Critics might wonder if voodoo chants are now being directed at the Fed.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2025-11-18/fed-latest-central-bank-gets-voodoo-chants-on-balance-sheet
The Fed Balance-Sheet Debate Tilts Toward ‘Voodoo’ Economics
Critics might wonder if voodoo chants are now being directed at the Fed.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2025-11-18/fed-latest-central-bank-gets-voodoo-chants-on-balance-sheet
Meridian and Lauderdale County students will enjoy a break from the classroom next week as schools mark Thanksgiving break.
A right-wing media outlet’s exposé on what it claimed was the likely identity of the January 6th pipe bomber has been proven to be more of a bomb than a bombshell, reports The Bulwark. The Blaze, founded by conservative commentator Glenn Beck, reported that “a female former Capitol Police officer who joined the CIA shortly after January 6th was ‘a forensic match’ for the individual caught on camera footage the night before.”The report said that they used “gait analysis” to compare the walk of the ex-officer to the alleged bomber. Loyalists of President Donald Trump immediately picked up on the report, including Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL), who wrote on X that “a capitol police officer placed a pipe bomb at the RNC on J6,” adding that the Blaze story was proof that Republicans would “all be in the gulag” if it wasn’t for Trump.“This woman was the Capitol Hill pipe bomber,” wrote Women for Trump co-founder and January 6 Ellipse rally organizer Amy Kremer on X. The Justice Department, however, remained uncharacteristically silent about the report, The Bulwark notes, and Rep. Luna deleted her post.”Instead of uncovering the likely identity of the pipe bomb-dropping suspect, the Blaze may have a legal mess on its hands,” The Bulwark says.”The mystery has loomed especially large for conservatives, who see the FBI’s failure to catch the perpetrator as proof that the laying of the bombs and perhaps the Capitol riot itself was an inside job orchestrated by federal law enforcement to entrap Trump supporters,” they write. enogears.”The woman who was identified by the Blaze “was already a target of the MAGA right,” photographed as one of the officers firing pepper balls at January 6th rioters, and later testified against January 6th participants in at least two cases, according to court records, The Bulwark says. As the article started to gain traction, it suffered “an immediate blow to its credibility,” they report.”While the article initially claimed that the woman now works on CIA director John Ratcliffe’s security detail, the article was corrected after the CIA clarified that she worked as a security guard on CIA property,” they write. Julie Kelly, “a right-wing media figure who has become the dean of the MAGA January 6th counternarrative,” has investigated the pipe bomber herself, and slammed The Blaze’s story.“I am shocked at the weak evidence cited in The Blaze article and nonexistent evidence contained in the piece itself,” Kelly tweeted.”High-ranking Justice Department official Ed Martin appeared to support the article before it came out, tweeting sequentially ‘P’ ‘I’ ‘P’ ‘E?’ before deleting the posts containing the letters. At the same time, Martin tweeted out that neither he nor the FBI had made a determination of the pipe-bomb suspect’s identity,” The Bulwark notes. Following the story, the FBI put out a statement saying they are still investigating the case, and right-wing podcaster Benny Johnson used it to quash the story on his show. “There’s no other way to accept this statement, other than they’re saying the Blaze has it wrong,” he said. Even Beck seems to be walking away from the story, The Bulwark says. “Despite the Blaze publishing the officer’s name on Saturday, Beck refused to name the woman on his podcast, saying ‘a match is not guilt.'”“This person of interest is still a citizen whose life carries the same dignity and presumption of innocence as yours and mine,” Beck said. “I can’t tell you what is true in this story yet.”.
Attorneys for Lindsay Clancy, the Duxbury mother accused of strangling her three young children to death, have filed a motion to move her trial from.