Bookmarks 2026-05-16T20:44:10.708Z

by Owen Kibel

31 min read

Bookmarks for 2026-05-16T20:44:10.708Z

  • Favicon President Trump Gives Remarks at Welcome Banquet in China - YouTube Added: May 16, 2026

    President Trump Gives Remarks at Welcome Banquet in China

    Site: YouTube

    Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

    President Trump Gives Remarks at Welcome Banquet in China - YouTube

  • Favicon Musk Calls Out Left's Empathy for Criminals Over Victims in White House Remarks / X Added: May 16, 2026

    Site: X (formerly Twitter)

    Musk Calls Out Left's Empathy for Criminals Over Victims in White House Remarks / X

  • Favicon All of it goes back to Obama | Sebastian Gorka - YouTube Added: May 16, 2026

    All of it goes back to Obama | Sebastian Gorka

    Site: YouTube

    Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of Pod Force One: https://www.youtube.com/@PodForce1Watch full clips of Pod Force One with Miranda D...

    All of it goes back to Obama  Sebastian Gorka - YouTube

  • Favicon Deep Space Is Full of Anomalous Objects | by Liena Dreams | May, 2026 | Medium Added: May 16, 2026

    Deep Space Is Full of Anomalous Objects

    Site: Medium

    The Gray Zone of New Discoveries in Rubin Alerts

    Deep Space Is Full of Anomalous Objects  by Liena Dreams  May, 2026  Medium

  • Favicon SpaceX heads into IPO with 'deepest moat that exists' as investors vow to 'never bet against Elon' | Fortune Added: May 16, 2026

    SpaceX heads into a record-shattering IPO with the 'deepest moat that exists today' as investors vow to 'never bet against Elon' | Fortune

    Site: Fortune

    SpaceX is seeking to raise up to $75 billion at a valuation of $1.75 trillion.

    SpaceX heads into IPO with 'deepest moat that exists' as investors vow to 'never bet against Elon'  Fortune

  • Favicon Colonial roots may explain why North and Latin America treat wildlife differently Added: May 16, 2026

    Colonial roots may explain why North and Latin America treat wildlife differently

    How people view and treat wild animals can vary dramatically from one part of the world to another. In the first international study of wildlife values, research led by Colorado State University found a distinct difference between Latin American views toward wildlife and those in the United States and Canada—and traced the divergence in views to European colonization centuries ago.

    Colonial roots may explain why North and Latin America treat wildlife differently

  • Favicon SpaceX's Starship V3 megarocket will do something completely new on Flight 12 — take a good look at itself | Space Added: May 16, 2026

    SpaceX's Starship V3 megarocket will do something completely new on Flight 12 — take a good look at itself

    Site: Space

    Flight 12 is scheduled to lift off on Tuesday evening (May 19).

    SpaceX's Starship V3 megarocket will do something completely new on Flight 12 — take a good look at itself  Space

  • Favicon We Should Not Mistake Cosmic-Rays for UFOs! | by Avi Loeb | May, 2026 | Medium Added: May 16, 2026

    We Should Not Mistake Cosmic-Rays for UFOs!

    Site: Medium

    The UFO files released here by the U.S. Department of War on May 8, 2026 included images from the Apollo 12 and 17 missions which show…

    We Should Not Mistake Cosmic-Rays for UFOs!  by Avi Loeb  May, 2026  Medium

  • Favicon Trump’s Beijing Summit Through Chinese Eyes Added: May 16, 2026

    Trump’s Beijing Summit Through Chinese Eyes

    Site: Forbes

    Takeaways and implications of the Trump-Xi meeting. What does this mean for American business interests in China?

    Trump’s Beijing Summit Through Chinese Eyes

  • Favicon Why Smart Folks Are Terrible Listeners | Psychology Today Added: May 16, 2026

    Why Smart Folks Are Terrible Listeners

    Site: Psychology Today

    The mind wanders. It always will. The practice isn't to stop it, it's to notice when it's happened and come back.

    Why Smart Folks Are Terrible Listeners  Psychology Today

  • Favicon Between 6.4 and 7.8 hours of sleep may aid healthy aging, longevity Added: May 16, 2026

    Between 6.4 and 7.8 hours of sleep may aid healthy aging, longevity

    A new study suggests that a certain number of hours of sleep each night — between 6.4 and 7.8 hours to be exact — is associated with healthy aging, lower disease risk, and enhanced longevity

    Between 6.4 and 7.8 hours of sleep may aid healthy aging, longevity

  • Favicon What to know ahead of Sen. Bill Cassidy’s do-or-die Louisiana primary battle Added: May 16, 2026

    Cassidy’s do-or-die Louisiana primary battle: What to know

    Site: The Hill

    Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) is facing the biggest challenge of his political career on Saturday as voters take to the polls for a highly competitive GOP Senate primary. Cassidy is seeking a third ter…

    Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) is facing the biggest challenge of his political career on Saturday as voters take to the polls for a highly competitive GOP Senate primary. Cassidy is seeking a third term in the U.S. Senate but his path to the Republican nomination runs through a pair of tough challengers who are hoping to convince voters that the incumbent is not conservative enough to represent a state that voted overwhelmingly for President Trump in 2024. The Louisiana Republican was one of seven GOP senators who voted to convict Trump in his second impeachment trial following the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol — a decision that made him a prime target for MAGA anger. Cassidy wrote in a newspaper column at the time that he did so because he believed Trump was “guilty” of inciting rioters and “clearly intended to prevent a peaceful transfer of power.” The former practicing physician has also taken heat from the president’s core base over his public clashes with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on vaccine policy, despite him casting the deciding vote to advance Kennedy’s nomination. Cassidy’s breaks with the Republican Party have drawn the ire of Trump, who slammed the senator ahead of Saturday’s election as a “disloyal disaster.” “Bill Cassidy is a sleazebag, a terrible guy, who is BAD FOR LOUISIANA,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. “Now he’s going to get CLOBBERED, hopefully, in today’s BIG election, by two great people!!!” Trump is backing Rep. Julia Letlow (R-La.) in the primary, a coveted endorsement that once belonged to Cassidy when he first ran for reelection in 2020. Letlow’s husband, former Rep.-elect Luke Letlow, died from complications of COVID-19 in December 2020, and she won a special election three months later to finish out his term. A third candidate, Louisiana State Treasurer John Fleming, has also thrown his hat in the ring. Saturday’s contest serves as another test of the president’s influence over the party, coming off the heels of an Indiana state Senate primary that saw multiple Republican incumbents who rejected his redistricting push defeated by Trump-backed challengers.   Meanwhile, Cassidy has the backing of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, headed by Republican Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.). The race in Louisiana is expected to be tight, with recent polling suggesting that none of the candidates has likely secured the 50 percent support needed to avoid a June 27 runoff between the top two vote-getters. An Emerson College Polling/KLFY News 10 survey released late last month found a virtual tie between Letlow and Fleming at 28 percent, with Cassidy trailing closely behind at 27 percent. Another 22 percent of voters were still undecided.  It also happens to be Cassidy’s first reelection contest since the state moved away from a “jungle primary” model in which all candidates for the office run on the same ballot, regardless of party affiliation. The state’s elections are now held under a closed-party primary system in which Republicans and Democrats hold separate nomination contests and only voters registered with that party can participate. Unaffiliated voters, called “no party” voters, can choose to participate in either primary but not both. Cassidy knocked the change in a statement to Nexstar affiliate WGNO last month, alleging the process was “set up to disenfranchise certain voters in our state.” In response, Letlow’s campaign accused the senator of “privately encouraging” Democrats to cross over and “save him” in the GOP primary. That change is not the only source of confusion voters are potentially facing at the polls, as they will no longer see U.S. House races on the ballot. Gov. Jeff Landry (R) suspended the House primary elections in the wake of a Supreme Court ruling that struck down Louisiana’s second majority-Black congressional district as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. The Senate race was allowed to proceed as planned, however, which Cassidy described as “disappointing” late last month. “Louisiana voters have an important choice to make about who will represent them in the U.S. Senate for the next six years,” Cassidy wrote on the social platform X. “The governor’s decision to move ahead with the Senate race during a confusing time is disappointing.” Polls in Louisiana close at 8 p.m. CDT on Saturday.

    What to know ahead of Sen. Bill Cassidy’s do-or-die Louisiana primary battle

  • Favicon Exclusive | Los Angeles mayor race: voters raise crime fears at Spencer Pratt event in Nithya Raman’s district Added: May 16, 2026

    Exclusive | Game-changing revelations from Spencer Pratt’s event in Nithya Raman’s heartland: ‘Our city has been destroyed’

    Site: California Post

    Sherman Oaks rolled out the welcome mat for Spencer Pratt on Saturday as hundreds packed an event in Nithya Raman’s own backyard, saying they are tired of living in fear in their own communit…

    Exclusive  Los Angeles mayor race: voters raise crime fears at Spencer Pratt event in Nithya Raman’s district

  • Favicon I used to email myself everything — these 5 Google Drive features fixed that Added: May 16, 2026

    I used to email myself everything — these 5 Google Drive features fixed that

    Site: Android Police

    Drive features that fixed my messy workflow

    I used to email myself everything — these 5 Google Drive features fixed that

  • Favicon Elon Musk on X: "That cartoon of someone going from slightly left of center to somehow right wing describes the average American" / X Added: May 16, 2026

    Site: X (formerly Twitter)

    Elon Musk on X: "That cartoon of someone going from slightly left of center to somehow right wing describes the average American" / X

  • Favicon X Freeze on X: "Woke is a death cult that executes common sense and devours anyone who tells the truth It spreads insanity like a plague and turns mental illness into the new standard Worst of all, it has turned pure evil into a religion and demands we worship it https://t.co/ipoiP2w0HH" / X Added: May 16, 2026

    Site: X (formerly Twitter)

    X Freeze on X: "Woke is a death cult that executes common sense and devours anyone who tells the truth It spreads insanity like a plague and turns mental illness into the new standard Worst of all, it has turned pure evil into a religion and demands we worship it https://t.co/ipoiP2w0HH" / X

  • Favicon Invention no 13 in A minor by J.S. Bach - YouTube Added: May 16, 2026

    Invention no 13 in A minor by J.S. Bach

    Site: YouTube

    https://www.justinballrecording.com/Performed and Recorded by Justin Ball in the Florida State University Percussion Studio. January 2019.Mallets:Malletech C...

    Invention no 13 in A minor by J.S. Bach - YouTube

  • Favicon Gigue | Cello Suite No. 2 in D minor | by J.S. Bach - YouTube Added: May 16, 2026

    Gigue | Cello Suite No. 2 in D minor | by J.S. Bach

    Site: YouTube

    https://www.justinballrecording.com/Performed and Recorded by Dr. Justin Ball in the Florida State University Percussion Studio, November 2024.@bach #marimba...

    Gigue  Cello Suite No. 2 in D minor  by J.S. Bach - YouTube

  • Favicon Victor Davis Hanson: Trump Goes to China Having the Upper Hand - YouTube Added: May 16, 2026

    Victor Davis Hanson: Trump Goes to China Having the Upper Hand

    Site: YouTube

    Given that we spent over a trillion dollars in Iraq and maybe more in Afghanistan, and Joe Biden left $50 billion in equipment in the latter, the idea that y...

    Victor Davis Hanson: Trump Goes to China Having the Upper Hand - YouTube

  • Favicon Rising China Just Another Episode in the Long History of American Doomsday Myths | VDH - YouTube Added: May 16, 2026

    Victor Davis Hanson: Trump’s Leverage Over Xi Jinping EXPLAINED

    Site: YouTube

    The narrative that America is in terminal decline while China is an unstoppable juggernaut is a completely historically illiterate trope. Donald Trump has st...

    Rising China Just Another Episode in the Long History of American Doomsday Myths  VDH - YouTube

  • Favicon Trump-Xi Summit, Benioff: "Not My First SaaSpocalypse," OpenAI vs Apple, Multi-Sensory AI, El Niño - YouTube Added: May 16, 2026

    Trump-Xi Summit, Benioff: "Not My First SaaSpocalypse," OpenAI vs Apple, Multi-Sensory AI, El Niño

    Site: YouTube

    (0:00) Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff joins the show!(1:14) Trump-Xi summit, doing business in China as a US company, impact on Americans and the midterms(18:46...

    Trump-Xi Summit, Benioff: "Not My First SaaSpocalypse," OpenAI vs Apple, Multi-Sensory AI, El Niño - YouTube

  • Favicon Trump and Xi: Who Really Holds the Power? Body Language Analysis - YouTube Added: May 16, 2026

    Trump and Xi: Who Really Holds the Power? Body Language Analysis

    Site: YouTube

    Join this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOmjR-JVOshlZbUoQYOCxWg/joinDr. G's Body Language Course:https://www.drgexplains.co...

    Trump and Xi: Who Really Holds the Power? Body Language Analysis - YouTube

  • Favicon Cassidy loses Louisiana Senate primary in another major win for Trump - POLITICO Added: May 16, 2026

    Bill Cassidy loses Senate primary in another major win for Trump

    Site: POLITICO

    Louisiana Rep. Julia Letlow, the president’s favored candidate, and MAGA-aligned state Treasurer John Fleming advanced to a runoff for the GOP nomination.

    Cassidy loses Louisiana Senate primary in another major win for Trump - POLITICO

  • Favicon NASA just put a 30-day clock on a $700 million Mars contract, and the deadline tells you everything about how scared the agency is of losing its relay orbiters before astronauts arrive Added: May 16, 2026

    NASA just put a 30-day clock on a $700 million Mars contract, and the deadline tells you everything about how scared the agency is of losing its relay orbiters before astronauts arrive

    Site: Space Daily

    NASA’s Mars relay infrastructure is dying, and the agency just put a 30-day clock on finding a replacement. The Request for Proposal for the Mars Telecommunications Network, posted this week to the federal contracting portal, gives prospective contractors barely a month to respond on a program estimated to be worth roughly $700 million. As reported […]

    NASA just put a 30-day clock on a $700 million Mars contract, and the deadline tells you everything about how scared the agency is of losing its relay orbiters before astronauts arrive

  • Favicon Human brains decreased in size 3,000 years ago - here's why - The Brighter Side of News Added: May 16, 2026

    Human brains decreased in size 3,000 years ago - here's why

    Site: The Brighter Side of News

    Human brains may have shrunk about 3,000 years ago as collective intelligence grew, researchers suggest.

    Human brains decreased in size 3,000 years ago - here's why - The Brighter Side of News

  • Favicon AWS found bugs in 60% of software requirements. Its fix isn't more AI — it's a 50-year-old logic engine. - The New Stack Added: May 16, 2026

    AWS found bugs in 60% of software requirements. Its fix isn't more AI — it's a 50-year-old logic engine.

    Site: The New Stack

    AWS Kiro's new Requirements Analysis feature uses formal logic and SMT solvers to catch contradictions in specs before they reach production.

    AWS found bugs in 60% of software requirements. Its fix isn't more AI — it's a 50-year-old logic engine. - The New Stack

  • To celebrate Endangered Species Day, meet the scaly-foot snail, the most metal animal in the world | Scientific American Added: May 16, 2026

    To celebrate Endangered Species Day, meet the scaly-foot snail, the most metal animal in the world

    Site: Scientific American

    This snail became the first animal living on deep-sea hydrothermal vents to be added to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species—it also turns poisonous sulfur into armor

    To celebrate Endangered Species Day, meet the scaly-foot snail, the most metal animal in the world  Scientific American

  • Favicon HE WAS CAUGHT - YouTube Added: May 17, 2026

    HE WAS CAUGHT

    Site: YouTube

    WATCH THE FULL EPISODE HERE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P29Gb5EBfeESUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/Join - https://timca...

    HE WAS CAUGHT - YouTube

  • Favicon Charles Darwin quote of the day on wisdom: Quote of the day by Charles Darwin: “If I had my life to live over again, I would have made a rule to read some...” — The profound wisdom from the evolution pioneer: Ignoring music, poetry, and beauty can slowly rob the human soul of happiness - The Economic Times Added: May 17, 2026

    Charles Darwin quote of the day on wisdom: Quote of the day by Charles Darwin: “If I had my life to live over again, I would have made a rule to read some...” — The profound wisdom from the evolution pioneer: Ignoring music, poetry, and beauty can slowly rob the human soul of happiness - The Economic Times

    Quote of the day by Charles Darwin: When Charles Darwin wrote, “If I had my life to live over again, I would have made a rule to read some poetry and listen to some music at least once every week,” he was not speaking as a poet, philosopher, or artist. He was speaking as one of the greatest scientific minds in human history. That is precisely why the quote continues to resonate so deeply today.The line, taken from The Autobiography of Charles Darwin, feels almost startling in the modern world. We live in an age driven by speed, algorithms, productivity, artificial intelligence, financial pressure, and endless information. Attention itself has become a currency. Yet Darwin’s regret was not about fame, failure, money, or scientific achievement. His regret was that he slowly lost touch with beauty.That single admission transforms the quote from a simple reflection into something philosophical, emotional, and deeply human.Quote of the day today:“If I had my life to live over again, I would have made a rule to read some poetry and listen to some music at least once every week.” — Charles DarwinQuote of the day by visionary naturalist Charles DarwinThe Quote of the day by Charles Darwin carries a deep message for modern life. Darwin spent decades studying science, evolution, and human existence. Yet near the end of his life, he admitted that constant intellectual work slowly distanced him from poetry, music, and emotional beauty. His words reveal that success and knowledge alone cannot fully satisfy the human mind.In today’s fast-moving digital world, the Charles Darwin quote feels more relevant than ever. Millions live under pressure from nonstop work, social media, deadlines, and information overload. People chase productivity but often lose connection with creativity, reflection, and peace. Darwin’s reflection reminds readers that emotional balance matters as much as professional achievement and intellectual growth.The quote also explains why art, literature, and music remain essential to human life. Poetry sharpens emotional understanding. Music heals mental exhaustion. Creative expression gives meaning beyond money and success. Through this simple but powerful reflection, Charles Darwin leaves behind not just scientific wisdom, but a timeless lesson about protecting the human soul in a demanding world.Meaning of the Quote of the dayThe meaning behind the Quote of the day is deeply emotional and philosophical. Charles Darwin realized that a life focused only on work, science, and intellectual success can slowly disconnect a person from beauty, creativity, and emotional peace. His reflection about poetry and music was not a small regret. It was a warning that human beings need art, feelings, imagination, and inspiration to remain fully alive.The quote also highlights the importance of balance in modern life. Today, millions spend most of their time chasing careers, money, deadlines, and digital distractions. People often ignore simple things that nourish the mind and soul. Darwin’s words remind readers that music, literature, and creative thinking are not luxuries. They are essential parts of emotional health, inner wisdom, and personal growth.At a deeper level, the quote teaches that intelligence alone does not create a meaningful life. A person can achieve success and still feel emotionally empty. Through this honest reflection, Charles Darwin encourages people to protect their humanity, curiosity, and emotional depth before it slowly disappears under pressure, routine, and nonstop ambition.Who was Charles Darwin?Charles Darwin was a British naturalist, biologist, and scientist who changed humanity’s understanding of life on Earth. Born on February 12, 1809, in Shrewsbury, Darwin became one of the most influential thinkers in modern history through his theory of evolution by natural selection. His ideas transformed science, biology, medicine, anthropology, and the study of human origins.Darwin gained worldwide recognition after publishing On the Origin of Species in 1859. In the book, he explained that species evolve over time through natural selection, where organisms better adapted to their environment survive and reproduce. The theory challenged long-held beliefs about creation and became one of the foundations of modern biological science.Much of Darwin’s research came from his five-year voyage aboard the HMS Beagle, where he studied plants, animals, fossils, and geology across South America and nearby islands. His observations in the Galápagos Islands played a major role in shaping his evolutionary ideas. Beyond science, Darwin was also known for his curiosity, humility, and deep reflections on human life, nature, creativity, and emotional balance, which continue to inspire readers around the world today.Although he briefly studied medicine and theology, Darwin’s true passion remained scientific observation and natural history. His life changed forever when he joined the historic voyage of the HMS Beagle in 1831. During the five-year journey, Darwin explored South America, fossils, wildlife, and the Galápagos Islands, where his observations later shaped the theory of evolution. He spent decades carefully researching and writing before publishing On the Origin of Species, one of the most influential scientific books ever written.Darwin’s work transformed modern biology and permanently changed how humans understand life and evolution. His theory of natural selection explained how species gradually evolve and adapt over time. The success of his ideas made him one of the most respected scientists in history, even though his theories sparked global debate and criticism during his lifetime.Darwin also wrote major works including The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex and The Autobiography of Charles Darwin. While there was no Nobel Prize during his lifetime, Darwin received prestigious scientific honors from major European institutions and became an international intellectual icon. Today, his legacy continues to influence science, medicine, psychology, philosophy, and modern research across the world.Other famous quotes by Charles Darwin “A man who dares to waste one hour of time has not discovered the value of life.” “It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.” “The love for all living creatures is the most noble attribute of man.” “Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge.” “In the long history of humankind, those who learned to collaborate and improvise most effectively have prevailed.” “A scientific man ought to have no wishes, no affections — a mere heart of stone.” “We stopped looking for monsters under our bed when we realized they were inside us.” “The highest possible stage in moral culture is when we recognize that we ought to control our thoughts.” “Blushing is the most peculiar and most human of all expressions.” “I am turned into a sort of machine for observing facts and grinding out conclusions.” “Animals, whom we have made our slaves, we do not like to consider our equal.” “The mystery of the beginning of all things is insoluble by us.”

    Charles Darwin quote of the day on wisdom: Quote of the day by Charles Darwin: “If I had my life to live over again, I would have made a rule to read some...” — The profound wisdom from the evolution pioneer: Ignoring music, poetry, and beauty can slowly rob the human soul of happiness - The Economic Times

  • Favicon NYC Mayor Mamdani seeks meeting with Ken Griffin after tax video backlash | Fox Business Added: May 17, 2026

    NYC Mayor Mamdani seeks meeting with Ken Griffin after tax video backlash | Fox Business

    New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said Friday he has attempted to meet with billionaire Citadel CEO Ken Griffin after the hedge fund executive blasted the mayor’s viral "Tax the Rich" video targeting him. Mamdani said a member of his team reached out to Griffin but had not received a response. "We reached out to set up a meeting," Mamdani said Friday. "We're still waiting to hear." "That continues to be an open invitation, and it’s part of invitations that I’ve made to a number of business leaders across the city," he continued. "I’m there to listen and there to have a conversation that goes beyond places of agreement, but perhaps places of disagreement to hear honest reflection and critique, without putting any precondition on the nature of that conversation." BILLIONAIRE SAYS MAMDANI’S 'TAX THE RICH' VIDEO OUTSIDE HIS NYC APARTMENT WAS ‘CREEPY’ AND ‘FRIGHTENING’ The outreach comes after Mamdani posted a video on April 15 highlighting Griffin’s property while promoting a new pied-à-terre tax proposal. In the video, the mayor — who has pledged to raise taxes on wealthy New Yorkers — stood outside Griffin’s 24,000-square-foot penthouse, which Griffin purchased in 2019 for $238 million, the most expensive residential sale in U.S. history. Griffin later criticized the video, calling it a "creepy and weird" political advertisement. A spokesperson for Griffin did not say whether he plans to meet with the mayor. MAMDANI TAX BREAK PROPOSAL SPARKS FEARS AS BUSINESS LEADERS WARN OF ‘FRAGILE’ NYC ECONOMY "Ken cares deeply about New York City and welcomes thoughtful, serious conversations about the policies that can grow the city’s economy and create more opportunity for all New Yorkers," the spokesperson said in a statement to FOX Business. "Reckless political theater serves no purpose and undermines the future of one of the world’s most important cities." In the April video promoting higher taxes on wealthy New Yorkers and a pied-à-terre tax on second homes, Mamdani singled out Griffin’s penthouse as an example of what he called a "fundamentally unfair system." "This is an annual fee on luxury properties worth more than $5 million whose owners do not live full-time in the city—like this penthouse, which hedge fund CEO Ken Griffin bought for $238 million," Mamdani said in the video. Speaking at the Milken Conference in Los Angeles earlier this month, Griffin said Mamdani’s "frightening" video reaffirmed his decision to "double down" on business in Miami. MAMDANI THANKS SAME BILLIONAIRE HE TARGETED IN TAX VIDEO FOR NYPD MONEY "Mamdani has made it very clear—New York does not welcome success," Griffin said during the panel. Citadel is currently building a new headquarters in Miami, and Griffin reiterated plans to expand the company’s presence in Florida, citing the state’s pro-business policies. The mayor’s office previously told Fox News Digital that Mamdani "wants all New Yorkers to succeed," including Griffin, whom it described as a major employer in the city. GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE "That does not negate the fact, however, that our tax system is fundamentally broken," the statement continued. "It rewards extreme wealth while working people are pushed to the brink." "The status quo is unsustainable and unjust," it added. "If we want this city to become a place that working people can afford, we need meaningful tax reform that includes the wealthiest New Yorkers contributing their fair share." FOX Business' Nikolas Lanum and Alexandra Koch contributed to this report.

    NYC Mayor Mamdani seeks meeting with Ken Griffin after tax video backlash  Fox Business

  • Favicon Some people really are mosquito magnets, and scientists are starting to understand why- Earth.com Added: May 17, 2026

    Some people really are mosquito magnets, and scientists are starting to understand why

    Site: Earth.com

    Science reveals why some people attract far more mosquitoes, from skin chemistry to compounds linked to disease.

    Some people really are mosquito magnets, and scientists are starting to understand why- Earth.com

  • Favicon You’ve probably seen henna more commonly in South Asian contexts, but did you know it’s worn right - YouTube Added: May 17, 2026

    You’ve probably seen henna more commonly in South Asian contexts, but did you know it’s worn right

    Site: YouTube

    You’ve probably seen henna more commonly in South Asian contexts, but did you know it’s worn right across the African continent too? 👀✨We HAD to bring taeya...

    You’ve probably seen henna more commonly in South Asian contexts, but did you know it’s worn right - YouTube

  • Favicon An AI hate wave is here Added: May 17, 2026

    AI backlash becomes a real business risk

    Site: Axios

    Resistance to AI is growing as it becomes more prevalent.

    An AI hate wave is here

  • Favicon How Elon grew to love Anthropic Added: May 17, 2026

    How Elon grew to love Anthropic

    Site: Axios

    Business imperatives turned Musk's AI rival into a partner.

    How Elon grew to love Anthropic

  • Favicon Jonathan Turley on X: "Gov. Abigail Spanberger may have just said the quiet part out loud in acknowledging that the new state "assault weapon" ban includes common hunting rifles. Spanberger may find that her signing statement will feature greatly in any appeal. https://t.co/x1SqQVGJlC" / X Added: May 17, 2026

    Site: X (formerly Twitter)

    Jonathan Turley on X: "Gov. Abigail Spanberger may have just said the quiet part out loud in acknowledging that the new state "assault weapon" ban includes common hunting rifles. Spanberger may find that her signing statement will feature greatly in any appeal. https://t.co/x1SqQVGJlC" / X

  • Favicon Locked and Loaded: Spanberger Inadvertently Makes Case for Striking Down New Gun Ban – JONATHAN TURLEY Added: May 17, 2026

    Locked and Loaded: Spanberger Inadvertently Makes Case for Striking Down New Gun Ban

    Site: JONATHAN TURLEY

    Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger is reportedly “fuming” this week after the state failed to get a single justice on the Supreme Court to support her after she violated the state constit…

    Locked and Loaded: Spanberger Inadvertently Makes Case for Striking Down New Gun Ban – JONATHAN TURLEY

  • Favicon Madison Mills on X: "The AI power scramble is playing out in court all while Elon is cutting deals with OpenAI's biggest rival. What this tells us about the status of the AI race in my latest video explainer for @axios: https://t.co/ZWIxc6vkBZ" / X Added: May 17, 2026

    Site: X (formerly Twitter)

    Madison Mills on X: "The AI power scramble is playing out in court all while Elon is cutting deals with OpenAI's biggest rival. What this tells us about the status of the AI race in my latest video explainer for @axios: https://t.co/ZWIxc6vkBZ" / X

  • Favicon The AI War: Musk vs Altman vs Anthropic - YouTube Added: May 17, 2026

    Elon Musk threw a BIG curveball into the AI race

    Site: YouTube

    Elon Musk is fighting OpenAI in court. But outside the courtroom, he’s making a surprising deal with one of OpenAI’s biggest rivals.Axios Senior AI Reporter ...

    The AI War: Musk vs Altman vs Anthropic - YouTube

  • Favicon MTG GOES TO WAR Against Benny Johnson, Calls Him “LYING SCUMBAG” Over Thomas Massie - YouTube Added: May 17, 2026

    MTG GOES TO WAR Against Benny Johnson, Calls Him “LYING SCUMBAG” Over Thomas Massie

    Site: YouTube

    WATCH THE FULL EPISODE HERE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVY_HH9h6csSUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/Join - https://timca...

    MTG GOES TO WAR Against Benny Johnson, Calls Him “LYING SCUMBAG” Over Thomas Massie - YouTube

  • Favicon US-Iran war: Three priorities for de-escalation Added: May 17, 2026

    How Trump could stop losing in Iran

    Site: The Hill

    The U.S. is losing the war with Iran, and must now focus on building an international coalition to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, reviving arms control, and expanding the Abraham Accords in order to …

    The Trump-Xi summit concluded with vague promises for China to help. But as of now, the U.S. is losing the war with Iran. Thirty-seven days of intense airstrikes have only made the Iranian regime more hardline and the Strait of Hormuz — open and stable before the campaign began — is now under its control. The question facing the U.S. today is no longer how to win this war, but how to stop the bleeding and regain some ground — just possibly enlisting China and others in fashioning a few wins. There are three concrete priorities. The first is to build a truly international coalition to reopen the Strait. Until the world's most important energy chokepoint is reliably open, the global economy will continue to absorb the war's worst shocks, and Iran will continue to dictate the terms of any negotiation. Europe and Asia depend on Gulf energy far more than America, now a major net exporter. Gulf gas is the principal alternative to renewed European dependence on Russia. Our European partners have minesweeping, escort and surveillance capability which they should have every reason to deploy alongside ours. China, as Iran's largest oil customer and most consequential outside backer, has its own interest in keeping the Strait open. This war should not end the way it began, with the U.S. acting on its own. The second is to revive arms control. Stability in the region depends on preventing the nuclear arms race which this war has made considerably more likely, and that requires a sustained diplomatic effort. The president is right that Iran cannot be allowed to acquire a nuclear weapon. He is also unlikely to get a comprehensive agreement this year. Iran is no closer to a weapon today than after last June's strikes, but it is also nowhere near surrendering its enriched uranium or accepting real limits on enrichment. The right near-term posture is to keep sanctions, monitoring and credible deterrence firmly in place. The medium-term work is to rebuild a real negotiating table with the U.S., NATO, Russia, China, and Iran, supported by experts of genuine standing. Any agreement that emerges will have to address the same questions as the Obama administration's nuclear deal with Iran: enrichment limits, intrusive monitoring and the eventual disposition of Iran's highly enriched uranium stockpile. Hopefully, it will also address missiles, drones and support for proxies. Because lasting regional stability can only come from greater integration, the third priority is to expand the Abraham Accords. The premise of the accords is the straightforward bargain that Arab states recognize Israel and open full diplomatic and economic relations with it, and Israel, in turn, supports a credible path toward a Palestinian state and two peoples living side by side in security. The 2020 agreements, a genuine achievement of this president's first term, have proven resilient through more than two years of regional turbulence. The war with Iran has made the case for them only stronger. The United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, struck by Iranian fire during the campaign, have taken the toughest line on Tehran, and Saudi Arabia is positioning to lead a broader regional bloc. The opportunity now is to translate that alignment into deeper security cooperation, alternative trade corridors, including underwater pipelines, and, over time, the widening of the Accords to include Saudi Arabia and the broader Arab world. None of that expansion will hold, however, without meaningful progress on the Palestinian track; that is the other half of the bargain the Accords were built on. Done patiently, this is the only architecture that can bring lasting peace. These steps are not ones this administration is likely to take on its own. That makes congressional engagement essential. I have a name for what Congress is sadly doing — modeled after TACO, Trump Always Chickens Out: CACO, Congress Always Chickens Out. This is not a moment for chickening out. Members of both parties should use their authority over authorizing war, appropriations, oversight, and confirmations to demand a real plan from the White House and to push it toward a more constructive international posture. Restoring the soft-power and diplomatic instruments this administration has dismantled, from USAID to embassy budgets to international broadcasting, is part of that work; those are the tools through which these priorities will actually be executed.  The decisions that brought us to this moment cannot be undone, and the damage will not be repaired quickly. But the U.S. can still leave the world a better place than this war has so far left it. The question, as it has been so often before, is whether we will rise to the moment. Jane Harman is a former nine-term congresswoman from California and former ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, who most recently served as chair of the Commission on the National Defense Strategy.

    US-Iran war: Three priorities for de-escalation

  • Favicon Chaim Katz 📟 on X: "@MattZeitlin You omit the best part! At the same time, a third Jewish lady, Jane Harman, was a leading contender for the Democratic nomination for Governor of California (America's largest state). I still have day dreams about this multiple times a day (like all normal people)." / X Added: May 17, 2026

    Site: X (formerly Twitter)

    Chaim Katz 📟 on X: "@MattZeitlin You omit the best part! At the same time, a third Jewish lady, Jane Harman, was a leading contender for the Democratic nomination for Governor of California (America's largest state). I still have day dreams about this multiple times a day (like all normal people)." / X

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