More than 9,000 Americans have returned safely to the United States from the Middle East since the U.S. and Israel launched strikes on Iran over the weekend, President Trump announced Tuesday on Truth Social.

The number reflects a massive logistical mobilization. In just days, the federal government coordinated charter flights, commercial bookings, and a round-the-clock State Department task force to extract American citizens from an active conflict zone. Trump urged any U.S. citizens still in the region who want to come home to register with the State Department immediately.

"We are already chartering flights, free of charge, and booking commercial options, which we expect will become increasingly available as time goes on."

That's the president speaking directly to Americans abroad, with a concrete offer attached. Not a press release laundered through three layers of bureaucratic hedging. A direct message with a direct plan.

The timeline

The sequence of events moved fast, The Hill reported. On Friday, the State Department authorized the departure of all nonemergency government workers and their families from Israel through an updated travel advisory. Early Saturday morning, the U.S. and Israel launched attacks against Iran as part of a joint operation dubbed "Operation Epic Fury," killing Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

By Monday, the situation had escalated enough that the State Department issued an urgent warning for Americans to leave the Middle East entirely. Mora Namdar, assistant secretary of State for consular affairs, posted on X with unmistakable clarity:

"The @SecRubio @StateDept urges Americans to DEPART NOW from the countries below using available commercial transportation, due to serious safety risks."

That same day, Secretary of State Marco Rubio posted a video on X addressing affected U.S. citizens and sharing resources. Rubio said the department authorized a 24/7 task force to assist Americans in the region.

"To all American citizens in the Middle East: Your safety and security is our number one priority."

By Tuesday, more than 9,000 Americans were already home.

What this looks like when it works

The contrast with past evacuations hardly needs stating, but it's worth pausing on what competent execution actually looks like. Friday: advisories go out. Saturday: strikes begin. Monday: urgent warnings, task force activated, cabinet-level officials personally addressing citizens on social media. Tuesday: thousands already stateside.

That's four days. No stranded civilians left on a tarmac with no plan. No weeks of ambiguity while bureaucrats debated messaging. The machinery of government moved at the speed the situation demanded.

Trump's message to remaining Americans was characteristically direct. Register with the State Department. The department will identify where you are and provide travel options. The flights are free. The message carried the weight of someone who understood that Americans abroad during a military operation aren't an afterthought. They're the first obligation.

The security picture

The updated travel advisory from Friday made clear that conditions on the ground remain fluid. The U.S. Embassy reserved the right to further restrict or prohibit government employees and their family members from traveling to certain areas of Israel, the Old City of Jerusalem, and the West Bank. The advisory noted that such restrictions could come "without advance notice."

The advisory also carried a pointed recommendation for private citizens:

"Persons may wish to consider leaving Israel while commercial flights are available."

That language is diplomatic, but the meaning is plain. Commercial options exist now. They may not tomorrow. The window is open, and no one is guaranteeing how long it stays that way.

Americans still in the region who wish to return must register with the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program at step.state.gov. Trump emphasized that the State Department will locate registrants and arrange their travel home.

The bigger picture

Operation Epic Fury represents a defining moment, not just militarily but in how a government treats its own citizens during wartime. The elimination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the joint U.S.-Israel strikes reshaped the strategic landscape of the Middle East in a matter of hours. That kind of action creates consequences that ripple outward, and the first people caught in those ripples are always civilians.

The 9,000 Americans who made it home didn't get lucky. They got a government that planned the extraction alongside the operation, not as an afterthought weeks later. The charter flights were already in motion. The task force was already staffed. The communication channels were already live.

Nine thousand Americans, home in four days. That's not a talking point. That's a logistics operation executed under pressure with real lives on the line.

The ones still there have a number, a website, and a secretary of state who went on camera to tell them they matter. Now it's on them to register and get to a departure point.

The door is open. The flights are free. The clock is ticking.

As American missiles struck Iranian targets and ended the 86-year-old theocratic dictator Ali Hosseini Khamenei, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz took to X with a two-word foreign policy treatise: "No new wars."

It did not go well for him.

The 2024 vice presidential nominee joined the chorus of Democrats criticizing the Trump administration's strikes on Iran, and the internet responded with the kind of bipartisan contempt rarely seen in American politics. Walz managed to unite the left and the right, not behind a cause, but against himself.

A Two-Word Post, a Thousand Problems

The responses came fast and from every direction, Fox News noted. Aviva Klompas, whose bio includes time at the Israeli mission to the United Nations, dismantled the premise entirely:

"Iran started this war 47 years ago when they took Americans hostage. Honestly, can people crack open a book before posting nonsense?"

Comedian Michael Rapaport slammed Walz by retweeting Klompas's response and then offered his own assessment of Khamenei's demise:

"I'm glad that old bag of s--- and his entire regime are gone."

Rapaport, who has been vocal against New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, went on to take issue with critics of the Iranian strikes more broadly. He condemned those who remained silent as Khamenei oversaw mass murders of tens of thousands of dissidents in recent months. On Monday, he added further commentary on the dictator's death in characteristically colorful fashion.

Rep. Randy Fine, R-Fla., a top pro-Israel voice in Congress, skipped the geopolitics entirely and went straight for the jugular: "Will this affect your Somali kickbacks?"

Conservative videographer Cam Higby, who had tweeted videos of his stringer-type visits to Minneapolis unrest, posed a different question: "Didn't you just try to start a war with Trump a month ago?"

That last one lands harder than it might seem.

The Walz Contradiction Machine

Tim Walz has spent the past year as one of the most visible state leaders and Trump critics in the country. He has repeatedly condemned the Department of Homeland Security's immigration enforcement efforts in his state. He has pushed the idea that President Donald Trump is a monarch, posting "No kings" alongside his opposition. He has positioned himself as the conscience of the resistance.

And yet the man who wants to be the moral authority on executive overreach once stood with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and declared:

"Minnesota stands with the people of Ukraine as they fight to defend freedom and democracy."

So military engagement abroad is noble when it involves a cause Walz approves of, but a strike against a regime that took American hostages, sponsored terrorism across the Middle East, and brutalized its own people is somehow a bridge too far. The principle isn't "no new wars." The principle is "no wars that help Trump."

This is the feedback loop that defines so much of the modern left. Opposition to the current administration becomes the only consistent value. Everything else, including coherence, is negotiable.

The Somali Fraud Shadow

Fine's jab about "Somali kickbacks" wasn't random. Minnesota has wrestled with a Somali-linked childcare fraud problem that metastasized to other sectors, and Walz has faced scrutiny over his handling of it. The governor who positions himself as a guardian of democratic norms has presided over a state where fraud flourished under lax oversight. That context doesn't disappear because he posted two words about Iran.

The Regime Is Gone. The Excuses Aren't.

Late Monday, reports surfaced that Khamenei's wife, Mansoureh Khojasteh Bagherzadeh, succumbed to her injuries from the missile strike that killed her husband. The regime that terrorized its own citizens, hanged dissidents from cranes, and funded proxy wars across the region has been decapitated.

The appropriate response from an American governor is not complicated. You don't have to celebrate. You don't have to wave a flag. But "No new wars" in response to the elimination of one of the world's most brutal theocrats tells you everything about where Walz's priorities sit. Not with the Iranian women beaten for showing their hair. Not with the hostages taken 47 years ago. Not with the dissidents who disappeared into regime prisons.

With the narrative. Always with the narrative.

Walz wanted to score a point against the administration. Instead, he reminded everyone, left and right alike, why voters didn't send him to the White House.

The FBI terminated roughly 10 agents on Wednesday, all of whom participated in the investigation into Donald Trump's handling of classified documents after his first term. The firings mark the latest in a series of personnel actions taken since Trump returned to the White House in January, as the Justice Department and FBI have moved to remove employees who participated in federal investigations against him.

FBI Director Kash Patel did not publicly detail specific misconduct by the terminated employees. But Patel himself has personal experience with the investigation's reach: he told Reuters that federal agents subpoenaed his phone records when he was a private citizen during the documents probe. Now, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles also had her phone records subpoenaed as a private citizen during the same investigation.

That context matters. These weren't distant bureaucratic exercises. Investigators reached into the private lives of people who are now among the most senior officials in the U.S. government.

The investigation that collapsed under its own weight

After Trump left the White House in 2021, Special Counsel Jack Smith led two federal investigations into him. One focused on classified documents Trump brought back to his Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida and his alleged efforts to obstruct the Department of Justice from retrieving them. Trump and two of his associates were indicted in 2023 following Smith's investigation.

Then it fell apart.

In 2024, a federal judge in Florida dismissed the case against Trump, finding that Smith was unlawfully appointed. This year, a federal appeals court in Georgia dropped the case against the last two defendants at the request of Trump's Justice Department.

So the investigation that consumed years of federal resources, generated breathless media coverage, and swept up the phone records of private citizens produced zero convictions. The special counsel who ran it was found to have been unlawfully appointed. Every indictment has been dismissed.

The agents who executed that investigation are the ones who just lost their jobs.

A pattern of accountability, not retribution

According to the BBC, the FBI Agents Association pushed back on the terminations, framing them as a threat to national security:

"These actions weaken the Bureau by stripping away critical expertise and destabilizing the workforce, undermining trust in leadership and jeopardizing the Bureau's ability to meet its recruitment goals - ultimately putting the nation at greater risk."

It's a familiar argument. Every time personnel changes come to a federal agency, the institutional defenders claim the sky is falling. Critical expertise. Destabilized workforce. National risk. The language is always the same, whether it's ten agents or ten thousand bureaucrats. The premise is that no one inside federal law enforcement can ever be held accountable for their role in a failed, legally deficient investigation without endangering the republic.

That premise deserves scrutiny. The classified documents case didn't just fail on the merits. It failed on legitimacy. A federal judge ruled the man running it had no lawful authority to do so. If that doesn't warrant a review of who carried out the work and how, what would?

Broader housecleaning at DOJ

The firings are not isolated. Since January, the Justice Department has also:

  • Fired other employees who participated in federal investigations against Trump
  • Attempted to pursue charges against former FBI director James Comey, whom Trump fired during his first term in 2017
  • Attempted to pursue charges against New York Attorney General Letitia James, who led a civil fraud lawsuit against Trump

This is a systematic effort to impose consequences on officials who used the machinery of federal law enforcement against a political opponent. Whether the institutional class in Washington likes it or not, elections have consequences. So do investigations that turn out to be built on unlawful foundations.

The real trust problem

The FBI Agents Association worries about "undermining trust in leadership." That concern arrives several years too late. Trust in the FBI didn't erode because Kash Patel fired ten agents. It eroded because the bureau allowed itself to become a tool of political warfare, subpoenaing the phone records of private citizens in an investigation led by a special counsel who had no legal authority to hold the job.

You don't rebuild institutional credibility by protecting everyone who participated in the credibility crisis. You rebuild it by demonstrating that the rules apply to the enforcers, too.

Ten agents lost their jobs this week. The investigation they worked on lost its legal standing last year. The sequence speaks for itself.

Wesley Dingus, the 48-year-old mayor of Butler, Ohio, resigned from office Tuesday after the village council convened a special meeting to address what it called "personnel reasons." His resignation letter was read aloud at the meeting and unanimously accepted.

The letter was brief and strange in equal measure. Dingus wrote that he was stepping down "not under stress but under duress," a distinction without much of a difference for a man facing two misdemeanor voyeurism charges and a separate arrest for aggravated assault.

Council President Eric Tron will assume the mayor's role.

The Charges

Dingus was arraigned on February 19 in Mansfield Municipal Court on two misdemeanor charges of voyeurism. According to the report, he was captured on camera twice smelling a girl's underwear. He pleaded not guilty in both cases.

Those charges arrived on top of an already existing legal mess. Dingus was arrested on August 17, 2025, on charges of aggravated assault and vehicular assault tied to a July 11 incident that gained national attention. The man held public office throughout it, as Beacon Journal reports.

A Town Exhales

Tron, the council president who now inherits the mayor's duties, spoke to News 5 Cleveland after the meeting:

"I have mixed feelings about everything, but I'm just happy that things turned out the way they did, as far as how it went tonight. I think everybody's kind of relieved the mayor resigned."

"Mixed feelings" is generous. The village council had to drag this to a special session just to get a resignation out of a mayor facing voyeurism charges involving a minor. That it required a formal meeting, public pressure, and what Dingus himself characterized as "duress" tells you everything about how voluntarily he left.

When Accountability Has to Be Extracted

There is a broader pattern here that conservatives understand instinctively: public officials cling to power long past the point where decency demands they let go. It doesn't matter the party or the size of the office. A village mayor in rural Ohio and a big-city machine politician share the same reflex. The title becomes the identity, and the identity doesn't surrender easily.

What makes cases like this particularly corrosive is the smallness of the stage. Butler is not a metropolis with layers of bureaucracy to absorb the shock. In a village, the mayor is someone your kids see at the gas station. The betrayal of public trust lands differently when the public is your neighbors.

Dingus pleaded not guilty. He is entitled to the presumption of innocence in court. But a courtroom and a mayor's office operate under different standards. Criminal guilt requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Public service requires the public's confidence. Those two thresholds are not the same, and elected officials who hide behind the first to avoid the second do their constituents no favors.

The council did what it had to do. It called the meeting. It accepted the resignation. It moved on. That's how self-governance is supposed to work at every level: when an officeholder becomes a liability to the people he serves, the people's representatives act.

Butler gets a clean start. The residents deserve one.

Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Friday that 30 more people have been indicted for their alleged roles in an anti-ICE protest at a Minnesota church, bringing the total number of defendants to 39.

News Nation Now reported that twenty-five of the newly indicted individuals had already been arrested, with more arrests expected before the day was out.

The sweep dramatically expands a case that first drew national attention when former CNN anchor Don Lemon was named as one of nine people initially charged.

Now, with 30 additional names on the indictment, the Justice Department is making clear that the original arrests were an opening salvo, not a final word.

The charges

All 39 defendants face the same pair of federal charges: conspiracy against the right of religious worship and violating a law that forbids obstructing access to houses of worship.

Read that again. The protesters who claimed to be standing up for the vulnerable are being prosecuted for targeting a church. For interfering with the right of Americans to worship freely.

There is a deep irony here that the left will never acknowledge. The same political movement that wraps itself in the language of rights and tolerance descended on a house of worship to obstruct a lawful federal operation.

They didn't picket a government building. They didn't march on a courthouse. They chose a church. And the charges reflect exactly what that choice was: an assault on religious liberty.

Bondi and Patel send a message

Bondi did not mince words in a social media post announcing the indictments:

"YOU CANNOT ATTACK A HOUSE OF WORSHIP. If you do so, you cannot hide from us — we will find you, arrest you, and prosecute you."

She followed that with a pointed declaration about the Justice Department's priorities:

"This Department of Justice STANDS for Christians and all Americans of faith."

FBI Director Kash Patel echoed the attorney general's resolve in his own statement:

"Let it be known: This FBI will never tolerate anyone who targets, intimidates, or attacks Americans peacefully exercising their right to worship freely. Thank you @AGPamBondi and @TheJusticeDept for your relentless pursuit of this case."

The tone from both officials is unmistakable. This is a DOJ that views obstruction of worship as a serious federal crime, not a misdemeanor footnote to be plea-bargained into community service.

The left's inversion of victimhood

When the original charges dropped, and Don Lemon's name surfaced, the predictable machinery of progressive sympathy kicked into gear.

Protesters were cast as brave dissidents. The church was reframed as a staging ground for ICE operations, as though that justified mobbing it. The actual congregants, the people who use the building to pray, were erased from the narrative entirely.

This is a pattern. The left champions "sanctuary" when it means shielding illegal immigrants from federal law. But the actual sanctuary of a house of worship? That gets trampled the moment it becomes politically inconvenient. The word only matters when it serves their purposes.

Consider what the charges tell us about what happened at that church:

  • Defendants allegedly conspired against the right of religious worship
  • Defendants allegedly obstructed access to a house of worship
  • The conduct was serious enough to warrant federal indictments for 39 people

This was not a candlelight vigil. This was not a peaceful assembly. It was a coordinated effort to prevent Americans from accessing their own church.

Thirty-nine and counting

The expansion from nine to 39 defendants signals that investigators took their time building this case.

They identified participants methodically, secured evidence, and brought charges in waves. That's how serious federal prosecutions work. Bondi's note that more arrests were expected later Friday suggests the net may not be fully drawn yet.

For those who participated in the Minnesota church protest and assumed the original nine indictments were the end of it, Friday delivered a different message.

The DOJ kept working. The FBI kept identifying faces. And 30 more people woke up to the reality that obstructing a house of worship carries federal consequences.

The celebrity defendant in this case may be Don Lemon, but the story is bigger than one disgraced cable news anchor looking for a second act. It's about whether a movement that claims moral authority can bulldoze the religious liberty of ordinary Americans and walk away clean.

Thirty-nine indictments say it cannot.

Republican senators are pressing Attorney General Pam Bondi and the Justice Department to release every file related to Jeffrey Epstein that mentions President Trump's name, after media reports this week revealed that documents released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act did not include FBI memos summarizing interviews with a woman who made claims in 2019 against both Epstein and Trump involving an incident from the 1980s.

The DOJ publicly released an index indicating the FBI conducted four interviews related to the woman's claims and wrote separate summaries. But the summaries themselves were not among the published files.

The message from GOP lawmakers has been simple: the law says release everything, so release everything.

Republicans speak with one voice

Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana, a member of the Judiciary Committee, was characteristically blunt:

"Release the documents. Redact the names of the victims. Don't release photographs, naked or otherwise, of minors. Release the documents. This is not going to go away until there is full disclosure."

Kennedy followed up with a line that left no room for interpretation:

"I don't know how else to say it: Release the documents."

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley echoed the sentiment without hesitation:

"I think when we pass a law that says that all documents need to be put out, it seems to me all documents need to be put out."

Sen. Susan Collins of Maine noted that withholding files mentioning a sitting president "would seem to be contrary to the intent of the law," while acknowledging she didn't know whether legitimate reasons existed for redactions. Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina called it "concerning" if true, though he added he hadn't yet confirmed the reporting himself. Sen. Joni Ernst said she had believed all files were already released and called it "definitely something I'd want to look into." The Hill reported.

None of these senators hedged on the principle. Congress passed a transparency law. The expectation is compliance.

What the Justice Department is saying

The DOJ initially told The New York Times that "the only materials that have been withheld were either privileged or duplicates," later adding that some documents may have been held back because of "an ongoing federal investigation."

On Wednesday night, the Department issued a more detailed statement acknowledging that individuals and news outlets had flagged files related to documents produced to Ghislaine Maxwell in discovery during her criminal case:

"As with all documents that have been flagged by the public, the Department is currently reviewing files within that category of the production. Should any document be found to have been improperly tagged in the review process and is responsive to the Act, the Department will of course publish it, consistent with the law."

That statement strikes the right note. If files were improperly tagged, fix them. If a legitimate privilege or investigative need applies, explain it. Transparency laws don't come with a footnote that reads "unless politically inconvenient."

The White House has repeatedly said Trump did nothing wrong about Epstein, and the DOJ has previously described the allegations in question as having no credibility. If that's the case, releasing the files only reinforces that position. Withholding them does the opposite.

Schumer smells blood

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer held a press conference Thursday in the Capitol, and his rhetoric made clear that Democrats see this as a political weapon, not a transparency cause:

"Let me be blunt, there is a massive coverup going on in the Justice Department to protect Donald Trump and people associated with Jeffrey Epstein."

He vowed an "all-out oversight effort," promised to "pull on every thread" and "chase every lead," and said Democrats plan to travel to the DOJ in the coming days to review unredacted files. Democrats also asked the DOJ and FBI to preserve all records related to decisions on redacting and withholding Epstein documents.

This is Schumer doing what Schumer does: wrapping partisan ambition in the language of justice. The man who spent four years enabling the weaponization of the DOJ against Trump's political allies now demands the same institution answer to him. His concern for transparency is recent and selective.

Rep. Robert Garcia of California, ranking member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, claimed Tuesday that the DOJ "appears to have illegally withheld FBI interviews" with the woman who made the allegations.

The Democrats' framing here deserves scrutiny. They aren't simply asking for documents. They're pre-loading the conclusion: that any gap in the record is proof of a conspiracy. That framing is designed to ensure that no matter what the files contain, the narrative of a "cover-up" persists.

The transparency trap Democrats are setting

Here's the political reality. If files are released and contain nothing damaging, Democrats will claim the real documents were destroyed. If files are withheld for legitimate legal reasons, Democrats will call it a cover-up. And if anything ambiguous emerges, it will be treated as a conviction in the court of cable news.

This is why Republicans are smart to get ahead of it. By demanding full release themselves, GOP senators eliminate the Democratic monopoly on the transparency argument. Kennedy, Grassley, Collins, Tillis, and Ernst aren't breaking with the administration. They're protecting it by making the obvious point: sunlight is the best disinfectant, and the law already requires it.

The real principle at stake

Congress passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act with broad bipartisan support. The premise was straightforward: the American public deserves to know who was involved in Epstein's operation and why certain people were never prosecuted. Kennedy framed it precisely:

"This is not going away until there's full disclosure and the American people want to know, and they're entitled to know, who if anyone, did Epstein traffic these women to … and why they weren't prosecuted."

That question doesn't become less important when it touches powerful people. It becomes more important. The entire justification for the law was that the Epstein case represented a grotesque failure of the justice system, one in which wealth and connections shielded predators for decades. If the DOJ now carves out exceptions to the transparency mandate, it validates every suspicion the law was meant to address.

Grassley hasn't decided whether to hold a hearing on DOJ compliance. He should. Not to grandstand, but to establish a clear record of what was withheld, why, and on whose authority. Independent journalist Roger Sollenberger first reported on the missing pages. The press did its job. Now Congress needs to do its job.

The DOJ says it's reviewing the flagged files. Good. The review should be swift, the results public, and the explanations specific. Vague invocations of privilege and ongoing investigations won't satisfy a law written to override exactly those kinds of institutional reflexes.

The American people passed this test once before: they demanded the files. They'll demand them again. The only question is whether the Justice Department treats a transparency law as binding or optional.

Former first lady Michelle Obama used her podcast this week to argue that American society sends women contradictory messages about motherhood, telling them not to have abortions while failing to create the support systems mothers need. The remarks came during an episode of "IMO with Michelle Obama & Craig Robinson," where Obama fielded a question from a first-time mother struggling with the transition back to work.

The listener, identified as Abigail, is a high school music teacher who took a year off to care for her child and was seeking advice about reentering the workforce. Obama, speaking alongside actress Halle Bailey, used the question as a springboard into broader commentary on maternity leave, hormonal recovery, and what she characterized as a culture that doesn't "fully respect and value childbirth."

The Argument, Such As It Is

Obama's central claim is that the country's posture toward motherhood is incoherent. She framed the tension this way:

"We don't live in a society that fully respects and values childbirth. Like, we want people to have them – 'don't have an abortion!'"

She went on to argue that maternity leave policies are inadequate, calling them "ridiculous" and noting that most offer only three to four months. In her telling, that timeline doesn't give a woman's body time to heal, let alone allow hormones to stabilize while breastfeeding. Fox News reported.

"Your hormones are telling you to do one thing. And the societal structure is telling you to do something else."

Obama then pivoted to advice for the listener, encouraging her to accept less than full commitment in certain areas of life. She said she personally likes giving 100% to everything, but that mothers should forgive themselves for falling short of that standard.

"Sometimes 40% is OK. Sometimes 30% is OK, sometimes 70% is OK, right? Because we talked about this earlier, the children are way more resilient than we give them credit for."

The Framing Reveals the Problem

Something is telling about the way Obama structured her complaint. She didn't say, "We should do more for mothers." She said, essentially, "You don't get to oppose abortion unless you also build the system I want." That's not an argument for supporting mothers. It's an argument for keeping abortion as the default solution when support systems are lacking.

This is a familiar move from the left. Package a policy demand inside a moral accusation, and suddenly, anyone who opposes abortion but doesn't support a specific government program is a hypocrite. The framing is designed to make the pro-life position contingent on endorsing a progressive welfare agenda. Accept the premise, and you've conceded that the right to life is negotiable based on what the state provides.

But conservatives have never argued that life's value depends on federal maternity leave mandates. The pro-life position is that a child in the womb is a human being. That's a moral claim, not a policy proposal with prerequisites. You don't need to build a perfect society before you can say killing the unborn is wrong.

Who Actually Supports Mothers?

The deeper irony is that the institutions most invested in supporting mothers, practically and directly, tend to be the ones the left either ignores or actively disdains. Churches, crisis pregnancy centers, faith-based charities, and local community organizations have been doing the unglamorous work of helping new mothers for decades. They provide diapers, formula, housing assistance, counseling, and childcare. They do it without a podcast.

When Obama says society doesn't create "an environment for all women to be able to heal, be focused, and then make the decisions at the right time about when they're ready to move on," she's talking about government. That's the only institution the left recognizes as legitimate when it comes to collective support. The family, the church, the neighborhood: these don't register.

And that blindspot is the actual mixed message. The progressive vision tells women that independence means freedom from all obligation, that children are resilient enough to handle a distracted parent, and that the solution to the difficulty of motherhood is more government intervention. It never tells women that motherhood is inherently valuable on its own terms, not as an obstacle to be managed, but as a vocation worth honoring.

The Percentages Game

Obama's advice to the listener was, on its surface, compassionate. Permitting yourself to operate at 40% or 30% in certain areas sounds forgiving. But listen to what it actually communicates: motherhood is one of several competing priorities, and the goal is to optimize your allocation across all of them.

This is the managerial language of modern feminism applied to the most intimate relationship a person can have. Your child isn't a deliverable. Motherhood isn't a vertical you're underperforming in. The reason new mothers feel torn isn't that society failed to give them enough leave. It's that something deep and true is telling them their baby needs them, and a culture that treats that instinct as a problem to be solved rather than a signal to be honored is the one sending mixed messages.

Obama acknowledged this instinct without realizing it. She noted that hormones tell a mother to feed and care for her child while "the societal structure is telling you to do something else." She's right. But the answer isn't to redesign the societal structure so mothers can more comfortably ignore the instinct. The answer is to ask why the structure demands that in the first place.

What This Is Really About

This wasn't a policy speech. It was a podcast segment. And Michelle Obama is free to say whatever she wants on her own show. But the framing matters because it captures a broader progressive argument that has become the default in media and elite culture: that pro-life conviction without progressive policy support is hypocrisy.

It isn't. It's a difference in philosophy about where support comes from and what human life is worth. Conservatives believe children deserve to be born. They also believe families, communities, and yes, sometimes government, should support mothers. But one belief doesn't require the other as a precondition. You don't earn the right to defend life by first passing a maternity leave bill.

Obama told her listeners that children won't stop loving their mothers for leaving the house to pursue a passion. That's probably true. But children also can't advocate for themselves in the womb. Someone has to speak for them without conditions attached.

Robert Scrivner stood before cameras this week and did something no child should ever have to do: publicly accuse his own father of abuse, then explain how the state of California helped that father walk free.

Speaking for the first time at a press conference held by State Senator Shannon Grove, Robert branded California's mental health diversion law a "flawed system." His father, former Kern County Supervisor Zack Scrivner, was charged last February with child abuse and possession of assault weapons. He avoided harsher charges of child sexual assault because he was under the influence of drugs at the time and instead entered a mental health diversion program.

Robert Scrivner did not mince words:

"My own father, who is an elected official in Kern County, assaulted my siblings and myself and was granted mental health diversion."

That single sentence carries more indictment of California's criminal justice priorities than a thousand policy papers ever could.

The law that made it possible

Under California law, mental health diversion allows eligible defendants with diagnosed mental health disorders to receive treatment instead of jail time, the New York Post reported. The program dates back to 2018, and critics have warned for years that it functions as a get-out-of-jail-free card for serious offenders.

The Scrivner case illustrates exactly how. Zack Scrivner was accused of climbing into bed with a pre-teen child in April 2024 and touching her inappropriately. Because he was allegedly under the influence of drugs during the incident, the charges were reduced. Instead of facing the full weight of what he allegedly did to children, he entered a diversion program.

Think about the logic at work here. A man is accused of sexually assaulting a child. Because he was high at the time, the system treats the crime as less serious. Being intoxicated during an alleged assault on a minor becomes a mitigating factor rather than an aggravating one. The drugs don't compound the horror; they dilute the accountability.

This is what California built.

A mother's testimony

Christina Scrivner, Zack's estranged wife, also spoke at the press conference in favor of the proposed legislation. Her words captured the particular cruelty of a system that asks victims to come forward, then fails them when they do:

"We tell our children to speak up, speak up for yourselves, tell the truth, be honest. My children were and they did."

And then she described what followed:

"Their answer to their plea, their cry for help, was a stark reality of a broken system under mental health diversion."

Christina called her children "courageous" and "honorable" for sharing the truth of their abuse. She described the trauma as "inexplicable." What she did not call it was surprising. For anyone who has watched California's progressive criminal justice experiments play out over the past decade, none of this is surprising. The pattern is familiar. Lenient frameworks designed with sympathetic hypotheticals in mind collide with grotesque real-world cases, and the system shrugs.

Senate Bill 1373

Grove used the press conference to announce Senate Bill 1373, which would set limits on which crimes qualify for mental health diversion. She was direct about its purpose:

"My bill will ensure that those who commit violent crimes, such as attempted murder of a child, assault resulting in death and domestic violence, are no longer eligible for a mental health diversion program."

The bill represents a straightforward correction. Violent crimes against children, attempted murder, and domestic violence should never have been eligible for diversion in the first place. That they were tells you everything about the philosophy that produced the 2018 law: the offender's therapeutic journey matters more than the victim's safety.

Assemblymember Dr. Jasmeet Bains, who specializes in family and addiction medicine, added her voice to the effort. Her framing was notably blunt for a California Democrat:

"It was designed to help people get treatment and rehabilitation in appropriate cases, not to provide an escape hatch to sexually assault children."

Bains called it the "Epstein loophole," a term that has attached itself to this provision because of how neatly it captures the dynamic: powerful people exploiting therapeutic language to escape consequences for predatory behavior.

The deeper rot

California has spent the better part of a decade reimagining criminal justice around the idea that incarceration is the problem rather than the response to a problem. Proposition 47 downgraded theft. Proposition 57 eased early release for "nonviolent" offenders through classifications that strained the meaning of the word. Zero-bail policies turned arrest into a revolving door. Mental health diversion was supposed to be the humane, evidence-based alternative to a system the left insisted was irredeemably punitive.

But humane for whom? Not for Robert Scrivner. Not for his siblings. Not for the pre-teen child Zack Scrivner allegedly climbed into bed with.

Every one of these reforms shares the same structural defect. They center the accused. They treat the system's response to crime as the injustice worth fixing, rather than the crime itself. And when the inevitable horror story emerges, the architects of these policies express shock that anyone would use a loophole as a loophole.

The fact that it took a former county supervisor's own son going public to generate enough pressure for a legislative fix tells you how entrenched these frameworks are. How many cases without a press conference never get corrected at all?

What comes next

Senate Bill 1373 faces the gauntlet of California's legislature, where criminal justice reform has historically meant making enforcement softer, not harder. Whether Grove can build enough coalition support to carve out these exclusions remains an open question. Bains's involvement as a physician and assemblymember lends bipartisan credibility, but Sacramento has killed commonsense public safety measures before.

The Scrivner family did what the system told them to do. The children spoke up. The mother believed them. They told the truth. And California's answer was to send the man accused of abusing them to a treatment program instead of a cell.

Robert Scrivner had to stand at a podium and say his father's name out loud to change that. No child should carry that weight. But in California, the state made sure someone had to.

President Donald Trump announced Saturday that he is withdrawing his endorsement of Republican Colorado Rep. Jeff Hurd after the first-term congressman voted for H.J.Res.72, a resolution aimed at Trump’s emergency tariff authority.

Trump said he is backing Hope Scheppelman, a critical care nurse practitioner and U.S. Navy veteran, to challenge Hurd in Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District.

A tariff vote turns into a litmus test

Hurd was among six House Republicans who crossed the aisle earlier this month to pass H.J.Res.72, which would repeal Trump’s tariffs on Canada by terminating the national emergency used to justify them.

The vote landed at a volatile moment for U.S. trade policy. The day before Trump’s announcement, the Supreme Court struck down the bulk of Trump’s tariffs in a 6-3 ruling, finding his expanded use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act exceeded his authority. Trump, however, announced a new 15 percent global tariff and vowed to pursue trade policy through alternative legal channels, Newsweek noted.

This is not a subtle message from the president. In a party that campaigns on fighting for American workers, American producers, and American leverage, the question is no longer whether trade will be contested. It is those who are willing to take the political heat to contest it.

Trump’s break with Hurd, in his own words

Trump framed the move as a direct response to Hurd’s posture on tariffs and what Trump sees as a failure to support an America First trade agenda. In a Truth Social post, Trump wrote:

"Based on a lack of support, in particular for the unbelievably successful TARIFFS imposed on Foreign Countries and Companies which has made America Richer, Stronger, Bigger, and Better than ever before, I am hereby WITHDRAWING my Endorsement of RINO Congressman Jeff Hurd, of Colorado’s 3rd District, and fully Endorsing Highly Respected Patriot, Hope Scheppelman, to take his place in Congress."

Trump also accused Hurd of misplaced priorities, arguing that the Colorado Republican was “more interested in protecting Foreign Countries that have been ripping us off for decades than he is the United States of America.”

And he made clear this is not how he prefers to operate. Trump described taking back an endorsement as “a difficult decision,” saying he has only done it once before, citing his 2022 withdrawal of support from Alabama Senate candidate Mo Brooks.

Hurd’s constitutional argument, and the institutional wager behind it

Hurd defended his vote in a statement released February 19, grounding his position in Congress’s constitutional authority over trade.

As Hurd put it:

"Today's vote is grounded first and foremost in the Constitution. Article I gives Congress the authority to regulate commerce with foreign nations and to levy tariffs. Those delegations were never intended to serve as a permanent vehicle for sweeping, long-term trade policy."

Hurd also warned about setting a precedent that future presidents could use, even in ways Republicans would oppose.

"If we normalize broad emergency trade powers today, we should expect that a future president — of either party — will rely on the same authority in ways many of us would strongly oppose."

That is the core clash: Trump is signaling that the economic fight with foreign competitors cannot be run with one hand tied behind the nation’s back, while Hurd is signaling that the method matters because precedent lasts longer than any one presidency.

Both arguments are serious. But only one of them is paired with a blunt political reality: the party’s voters are watching who actually stands with the president when the fight gets real.

Colorado’s 3rd District, and the coming primary

Trump first endorsed Hurd for reelection in October of 2025, calling him “an Incredible Representative for the Great People” of Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District. The endorsement was part of a batch of 28 House Republican incumbents Trump backed in quick succession, and it marked the first time Trump had thrown his support behind the Grand Junction attorney, who was elected in 2024 by a comfortable margin in the Republican-leaning seat.

Hurd won that 2024 race after his primary opponent, Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert, moved across the state to run in the heavily Republican 4th Congressional District, where she won election to a third term.

Now, Trump is placing his bet on Scheppelman, described as a former Colorado GOP vice chair, critical care nurse practitioner, and U.S. Navy veteran. Trump said she “knows the America First Policies required.” In the same Truth Social post, Trump listed the agenda he expects her to carry, including “Promote MADE IN THE U.S.A.,” “Champion American Energy DOMINANCE,” “Keep our Border SECURE,” and “Stop Migrant Crime.”

Hurd and Scheppelman are set to face off in the June 30 GOP primary for Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District.

What this signals inside the GOP

Trump’s decision to pull his endorsement marks only the second time he has withdrawn support from a sitting Republican lawmaker, according to the source material. The first, in March 2022, came after Mo Brooks urged voters to move past the 2020 election, which Trump called “going woke.” Brooks later lost his primary to Katie Britt.

Here, Trump is turning a policy dispute into a governing test: if the administration is moving to rebuild leverage on trade, it expects its own party to stop undercutting it, especially when the legal terrain is already contested, and the Supreme Court has narrowed the president’s authority under IEEPA.

Hurd, for his part, pointed to district-level economic concerns, including agricultural producers operating on tight margins and the presence of “the largest steel rail mill in the United States” located within Colorado’s 3rd, arguing that unpredictable trade policy affects “payrolls, investment decisions, and long-term planning.”

That is the tension Republican voters will have to referee: the desire for stable conditions at home versus a national strategy that uses tariffs as leverage abroad.

The race is on

With Trump’s endorsement now behind Scheppelman, the primary race in Colorado’s 3rd District is set to intensify.

In the Trump era, endorsements are not ceremonial. They are enforcement.

A Spanish teacher at Charles W. Baker High School in Baldwinsville, New York, was placed on paid administrative leave in late January after she agreed to help students establish a Club America chapter, the conservative civics organization affiliated with Turning Point USA.

Jennifer Fasulo's offense, as far as anyone can tell, was saying yes to her students.

The Baldwinsville Central School District, a suburb outside of Syracuse, confirmed the leave in a February 10 letter to parents and staff but offered almost nothing in the way of explanation. The district's statement was a masterclass in bureaucratic non-answers:

"The District can confirm that a staff member has been placed on paid administrative leave while a matter is under review."

"We are following established administrative and legal procedures, and we are unable to comment further or share additional details at this time."

No specifics. No allegations. No transparency. Just a teacher removed from her classroom and a district hiding behind boilerplate.

Students Wanted This. The District Punished the Teacher Who Listened.

According to Breitbart, the most important detail in this story is one the district clearly hopes people will overlook: the students initiated this. They wanted to start a Club America chapter. They went looking for a faculty adviser, which is standard procedure for any school club. Fasulo agreed to help.

Republican State Senate candidate Caleb Slater, who met Fasulo through his church community, made the point plainly:

"These are students who asked for this organization to be founded, not parents or teachers."

Slater said the teacher is being used as a sacrificial lamb to dissuade conservatives from starting clubs at their schools. That framing is hard to argue with when the district won't provide any other explanation for why a teacher who helped students exercise their right to organize is now sitting at home on paid leave, pending what a petition supporting her describes as termination.

Club America President Jerry Dygert spoke at a February 9 board meeting and didn't mince words about what was happening:

"Our club exists to promote political understanding through civil discourse, removing the one teacher who best embodies those values puts that mission in serious jeopardy."

Dygert also said Fasulo "is being targeted not because of her performance, but for her political beliefs." The district has done nothing to contradict that conclusion.

The 'Inclusive' District That Can't Tolerate a Conservative Club

Here is where the district's own language becomes its most damning evidence. From that same February 10 letter:

"The District is firmly committed to providing a safe, welcoming, and inclusive environment for every individual."

"Our policies, practices, and values reflect our belief that all members of our school community deserve to be treated with dignity and respect."

Every individual. All members. Dignity and respect.

Unless, apparently, you're a teacher who helps students start a conservative club. Then you get placed on leave, your name dragged into public view, and your career put in jeopardy while administrators mumble about "established procedures" and refuse to say what you actually did wrong.

This is the pattern in American public education. The word "inclusive" has been hollowed out and repurposed. It now means a specific political orientation is welcome. Deviate from it, and the machinery of administrative review activates. No one will tell you the charge. No one will say your politics are the problem. They don't have to. The process is the punishment.

Community Pushback Is Real

To their credit, parents and community members aren't letting this slide. A petition supporting Fasulo had collected more than 2,300 signatures as of Sunday. That's a significant number for a suburban school district, and it signals that the silent majority in places like Baldwinsville is getting less silent.

Community members spoke at the board meeting alongside Dygert. The message was consistent: this looks like ideological targeting, and the district's refusal to explain itself only reinforces that impression.

The Chilling Effect Is the Point

Think about what this teaches every other teacher in the Baldwinsville Central School District. Think about what it teaches every other teacher in New York State. A colleague agreed to sponsor a student club with a conservative orientation, and it cost her the classroom. The specifics of the "review" don't matter for the purposes of the message being sent. The message is: don't.

Don't help those students. Don't associate with that organization. Don't make yourself a target. Keep your head down, run the approved clubs, and nobody gets hurt.

Schools across the country host chapters of every imaginable political and social identity organization. Progressive activism clubs operate freely. But a Club America chapter, focused on civic discourse? That triggers an administrative investigation and a paid leave that sure looks like a prelude to firing.

Conservatives have argued for years that public schools operate as ideological gatekeepers. Districts like Baldwinsville keep proving them right, then issuing statements about "dignity and respect" without a trace of self-awareness.

Jennifer Fasulo said yes to her students. That's all it took.

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