
Jim Jordan breaks down the Left's lying ‘template'

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Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Joe Rogan claims Hunter Biden ‘could be president,' insists he's more intelligent than most people think
Podcast host Joe Rogan said on Wednesday that former President Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden, is smarter than people think and could be president. During the latest episode of "The Joe Rogan Experience," with guest comedian Joe DeRosa, Rogan was talking about how convincingly he thought Hunter Biden had spoken about the draw of crack cocaine. "It's the greatest crack advertisement of all time," Rogan said. "No. If crack wasn't terrible for you, this guy makes me want to try crack. I'm not going to. Don't do it. I'm not giving any advice, but I'm saying this guy, like legitimately, this might be the best advertisement for crack of all-time," Rogan said. Flashback: Biden Challenged To Take Pre-debate Drug Test In 2024; His Son Now Makes Ambien Claim "He's a lot smarter than people give him credit for," Rogan added. "He's talking, and one of the things he was talking about was why smoking things are so addictive, why smoking cigarettes are so addictive, and the psychology behind it. He's not dumb." The podcast host admitted that the son of the former president could himself one day be president. Read On The Fox News App "He could be president," Rogan told DeRosa. "No bulls---." Rogan played a clip from Hunter Biden's recent viral interview with Channel 5's Andrew Callaghan, where Hunter Biden addressed many topics, including the science behind cocaine. Rogan Reveals What Persuaded Him To Finally Interview Trump Right Before The Election "The only difference between crack cocaine and cocaine is sodium bicarbonate, and water and heat," Hunter Biden said. "Literally, that's it." "And those things are pretty much free, if you go to a science store," Callaghan interjected. "You can go to your neighborhood convenience store and just get, anyway, I don't want to tell people how to make crack cocaine, but it literally is a mayonnaise jar of cocaine and baking soda," Hunter Biden said. He added that the experience of crack cocaine versus cocaine is "vastly, vastly different" and more article source: Joe Rogan claims Hunter Biden 'could be president,' insists he's more intelligent than most people think


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
CHARLIE KIRK: Republicans must seize Gen Z moment or risk losing an entire generation
Donald Trump did better with American young people last fall than any Republican candidate in decades. He won men under 30, won men of college age, and even won the youth vote in the swing state of Michigan. American young people were widely assumed to be uniformly liberal, and expected to remain so forever and ever. But the reality was anything but. I saw this trend playing out in real time as I toured the country speaking on college campuses to crowds of three, four, and even five thousand strong. Young Americans were not happy with Joe Biden's America or Kamala Harris' vows to continue it, and they were ready to return to the president they associated with a more prosperous pre-COVID time. It was a big win. But it was also impermanent. It could be a one-off. It could easily be explained by the aftermath of COVID or the incredible political charisma of Donald Trump himself. The youth vote of 2024 wasn't so much a win as it was an opportunity: A clear demonstration that conservatives actually can compete to win the votes of American young people, rather than writing them off. The challenge for Republicans now is seizing this Gen Z opportunity. Because Gen Z won't become lifelong conservatives thanks to a good campaign or slick online memes. They'll only become lifelong supporters if we're able to deliver for them on the big issues that matter. Experts expend a lot of effort and ink explaining what Gen Z "wants." But between my campus visits and my work running Turning Point USA, I talk to as many Gen Z'ers as anyone in the country. They want basic economic success and security like the generations before them. They want a home, they want a family, they want to feel like they are building something and that they are a part of something. And right now, on that front, Gen Z has a lot of problems. Economically, things are dire. In 1984, the median American home cost about three and a half times the median income in America. Today, the median house costs almost six times the median income. Rent isn't much better, and has risen more than 50% in real terms since the 1970s. In 1980, tuition at the average public college was about $2,800 in today's dollars. Today it's around $10,000, and, unsurprisingly, that means the average college student leaves school with a debt burden that previously could have bought them a car, provided the down payment on a house, or helped them start a family. Financially, young people aren't just facing more expensive necessities, but also a more predatory economic reality. Millions of Gen Zers are buying everything from concert tickets to groceries to Chipotle burritos through buy now, pay later (BNPL) setups from companies like Klarna and Affirm. Some polls indicate Gen Z prefers BNPL to traditional credit cards. Taking on debt for purchases may make sense when buying a house or a car, but once a person is paying for their groceries with 4 monthly payments at 10% interest, something has gone awry. Of course, America hasn't become a poor nation. In fact, we're as spectacularly wealthy as ever. Yet this wealth doesn't reach young Americans (unless it's by way of inheritance). Instead, over and over, policy decisions have ensured that elderly Americans grow wealthier and wealthier. Never in American history has so much wealth been concentrated in those who are already retired from the labor force. This reality became even more pronounced during COVID and the rampant inflation that followed. Older Americans with equities and assets in their portfolio saw their net worth skyrocket, while younger Americans just saw those assets become even more unaffordable. It wasn't always like this. When the baby boomers of today were growing up, government policy routinely favored young people. Jobs were easier to get, with far fewer credentialing hurdles. Houses were built far faster. Wages were higher instead of being suppressed through sky-high legal and illegal immigration. Today, though, America is a country built for those who are already owners, and those too young to buy are finding themselves stuck becoming borrowers and renters. The median age of first-time home buyers is now pushing 40, about a decade higher than the 1980s when the average age was just 29! This isn't because Gen Z is lazy — a common retort I hear — it's because they are contending with structural disadvantages older Americans didn't experience. If this continues, something will break, and young people will lead the way in breaking it. Zohran Mamdani has become a celebrity for Gen Z with his slick promises of a New York City rent freeze, state-owned grocery stores, and free daycare as stepping stones to eventually seizing the means of production. Mamdani's political surge is not a passing fad or pure TV news fodder. It should be a giant flashing red alarm. There are millions of Americans who feel cut off from any meaningful economic progress or stability. Eventually, if they can't obtain prosperity the old-fashioned way, they will simply try to vote themselves prosperity, and there will be plenty of demagogues promising this can be done easily by simply expropriating those with more than them. Most of Gen Z is ideologically fluid. They're happy to give Republicans a shot, then turn around and elect a Marxist two years later. America will have a reordering of its economy. The only question is what that reordering will look like. There are two paths before us. We will either have stabilizing reforms like those of Theodore Roosevelt a century ago and those espoused by nationalist, populist conservatives, or we will have revolutionary, destructive "reforms" like those that have already ruined once-prosperous countries like Cuba or Venezuela. If we succeed in the next three years, or if we fail, will determine which.


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
Laura: The mainstream press is having an existential crisis
Fox News host Laura Ingraham argues 'Russiagate' illustrates why Americans don't trust the press anymore on 'The Ingraham Angle.'