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Trump can revoke humanitarian protections for 500,000 immigrants, Supreme Court says

Trump can revoke humanitarian protections for 500,000 immigrants, Supreme Court says

Independenta day ago

The Supreme Court has ruled that Donald Trump 's administration can begin taking steps to deport more than 500,000 immigrants who were granted emergency humanitarian protections to legally live and work in the United States.
A brief order from the nation's highest court on Friday allows the administration to revoke temporary legal status granted to roughly 532,000 immigrants during Joe Biden's administration.
The end of legal protections for people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela follows the Supreme Court's separate order ending those same protections for another 300,000 Venezuelans.
Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor dissented to Friday's order.
In her dissent, Justice Jackson warned that the court ignored the 'devastating consequences of allowing the government to precipitously upend the lives and livelihoods of nearly half a million noncitizens while their legal claims are pending.'

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Bill Maher blasts Cassie saying she CHOSE to stay with Diddy and was 'enthusiastic' about freak-offs
Bill Maher blasts Cassie saying she CHOSE to stay with Diddy and was 'enthusiastic' about freak-offs

Daily Mail​

time14 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Bill Maher blasts Cassie saying she CHOSE to stay with Diddy and was 'enthusiastic' about freak-offs

Diddy trial for 'choosing' to stay with the disgraced rap mogul Sean 'Diddy' Combs and was 'enthusiastic' about the infamous freak-offs. Maher slammed the singer for her role in Diddy's ongoing trial, and showed text messages Cassie sent Diddy at the time which proved her 'enthusiastic consent' in the freak-offs. 'We need to keep two thoughts in our head at the same time: One, Diddy is a bad dude - really bad. Like, the worst thing in rap since Hammer pants. A violent, sick f*** - I'm sorry, an alleged violent, sick f***. And we should lock him up and throw away the baby oil,' Maher began. 'And two, things have changed enough that moving forward, the rule should be, if you're being abused, you've got to leave right away.' Maher then referred to Cassie and insinuated that her 'enthusiasm' for the freak-offs and long running relationship with Diddy only bolstered his legal defense. 'If Diddy walks free, it will be because his lawyers can point to an endless stream of texts from Cassie expressing what's often called 'enthusiastic consent' to their sex life,' Maher said. 'If you're 'MeToo-ing' someone, it's not helpful to your case if you text him, 'me too!'' The host presented text messages of Cassie's 'enthusiasm', such as one which read: 'I'm always ready to freak off.' 'It's not victim-shaming to expect women to have the agency to leave toxic relationships. Quite the contrary, to not expect that is infantilizing,' Maher declared. 'I understand why it can be difficult for women to leave an abusive relationship, but this should be society's new grand bargain,' Maher said. 'We take every allegation seriously, but don't tell me anymore about your contemporaneous account that you said to two friends ten years ago.' 'Tell the police right away. Don't wait a decade. Don't journal about it. Don't turn it into a one-woman show. And most importantly, don't keep f***ing him. Your only contemporaneous notes about what he did should be a police report.' Maher's take is that with the MeToo movement, women have fewer reasons not to come forward about abuse and leave an abusive relationship. 'We're not in the 'no one listens to women or takes them seriously' era anymore. Operators are actually standing by to take your calls,' he said. The Real Time host declared that there should be a 'new rule,' that 'if you're being abused, you've got to leave right way,' and applied this rule to Cassie as she testifies against Diddy. 'When women felt, for good reason, that 'OG predators' like Bill Cosby and Harvey Weinstein would never be held accountable, why not at least get something out of it?' he said. 'It was not illogical for an abused women to say, 'Well, if I can't get justice for my pain, can I at least get a receipt? A coupon?'' he continued, insinuating that Cassie was benefiting in her career from their relationship. An emotional and heavily pregnant Ventura broke down on the stand as she testified against Diddy with claims that he raped her, was an out-of-control drug addict, and someone she felt she couldn't leave Maher said that having an 'honest conversation about abuse' must include the realities of 'what people are willing to do for stardom.' 'If you want a No.1 record so bad, you'll take a No.1 in the face, some of that is on you,' he said. 'And if you're doing it for love, well, c'mon, Oprah and Dr. Phil and every podcaster in the world by now have done a million shows about 'abuse is not love' and 'abusers don't change.'' Maher finished his relationship expertise by drawing comparisons from Ike and Tina Turner's relationship, he said: 'R&B singer Ike Turner was a psycho, just like Diddy. But in an era when there was no movement to help her, Tina Turner somehow got away and she did it with 36 cents in her pocket and a mobile card.' His slam on Cassie recieved mixed messages online, with some supporting the host while others finding it out of touch. One comment on X said: 'He's not wrong. There is 0 doubt that Diddy is a pos scumbag & he should've gone to jail for assault & battery. But if Cassie is the star witness on this 'RICO' case, Diddy should be freed today.' 'You can look at this situation from all different directions, maybe she stayed for fame and fortune, maybe she stayed in fear. People will do anything for fame and Fortune, the industry is the devils play ground, in the worst way,' another said. '@billmaher showing his true colors with his acceptance of the psychological warfare and terror of controlling abusive men in the industry and beyond, but especially if you have a lot of money to contribute to the @DNC.' 'Obviously He has no clue how a victim can be mentally like Diddy do it on a grander scale..,' another said. Another wrote: 'Cassie was groomed at a young age; then she was dragged into a culture she was drowning in with no sign of getting out by a complete monster who terrified everyone around him. Let's make @billmaher someone's b*** and see how he likes it, because that's what Cassie was to Diddy.' Maher's brutal analysis comes only days after Cassie welcomed her third child with her husband Alex Fine not long after testifying at Diddy's trial. The Me & U singer welcomed her baby boy on Tuesday at a hospital in New York City, according to TMZ, citing sources with direct knowledge. Insiders say the child arrived slightly ahead of schedule, but Cassie and her newborn are healthy and well. Ventura was around eight months pregnant when she began her horrifying testimony in the trial on May 12. She delivered graphic testimonies alleging that the music mogul physically and psychologically abused her over more than a decade from 2007-2018. She detailed the regular beatings she allegedly experienced, the rapper's use of blackmail and scare tactics to coerce and manipulate, depraved sex acts she claims she was forced to participate in - and the medical toll she suffered as a result. Ventura concluded testifying on May 16, just 11 days before she went into labor. Controversy first publicly grew around Diddy in late 2023, when he quickly settled a sex abuse case Ventura filed against him for a rumored $30million. Multiple properties across the country he owned were raided in March of 2024 and he was arrested six months later in September. In May 2024 Combs' downfall was hastened by the release of a devastating video of him beating Ventura in the corridor of a hotel in Los Angeles in 2016. The video, which was first broadcast by CNN last May, was played in full to the trial before Ventura, a male escort and others gave their testimonies. He has remained incarcerated at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn awaiting his trial after he was refused bail on multiple occasions. He faces life in prison on five federal charges: racketeering conspiracy, two counts of sex trafficking and two counts of transporting individuals for prostitution. Combs has plead not guilty to all the charges. His defense team has said the alleged victims are ex-girlfriends who willingly participated in threesomes. In the latest update, Diddy's lawyers asked the judge on Wednesday for a mistrial after arguing the prosecution made an unacceptable suggestion in front of the jury. The defense said it was 'outrageous' when prosecutors appeared to suggest the mogul had destroyed fingerprints taken from Kid Cudi's house after the January, 2012 bombing of his car. Prosecutors had asked LAFD official Lance Jimenez about the fingerprints, and he said the evidence was destroyed in August 2012. Jimenez said 'somebody within LAPD' authorized the destruction of the evidence. This is when Diddy's team objected. 'They know what they were doing,' the defense said of prosecutors. 'They were suggesting that someone in this courtroom has something to do with improper and suspicious destruction of these fingerprint cards and that's outrageous.' The attorneys added: 'The only proper remedy to cure the outrageous prejudice is a mistrial.' However, the defense's motion for a mistrial was denied.

Funky little Arizona town is hailed the 'new Roswell' after strange UFO sightings
Funky little Arizona town is hailed the 'new Roswell' after strange UFO sightings

Daily Mail​

time21 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Funky little Arizona town is hailed the 'new Roswell' after strange UFO sightings

An Arizona town with fewer than 10,000 residents is being dubbed the new Roswell after becoming one of the top spots in the US for UFO sightings. The desert town of Sedona, which is located approximately 180 miles outside of Phoenix, sits in both Coconino and Yavapai Counties, which had a combined 484 UFO sightings between 2000 and 2023, according to an Axios report. These numbers put the area well above the national average of 34 people per 100,000. Psychic and UFO tour guide John Polk, 56, told that he sees extraterrestrial activity nightly from his home in Sedona, where he's lived for the last eight years. The native Floridian told 'There's tons of activity. It's easy to see it.' He believes Sedona is such a high-traffic area for UFOs due to the vortexes the city is known for. Sedona is also a very spiritual place and is known as the 'door to the world' due to vortexes that are believed to open portals to other dimensions and provide healing energy. Polk said Sedona has quartz along the ley lines - invisible gridlines that often fall into triangles that are believed to carry powerful energy - that help build electromagnetic energy that creates electricity, and ultimately, a pathway for ETs. 'I believe that's what's happening in Sedona,' Polk told 'They're traveling over the gridlines. 'The better the energy, the more you'll see.' The Daytona Beach native also noticed a lot of UFOs seem to appear and then suddenly disappear in thin air and he believes that's due to the mythical ley lines and that aliens are using them to slip between dimensions. He explained it like turning stations on a radio, which is done by change frequency and vibrations. 'I think that's what they can do,' he said. 'Everything is about vibrations and frequency.' Polk regularly leads tour groups of 20 to 50 people and prepares for a tour by meditating to bring the best results. He says that UFOs 'seem to follow' him. 'You'd see stuff whether I was here or not. But when I am there, you see a lot more because I know how to work the energy out there,' he said. For Polk, who moved to the city to live with his aunt who had breast cancer, he's always believed in UFOs and had his first encounter when he was around 15 or 16. While in his bed in Florida, he saw something that looked like the moon but was moving over the ocean. After blacking out, he claims he awoke to find three four-foot creatures standing on his balcony peering into the glass. They eventually came into his room before he blacked out again. 'I totally believed in them my whole life,' Polk said. His mother, who is also a psychic, believed in aliens too and he says she worked adjacently to the FBI for many years. She was privy to confidential information and a lot of what she told him growing up then came true, he claimed. His father, a university president, was always a skeptic, but that hasn't stopped Polk from inviting ETs in with 'love, light and consciousness'. Sedona has been likened to Roswell, New Mexico, which has the most famous potential alien spotting area in the US. An extraterrestrial spacecraft allegedly crashed there in July 1947 and many conspiracy theorists believe aliens were captured by the government and the military attempted to cover up the incident. The area is a hotspot for UFO sightings, with 92 residents per 100,000 spotting one between 2000 and 2023, according to Axios. There have also been claims that Sedona has an 'alien base' hidden just outside the town in a desolate area, The Daily Express reported. 'There's a base there where the crafts are, there's a number of them high in the mountains in remote areas of the planet and they're here now and they're extraordinarily distressed about the state of affairs [of humanity],' lawyer Danny Sheehan, who has worked on UFO whistleblowers cases, told The Express. He claimed 'huge, seven feet tall, extraordinarily skinny, thin, kind of bowed over and reminding people of a praying mantis' people live inside the base. The paranormal was not associated with Sedona until the 1970s when psychic Paige Bryant visited the town and declared certain places were vortexes. 'She was not drawing from anything other than what she said she intuited from the land and she described these as places that had a spiritual or mystical type of energy emanating from specific spots in around Sedona,' McGivney told radio show KJZZ. 'And, you know, coincidentally, she was not like a wilderness backpacker. So all the vortexes are conveniently one mile from the road.' She was not the first person to feel the special power of Sedona, but she was the first to name the experience. Before her the psychic researcher Dick Sutphen brought groups of people to the town for spiritual retreats to help them experience the psychic energy emitting from the place. Dennis Andres and his mother visited the city when he was moving to studying at the Thunderbird School of Global Management, he told Arizona State University. When they came across a rock formation in Bell Rock, he found himself getting out of the car to climb and as he went higher, he felt better. 'We asked people if something was happening in Sedona. And they would always respond it is the vortex,' he told the university. 'Sedona is a place of spiritual energy. We cannot measure it with mechanical devices; we can only measure it with the human body. I can explain why some people feel this energy and others do not. You do not have to believe in it, and you do not have to reject it either.'

Musk's DOGE took control of the U.S. Institute of Peace. It brought roaches and rats to D.C. headquarters, court docs say
Musk's DOGE took control of the U.S. Institute of Peace. It brought roaches and rats to D.C. headquarters, court docs say

The Independent

time28 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Musk's DOGE took control of the U.S. Institute of Peace. It brought roaches and rats to D.C. headquarters, court docs say

The head of the United States Institute of Peace says its Washington, D.C. headquarters near the Lincoln Memorial was left to rot after billionaire Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency took it over in March, resulting in water damage, graffiti – and, worse yet, an infestation of roaches and rats. After DOGE replaced the independent, fully government-funded nonprofit's board with MAGA loyalists and fired the entire staff, Musk's crew left it with a 'level of staffing… woefully insufficient to properly protect and maintain' the $500 million Moshe Safdie-designed concrete-and-glass structure, according to a May 23 affidavit filed in D.C. federal court by USIP President and CEO George Moose. 'Vermin were not a problem prior to March 17, 2025, when USIP was actively using and maintaining the building,' Moose's affidavit states. The filing, which is part of a broader legal action by USIP in an attempt to regain full control of the organization, was first reported on Friday in the weekly Court Watch newsletter. The office, which is congressionally funded but is not part of the U.S. government, was established in 1984 by Ronald Reagan with a stated mission to advance international stability and conflict resolution. Still, shortly after he was sworn in for his second term as president, Donald Trump issued an executive order taking aim at USIP as 'unnecessary.' On Friday, March 14, Moose, a career diplomat who served as U.S. Ambassador to Benin and Senegal in West Africa, was abruptly terminated by the White House. He went back to the office on Monday and was removed from the USIP offices by police and replaced by Kenneth Jackson, a DOGE administrator, a move Moose immediately vowed to fight. Speaking to reporters outside after he was shown the door, Moose dubbed USIP's unilateral annexation 'an illegal takeover by elements of the executive branch of a private nonprofit corporation,' saying it had been 'very clear that there was a desire on the part of the administration to dismantle a lot of what we call foreign assistance.' On May 19, U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell ruled that the DOGE seizure of USIP was unlawful, and ordered Moose and his staff reinstated. In handing down her opinion, Howell said Trump's 'efforts here to take over an organization… represented a gross usurpation of power and a way of conducting government affairs that unnecessarily traumatized the committed leadership and employees of USIP, who deserved better.' The following day, Moose became concerned after hearing from USIP employees that the building's condition had been allowed to deteriorate, his affidavit states. With the help of his attorneys, and following Judge Howell's order, Moose arranged to get back into USIP headquarters on May 21. 'When my team and I arrived, the only persons in the building were two security guards and a small cleaning crew,' he says in the affidavit. 'In my experience, that level of staffing is woefully insufficient to properly protect and maintain the building.' However, Moose told reporters that, at first glance, nothing immediately seemed amiss. 'We just did a quick walk-through – externally, visibly, things look to be in pretty good shape,' he said. 'I didn't see anything, any destruction, if you will, no damage that I can see that is visible.' Yet, the following day, a more thorough inspection turned up myriad problems, according to Moose's affidavit. 'On May 22, members of my staff, including our chief of security and our contract building engineer, spent the day surveying and documenting the condition of the building, to include photographs,' he stated. 'They reported evidence of rats and roaches in the building,' which he said was a first. Moose says in his affidavit that staff reported 'other deficiencies in the maintenance of the building, including the failure to maintain vehicle barriers and the cooling tower, water leaks, damage to the garage door, and missing ceiling tiles in multiple places in the building (which I have been told suggest likely water damage).' 'In addition,' the affidavit contends, 'I learned from my team that sometime in the past several days, before we regained control of the property and assumed control for security, someone had scrawled graffiti on one of the outside spaces.' This occurred, according to the affidavit, because 'the building ha[d] been essentially abandoned for many weeks,' during which time DOGE left USIP HQ with 'only a few security guards on site, with no perimeter patrols.' According to Moose's affidavit, he 'immediately resumed' his duties at USIP, and reached out to staff and board members to begin working there again. It says USIP has once again assumed control of their building, has engaged a private security firm to guard the premises, and has taken over responsibility for the building's maintenance. At the same time, Musk is leaving DOGE as his 130-day tenure as a 'special government employee' comes to an end. Trump and DOGE have appealed Howell's ruling. Moose did not respond on Friday to The Independent 's requests for comment, nor did the attorneys representing him and USIP in court. Messages seeking comment from Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Carilli, DOGE's lawyer in the case, and the White House, also went unanswered.

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