Donald Trump’s moves against the U.S. Agency for International Development in recent months;
  • indications that the CIA was tracking Lee Harvey Oswald from the moment he departed the Soviet Union;
  • the agency’s connections to the establishment that sold Oswald the rifle that shot Kennedy, as well as to the ammunition used in the assassination;
  • the CIA’s infiltration of the American media and businesses and its apparent attempted wiretap of then-Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy; and
  • former CIA asset John Garrett Underhill Jr.’s allegation that elements of the agency killed the sitting president because he caught wind that they were “carrying on a lucrative racket in gun-running, narcotics and other contraband, and manipulating political intrigue” for their own ends.

Beck also touched on the CIA’s surveillance of Barry Goldwater, citing it as another damning example of precisely how “out of control” the agency had become around the time of Kennedy’s assassination.

— (@)

President Donald Trump was hardly the first Republican whose presidential campaign was infiltrated by politically motivated elements of the deep state on behalf of an incumbent Democratic president.

Barry Goldwater, a major general in the Air Force Reserve who long served as a senator for Arizona, was similarly surveilled when he ran for president against Lyndon Johnson following the Kennedy assassination. Whereas the FBI spied on Trump, in Goldwater’s case, the CIA, which is prohibited by law from operating stateside, did
most of the legwork.

Much has been said and written about the CIA’s infiltration of Goldwater’s 1964 campaign. The agency’s infiltration of the Goldwater campaign has been public knowledge for roughly 50 years.

Everette Howard Hunt Jr., a 20-year
veteran of the CIA who was a major agency player in the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba and ended up serving prison time for his role in the Watergate burglary, told Senate investigators in 1973 that he directed a spying campaign on Goldwater’s 1964 campaign.

According to Hunt, the instructions concerning this espionage came down from his CIA superiors and in turn allegedly came “down from the White House.” Hunt told investigators that he “dispatched a couple of people to the Goldwater headquarters to see what was going on.”

The spies apparently obtained advance campaign schedules, news releases, and “any other information they could get,” said Hunt. This information ultimately made its way up the chain at the CIA, including to a superior allegedly stationed at the Johnson White House.

In the special, Beck highlighted a
46-page document consisting of numerous memos — some marked “secret” and written by Scott Dudley Breckinridge Jr., the former deputy inspector general of the CIA — regarding Hunt.

‘The audio sounds convincing.’

Breckinridge noted in a Dec. 20, 1973, memo marked “secret” that agency files showed that during the fall of 1964, when Hunt “was alleged to have been engaged in surveillance activities of Barry Goldwater,” Hunt was in the CIA’s Directorate of Operations, which is also known as the Clandestine Service.

“Our files showed Hunt was in DO Division … and in August 1964 was assigned to the Washington field office,” wrote Breckinridge.

Again, the
what was telling: the CIA was running clandestine operations in the nation’s capital with the apparent aim of keeping Johnson in power.

Haunting tape

In a portion of the special, Beck explored the theory of Lyndon B. Johnson’s involvement with the assassination with former Nixon administration staffer
Roger Stone. Beck proved more willing to entertain this particular theory on account of a haunting audiotape played in full for BlazeTV subscribers and in excerpted form on YouTube.

In January, Alex Jones of Infowars
hosted Shane Stevens and played never-heard-before digital audio of Clifton Carter, the former executive director of the Democratic National Committee and an apparently close associate of LBJ, claiming in conversation with Stevens’ grandfather, convicted fraudster Billie Sol Estes, that Johnson hired a man named Malcolm “Mac” Wallace to kill JFK.

“The audio sounds convincing,” said Beck. “I didn’t want to take anyone’s word for it.”

‘I do believe it helps confirm the LBJ and Mac Wallace involvement.’

In addition to speaking directly to Shane Stevens about the audio and listening to the actual analog tape live, Beck indicated that his team “had a JFK assassination expert examine the original tape,” whose input left him “convinced that it is an authentic recording.”

Dory Wiley, JFK assassination expert and CEO of Commerce Street Holdings LLC, told the program in a statement, “I’ve known about these tapes for years. Estes made several copies and gave them to some of his closest friends.”

“I believe them to be genuine,” continued Wiley. “The voices sound like the Billie Sol Estes and Cliff Carter from other sources I have heard.”

Wiley added, “I believe them to be correctly dated and recorded at the time Shane has declared, and I believe the accusations. This does not mean there wasn’t involvement by the CIA, the Secret Service, FBI, Mafia, or others, but I do believe it helps confirm the LBJ and Mac Wallace involvement.”

Clifton Carter appears to say in the audio, “Well, Sol, it’s been a pretty touch-and-go situation. Lyndon and I have had quite a few unpleasant words here lately over the deal that he hired Mac Wallace to assassinate the president.”

“It’s been hectic in every way, but we’ve lived through it this far and I guess we’ll continue to do so,” Carter appears to say. “Lyndon should have never issued that order to Mac. But we’ve had our differences and I’m true blue to Lyndon, as I’ve always been and tried to carry out every order that he’s ever given me. But this is one I’ll probably never be able to forget.”

When pressed about his delay in releasing the audio, Stevens told Beck his grandfather tried on more than one occasion to “release the truth” but came to fear for his life.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Your taxes funded lavish vacations, luxury cars, and fake jobs

March 27, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

A little-known agency in Washington perfectly encapsulates everything wrong with our bloated, corrupt government: the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. It should be the poster child of everything that Elon Musk is exposing.

The agency was established in 1947 under the Labor Management Relations Act to serve as an independent agency mediating disputes between unions and businesses — a noble mission, perhaps. But like so many government institutions, it has rotted into something far removed from its original purpose.

The FMCS goes beyond mismanagement into blatant corruption and theft.

What was once a mechanism for labor stability has morphed into an unchecked slush fund — an exclusive playground for bureaucrats living high on taxpayer dollars.

The FMCS is a textbook case of government waste, an agency that no one was watching, where employees didn’t even bother showing up for work — some hadn’t for years. And yet they still collected paychecks and spent government money — our money — on their personal luxuries.

Luxury cars and cell phone bills

The Department of Government Efficiency discovered how FMCS employees used government credit cards — intended for official business — to lease luxury cars, cover personal cell phone bills, and even subscribe to USA Today. The agency’s information technology director, James Donnan, apparently billed taxpayers his wife’s cell phone bill, cable TV subscriptions in multiple homes, and personal subscriptions.

FMCS officials commissioned portraits of themselves and hung them in their offices, and you footed the bill. They took exotic vacations and hired their friends and relatives to keep the gravy train rolling.

The FMCS goes beyond mismanagement into blatant corruption and theft — and it went on for decades, unnoticed and unchallenged.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order to abolish the FMCS — a necessary and long-overdue move. But the FMCS is just one of many agencies within the federal government burning through billions of taxpayer dollars. How many more slush funds exist in the shadows, funneling money into the pockets of bureaucrats who produce nothing? How many government-funded NGOs operate in direct opposition to American interests?

Perhaps the most disturbing question is why Americans tolerate such corruption. Why do so many Americans tolerate this? Why is the left — supposedly the party of the people — defending the very institutions that rob working-class Americans blind?

Corruption beyond bureaucracy

The recent rallies led by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), and their socialist acolytes claim to be a grassroots uprising against corruption and greed. But GPS data from these rallies tells a different story. The majority of attendees aren’t ordinary citizens fed up with the status quo. They’re professional activists — serial agitators who bounce from protest to protest.

Roughly 84% of devices tracked at these rallies were present at multiple Kamala Harris events. A staggering 31% appeared at over 20 separate demonstrations, tied to Antifa, Black Lives Matter, and pro-Palestinian causes.

Many of these organizations receive federal grant money — our tax dollars — and they’re using those funds to protest the very policies that threaten to cut off their financial lifeline.

This isn’t democracy in action. This is political theater — astroturfing perfected. And the American taxpayer is funding it.

Rooting out corruption

Trump was a battering ram against this corrupt system. Elon Musk is a surgeon, meticulously exposing the infection that has festered for decades — and that’s why the leftists hate him even more than they hate Trump. Musk threatens to dismantle the financial web that sustains their entire operation.

When we allow the government to grow unchecked and our leaders to prioritize their own wealth and power over the good of the nation, figures like Trump and Musk are necessary. Rome didn’t fall because of an external invasion but rather due to internal decay that looked an awful lot like what we see today.

We must demand better. We must refuse to tolerate this corruption any longer. The FMCS may be gone, but the fight to root out this deep-seated corruption is far from over.

Want more from Glenn Beck? Get Glenn’s FREE email newsletter with his latest insights, top stories, show prep, and more delivered to your inbox.

High-trust societies die when people don’t trust their neighbors

March 27, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

In a better world, people would cultivate virtue and develop habits of right action, practicing them regardless of external pressures. But we don’t live in that world. For most, concepts like honor and morality emerge from community, not individual will. These vital, pro-social behaviors rely on constant reinforcement by others. When daily life consists of anonymous, disconnected interactions, it becomes easier to justify selfishness. But when people must live among and depend on those who observe and remember how they behave, accountability shapes conduct.

Social norms depend heavily on the expectation of repeated interactions — what game theorists call “iterated games.” A functioning society requires widespread cooperation. When people believe they benefit more by acting selfishly than by cooperating, social cohesion begins to unravel. In one-time interactions, the incentive to cheat or defect rises sharply. One can gain an immediate advantage with little risk of social or material consequences.

Many debate distant acquaintances online, try to enforce shared principles across cultural divides, and appeal to ‘common sense’ in a world where little remains common.

Carnival workers and traveling merchants were once known for scamming customers. Sailors and touring rock musicians were infamous for defiling the honor of the daughters of the town. These groups operated without accountability because they never had to face the communities they affected. Their minimal connection to others reduced the costs of antisocial behavior and encouraged defection.

Today, we see a broader breakdown of communal life. We’ve fragmented communities, commodified identity, and isolated individuals. In doing so, we’ve eroded shared moral standards and stripped away even the basic incentives to cultivate virtue.

As a colleague recently observed, communal gatherings used to serve as informal “wellness checks.” Church, for example, grounded both cultural norms and moral expectations. It also required people to present themselves before others. Even atheists or agnostics often showed up on Sunday mornings — not for faith but to signal solidarity and demonstrate their role as contributing members of the community.

Churches noticed what others missed. Underfed or unwashed children caught someone’s eye. A hungover woman felt the weight of disapproval. An unfaithful man encountered the quiet judgment of those around him. These small acts of social accountability reinforced a shared moral order.

For most of history, individual independence was difficult, if not impossible. People relied on their communities for safety, food, education, goods, and entertainment. In many ancient societies, exile was tantamount to a death sentence. Some preferred suicide to being cast out. Reputation and honor mattered more than money because survival depended on others’ trust. A man’s worth reflected the number of relationships he had managed honorably over time.

Today, people can meet most of their basic needs without relying on others. That shift creates the illusion of freedom, but in reality, it has replaced dependence on community with dependence on the state.

Now, instead of interacting face-to-face within tight-knit communities, we operate as isolated individuals within anonymous digital spaces. Functions once performed by churches and neighborhoods have shifted to malls and bureaucracies. But social correction — once a communal responsibility — has become taboo. Attempting to help or intervene risks public shaming as a so-called “Karen” on social media.

The best social worker, no matter how dedicated, cannot match the quiet authority of vigilant grandmothers. And as that kind of local, relational accountability fades, the consequences grow harder to ignore.

A shared religion and common cultural norms significantly increase the likelihood that people will cooperate and act ethically, even among strangers. This dynamic defines what we call a “high-trust” society — one where individuals expect cooperation and moral behavior from others, even without close, day-to-day interaction.

In such societies, cultural expectations and religious beliefs so deeply shape conduct that people often can’t imagine behaving any other way. Even when defection carries few immediate consequences, trust persists because moral behavior has been internalized through habit and community values.

This is why most successful civilizations develop around a unifying religion and dominant cultural framework. A shared moral and social code allows complex societies to function by making behavior more predictable. Without that foundation, everyday interactions become unreliable, and cooperation breaks down.

Still, this model has its limits. Problems arise when a society continues to assume widespread agreement on values long after the cultural or religious foundation has eroded. Without a clear basis for those norms — or mechanisms to enforce them — shared assumptions collapse. The result isn’t cohesion but confusion, fragmentation, and in many cases, failure.

Social norms draw their power from habit and community enforcement. Religious precepts gain strength by asserting transcendent truths. Strip away both, and the incentive to cooperate weakens dramatically.

This is why the popular secular call to “just be a good person” falls flat. What does it mean to be good, in what context, and to what end? Only deep-rooted moral traditions, developed over time within specific communities, can answer those questions with any clarity or authority. When pressure mounts, the only forces that reliably foster cooperation are interdependence, strong communal accountability, or a belief in higher truths — all of which arise from tight-knit communities. Attempts to universalize these concepts without those foundations always collapse in the end.

As Americans confront the consequences of open borders and increasing social isolation, questions of national identity have become more urgent. We’re told Americans value liberty and hard work — and while that’s true, it’s not enough. Many debate distant acquaintances online, try to enforce shared principles across cultural divides, and appeal to “common sense” in a world where little remains common.

To recover a meaningful national identity, we need to rebuild on the foundations of Christian faith and real, local community. Neighbors must be able to depend on one another and hold each other accountable. That’s a tall order in a digital age where every device offers an escape from responsibility. But those willing to embrace that challenge will be the ones most equipped to lead.

To thine own self be true — especially in our fake digital world

March 26, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

Every once in a while you hear about these people who build up totally fake identities on the internet.

They devote hundreds of hours to crafting a persona and a story that are completely fabricated. They claim they have eight kids. They claim they have a ton of money. They claim they are something they are absolutely not.

We shouldn’t seek out approval pretending to be someone else. We shouldn’t drift off into the digital abyss, play-acting like little children.

What is that? What can we learn from it? What does it mean for us?

A new kind of delusion

It’s a very modern phenomenon, that’s for sure. It didn’t exist 50 years ago. It couldn’t have existed 50 years ago. There was just no way to do it. There was no internet. No possibility of retreating into the safety of a false digital reality.

And that’s what it is at bottom: a retreat into a more alluring world. A world where you don’t have to ever do anything or be anything. You can just say you are anything, and that’s enough.

It’s a kind of fantasy escapism. Yes, of course, we have had fantasy and escapism for a long time. Books can be just that. But this is very different from books. It’s more interactive, more immersive, more alluring.

We live in an era of parallel worlds. There is the digital world and the actual world. It’s no stretch to suggest that retreating into a false digital identity, living in a false digital world, is a retreat from life itself.

How do you end up claiming that you have 11 kids when you have none? How do you end up claiming you are some wealthy mogul when you are living with your parents? How do you end up claiming you are 27 when you are 49?

The same old escapism

I imagine it happens slowly. It starts with a desire to escape. To leave life behind. To become someone else, someone you see as greater, without doing any of the work to get there.

You don’t leave your life if you are happy. You don’t leave reality if you are fulfilled. Think about drug addicts who zone out every day. Do they do it because they are fulfilled in their lives? No, they want to zone out as far as they possibly can without going over the edge into death.

A similar thing is going on with retreating into the digital. “Life is miserable, but the digital world can be whatever I want.” That’s the logic.

That’s how it all starts. Then it accelerates. The “likes” start coming in. The followers start increasing. Fabricators see what works, and soon enough they are throwing red meat to their mob. The people eat it up.

They see that everyone loves who they are. Well, not who they actually are, but who they pretend to be. “I’m not enough, but my pretend self is.” That must be painful, but it can be overcome for the sake of likes and follows.

Bridging the gap

The examples above are extreme. Most people, thankfully, don’t concoct false parallel lives for internet dopamine hits. But the question of how we bridge the gap between the digital and the actual in a healthy way is a question we all must wrestle with. How do we remain ourselves in the digital world?

Honesty. That’s how we remain ourselves. We just have to be honest, or at least not dishonest. We don’t have to tell the whole world everything about who we are. Strangers don’t have a right to anything that’s ours. We don’t owe anyone any details about how we live our lives.

But we shouldn’t lie to ourselves or others. We shouldn’t seek out approval by pretending to be someone else. We shouldn’t drift off into the digital abyss, play-acting like little children.

Living a parallel life isn’t natural. We haven’t evolved with the internet. We are new to it. Throughout human civilization, we have only lived IRL. Now, we live IRL and online. The dissonance of managing two conflicting identities at the same time is not something we were ever made to do.

Bad for the soul

It’s not good for the soul, either. There has to be some kind of corrosion that happens when you live a parallel life in the digital world. Some kind of deeper self-hatred burns there. The self-deception must eat away at you.

The most fundamental problem of losing oneself in the digital world is the fact that we will never escape the actual one, no matter how hard we try. We can’t upload our brains to the cloud. We can’t get away from the fact that we are stuck here on earth. We can’t escape our bodies, the rooms where we sleep, or the fingers with which we type. The actual world will always remain, as long as we do.

Offloading one’s energy and emotions to a parallel identity in the digital world only prevents us from bettering our actual lives in the actual world. It doesn’t matter how many likes you get or how many followers you have if you hate yourself. It doesn’t matter how exciting your digital life looks if your actual life is miserable.

The internet has given us incredible opportunities, but it also presents us with incredible dangers. We must never lose our way in a false digital world. We must always remain ourselves, both online and offline. This might be one of the great challenges of our time.

Former NFL player arrested in massive dogfighting bust involving 190 pit bulls, DOJ says

March 26, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

The FBI busted the largest dogfighting ring in the bureau’s history and nabbed a former NFL running back while seizing 190 pit bulls.

The Department of Justice said 54-year-old LeShon Eugene Johnson was indicted for allegedly operating the dogfighting ring at a large-scale breeding and trafficking operation in Broken Arrow and Haskell, Oklahoma.

‘Animal abuse is cruel, depraved, and deserves severe punishment.’

The 54-year-old running back was drafted to play for the Green Bay Packers in 1994 and went on to play for the Arizona Cardinals as well as the New York Giants.

Johnson’s alleged operation was called “Mal Kant Kennels” and included the breeding of dogfight champions. The DOJ said that Johnson benefited financially from the business and also furthered the growth of the dogfighting industry.

Court filings indicate that investigators were able to recover evidence from Johnson’s phone including a Facebook page and emails discussing pedigrees of the dogs, as well as Cash App history.

If convicted, Johnson faces five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

“Animal abuse is cruel, depraved, and deserves severe punishment,” said Attorney General Pamela Bondi. “The Department of Justice will prosecute this case to the fullest extent of the law and will remain committed to protecting innocent animals from those who would do them harm.”

Johnson pleaded guilty to similar charges in 2004 for an operation he called “Krazyside Kennels.”

“The FBI views animal cruelty investigations as a precursor to larger, organized crime efforts, similar to trafficking and homicides,” said FBI Director Kash Patel. “This is yet another push in the FBI’s crackdown of violent offenders harming our most innocent.”

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Native American Alaskan group applauds Trump for lifting drilling restrictions, says Biden ignored native communities

March 26, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

A group representing 21 Native American communities and corporations in Alaska accused the Biden administration of ignoring them after praising the Trump administration for opening up drilling opportunities.

The statement was a response to the Trump administration easing drilling restrictions in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska as well as the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The announcement on Thursday was a part of President Donald Trump’s plan to make the U.S. dominant in energy production.

‘The Biden administration produced deeply flawed policies that would have imposed dire economic consequences on the North Slope Iñupiat’s communities and culture.’

“It’s cautious optimism,” said Nagruk Harcharek, the president of the Voice of the Arctic Iñupiat nonprofit, to the Daily Caller News Foundation.

“We feel like we’re going to be able to get some things done with a more favorable administration,” he added, “but we’re also being careful about it because we don’t want to threaten that cultural base and lifestyle that we rely on every day.”

Republican Alaska Rep. Nick Begich claimed the former administration closed off economic opportunities in Alaska without consulting the opinions of affected native groups.

“The voices of North Slope Iñupiat communities were not given a seat at the table under the Biden administration, and Alaska’s resources were locked up with the stroke of a pen,” said Begich in a statement to the Caller.

The organization castigated the Biden administration in a 2024 statement.

“North Slope Iñupiat leaders were not consulted by the federal government prior to its actions,” read a press release from the group. “By excluding local Indigenous communities from the policymaking table, the Biden administration produced deeply flawed policies that would have imposed dire economic consequences on the North Slope Iñupiat’s communities and culture.”

Harcharek said that former President Joe Biden had promised “meaningful consultation” with the tribes but that they were often ignored and found out about decisions affecting them through news reports.

Critics of the group accused Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, a Republican who supports drilling, of granting $1 million of state funds to Voice of the Arctic Iñupiat in order to tip the scale of opinion toward easing restrictions. Harcharek said in a statement to the Guardian that the funds were solely used to educate people about Iñupiat culture. The governor did not respond to a comment request.

Other Native American groups like the Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic oppose the drilling and call instead for a more “equitable” economy.

“The expansion will add to the already massive footprint of the Willow Project and increase habitat fragmentation, disturb wildlife, and create long-term ecological consequences,” read a statement from the group.

“We can make a living without cannibalizing our lands,” said Enei Begaye, executive director of Native Movement.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

2 former Christian school teachers accused of sexually abusing same student; lawyer warns of more victims, more suspects

March 26, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

Two former private Christian school teachers in Georgia are facing multiple felony charges in connection with accusations that they both had illicit relationships with the same student.

Bonnie Elizabeth Brown — a 25-year-old ex-teacher from White Plains — was arrested Friday and charged with improper sexual contact by an employee, agent, or foster parent.

‘My school did not protect me as a child.’

The Athens Banner-Herald reported that “Brown, a graduate of Nathanael Greene Academy and the school’s 2016 homecoming queen, has been released from jail on a $50,000 bond.”

Sherri Delle Mauldin — a 60-year-old from Buckhead — was arrested Monday and charged with statutory rape, aggravated child molestation, and improper sexual contact by an employee, agent, or foster parent.

Both suspects were booked at the Greene County Sheriff’s Office Jail.

The suspects formerly worked at the Nathanael Greene Academy, which is roughly 90 miles southeast of Atlanta. The school teaches kindergarteners through 12th-graders. According to U.S. News & World Report, the school has a student population of 85; the tuition allegedly is as much as $6,350.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said in a statement, “On June 14, 2024, the Greene County Sheriff’s Office asked the GBI to investigate allegations of sexual contact between a student and a former Nathanael Greene Academy teacher in Siloam, Georgia.”

The GBI declared that the investigation “confirmed” that Brown engaged in illegal sexual contact with a student when she was a teacher at the Nathanael Greene Academy.

At the time of her arrest, Brown was a teacher at a primary school in neighboring Wilkes County.

The GBI investigation into Mauldin revealed that the former Nathanael Greene Academy teacher engaged in improper sexual contact with a student.

The GBI noted that the investigation remains active and ongoing.

‘These women took advantage of their positions as my teachers.’

The alleged victim’s lawyer, Ashley Mitchell, told the Banner-Herald that the sex abuse happened both on and off campus.

The paper reported, “The two former teachers charged recently with having sexual relations with a student at a private Christian school in Greene County allegedly knew that each other was involved with the same student, a lawyer for the victim said Tuesday.”

The lawyer said other students at the school exposed the alleged teacher sex scandal.

“There were students who had knowledge,” Mitchell stated. “There was a situation where students were reporting it to their family, and it eventually made its way to the Greene County Sheriff’s Office.”

Greene County Sheriff Donnie Harrison on Monday said that upon receiving the complaint, he forwarded it to the GBI.

Mitchell said complaints were provided to the school administration.

“Their claim is they investigated it and found no wrongdoing,” Mitchell said of the Nathanael Greene Academy administrators.

Mitchell added, “The GBI and law enforcement have done a thorough and diligent job. None of this was a hasty process.”

Mitchell alleged that school officials previously cited one of the teachers for inappropriate conduct with the student but did not name which teacher.

Mitchell hinted that there could be more victims as well as more suspects.

“There is information to suggest that potentially other teachers may have been involved with other victims,” Mitchell said.

Mitchell added, “It’s the classic case of predators having access to children and not much oversight.”

The anonymous accuser said in a statement obtained by WXIA-TV: “I’m relieved that these two women have been arrested, and the crimes are being fully investigated.”

“These women took advantage of their positions as my teachers. My school did not protect me as a child,” the alleged victim said. “I see that now, and I hope that these arrests will protect our community and children in it.”

On Monday, Wilkes County Schools said in a statement that school officials were not aware of Brown’s arrest until after she was taken into custody. The school system confirmed that the school as of Monday no longer employed Brown.

The Wilkes County School System said that it is “fully prepared to cooperate” with the GBI in its investigation into the child sex abuse allegations.

Anyone with information is urged to contact the Greene County Sheriff’s Office at 706-453-3351 or the GBI regional investigative office in Milledgeville at 478-445-4173.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Trump orders proof of citizenship to vote, threatens noncompliant states

March 26, 2025 Ogghy Filed Under: INVESTIGATIONS, The Blaze

President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday requiring proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections, threatening to yank funding from states that fail to make efforts to secure elections.

The executive action scrutinized the United States’ current voting methods, arguing that “modern, developed nations, as well as those still developing,” have deployed systems that curb fraud and abuse. The EO noted that India and Brazil have incorporated a biometric database, Germany and Canada require paper ballots, and Denmark and Sweden place restrictions on mail-in voting.

‘The farthest-reaching executive action taken in the history of the republic to secure our elections.’

It contended that the states have failed to comply with federal election requirements, in ways such as continuing to count ballots collected after Election Day and implementing inadequate citizenship vetting processes.

Trump’s executive action mandates that voters provide proof of citizenship before casting their ballots, and election officials are required to record the details of the provided documentation, including issue date, expiration date, and identification number. It lists acceptable proof of citizenship documents such as U.S. passports, military identification cards, and forms of identification that meet Real ID requirements.

The EO will also add a citizenship question to the federal voting form.

States that fail to take adequate steps to protect the election process could have their federal funding cut.

Trump directed the Department of Homeland Security to partner with the Department of Government Efficiency to review publicly available voter registration lists against immigration databases. Any noncitizens discovered on the voter rolls will be provided to Attorney General Pam Bondi, with the administration calling on the DOJ to prosecute election crimes.

During Tuesday’s signing, homeland security adviser Stephen Miller called the EO “the farthest-reaching executive action taken in the history of the republic to secure our elections.”

“We believe that these are very important steps that we need to be taking as an administration, at your direction, to ensure that our elections are as secure as they possible can be,” Miller stated.

Trump said that the EO would “go a long way” toward ending election fraud, adding that the administration planned to take additional steps “in the coming weeks.”

“Perhaps some people think I shouldn’t be complaining because we won in a landslide, but we’ve got to straighten out our election. This country is so sick because of the election — the fake elections and the bad elections. And we’re going to straighten it out one way or the other,” he stated. “It’s an honor to sign this one.”

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 42
  • Page 43
  • Page 44
  • Page 45
  • Page 46
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 98
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Latest Posts

  • Mexico sues Google for changing ‘Gulf of Mexico’ to ‘Gulf of America’ after Trump’s order
  • Underwater volcano off Oregon coast ‘ballooning’ with lava — and set to erupt for first time since 2015
  • Accused pedophile pastor allegedly sexually assaulted 2 girls at Florida church, telling one, ‘We only live once’
  • The Shady Bunch: Six Words We Won’t Be Hearing from Democrats Over the Next Four Years
  • Browns downplay Shedeur Sanders taking second in QB reps at rookie minicamp
  • Yankees throttle A’s behind Will Warren gem, Jasson Dominguez’s three homers
  • Liberty’s Natasha Cloud has waited for these vibes for six years
  • Jasson Dominguez makes Yankees history with first three-homer game of MLB career
  • Karen Read trial reveals flirty text messages with ATF agent behind boyfriend’s back
  • Travelers can ‘fly like a cardinal’ on direct Chicago-to-Rome flight in honor of Pope Leo, charter company reveals in cheeky new ad
  • UFC Tonight: What You Need To Know About The UFC 315 Fight Card
  • Refinancing Your Student Loans With a Private Lender Only Makes Sense in This One Situation
  • Democrats Privately Furious That Joe Biden Won’t Just Leave the National Stage
  • The Apprentice: Carney plays nice during first White House visit
  • Sen John Kennedy and Kristi Noem Explain Why Joe Biden Flooded the Country with Illegal Aliens
  • Mets pass the first part of their litmus test with flying colors
  • Washington Post Downplays Significance of New USA-UK Trade Deal
  • UFC 315 Updated Fight Card After Jose Aldo’s Massive Weight Issue
  • America Humbled
  • Cavaliers pummel Pacers to cut series deficit to 2-1

🛩️ Fly Smarter with OGGHY Jet Set
🎟️ Hot Tickets Now
🌴 Explore Tours & Experiences
© 2025 William Liles (dba OGGHYmedia). All rights reserved.