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Jimmy Failla & The 'Fox News Saturday Night' Panel React To The Left's Outlandish Attacks On Elon Musk

Jimmy Failla & The 'Fox News Saturday Night' Panel React To The Left's Outlandish Attacks On Elon Musk

Fox News10-02-2025
Comedian Aaron Berg and News Editor for Townhall.com Katie Pavlich join Fox News Saturday Night With Jimmy Failla to share their thoughts on some of the best meltdowns from Democratic lawmakers over the actions taken by the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency.
And if you missed any of Friday's show, check out the podcast!
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Mayor Adams slams Mamdani for wanting to decriminalize prostitution: ‘Don't know where in his Quran it states that it's OK'
Mayor Adams slams Mamdani for wanting to decriminalize prostitution: ‘Don't know where in his Quran it states that it's OK'

New York Post

time42 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Mayor Adams slams Mamdani for wanting to decriminalize prostitution: ‘Don't know where in his Quran it states that it's OK'

Mayor Eric Adams rebuked mayoral candidate Zohran's Mamdani in religious terms over the socialist candidate's longstanding push to decriminalize prostitution – saying the candidate was 'lost' on the grim reality of sex work. 'I can't be more clear. I'm a man of God, just as Mamdani says he's a Muslim. I don't know where in his Quran it states that it's ok for a woman to be on the streets selling their body,' Hizzoner told reporters Sunday. 3 Mayor Eric Adams speaks with reporters on Sunday. NY Post/Steven Vago Advertisement 'I don't know what Quran he is reading. It's not in my Bible.' He also said Mamdani's position ignores the victims of sex trafficking. 'You're not doing any service to a woman who is on the street who is forced to sell her body for whatever reason,' Adams told reporters Sunday. Advertisement 3 A woman suspected of being a prostitute on Roosevelt Avenue in Queens. NY Post 3 Frontrunner candidate Zohran Mamdani has been quiet on the issue of prostitution during his mayoral campaign. Michael Nigro 'We are trying to bring down crime and he is talking about legalizing sex work. Number one: As a man who said he is of faith, I don't quite understand what religion supports prostitution. I think he's lost on the fact that sex trafficking is very much part of prostitution,' he added. Adams' comments came after The Post cast the spotlight on Mamdani's past push to change the statue that makes it a crime for people to sell their bodies for sex in New York. It's an issue he has taken up multiple times since he ran for state assembly in 2020 and has continually supported since. Advertisement But the 33-year-old Democratic candidate has been largely mum on the issue since he started his run for mayor, leaving critics worried that he might make a sudden push for legal prostitution if he makes it into office in the fall. And Adams – who is running for reelection as an independent — thinks it would be reprehensible to green-light the practice. 'If that is his belief, it is a danger for our city. Our city needs to be a safe city. It should not be a city where women are standing on corners, or boys are standing on corners, or young men standing on corners selling their bodies,' he said.

Even liberal Maureen Dowd of The Times admits DC is crime-ridden
Even liberal Maureen Dowd of The Times admits DC is crime-ridden

New York Post

time42 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Even liberal Maureen Dowd of The Times admits DC is crime-ridden

Proving the old saw that a conservative is a liberal who's been mugged, one of The New York Time's marquee columnists has agreed — grudgingly, stubbornly, kicking and screaming — that President Donald Trump is right: There's too much crime in the nation's capital. And, just possibly, Washington, DC, currently under Democratic control, could benefit from Trump calling in the National Guard and other feds to help restore law and order. 'It's ridiculous to drag F.B.I. agents from their desks to be cops on the beat. And the tableau of National Guard troops — even unarmed — raises the specter of martial law being normalized and weaponized,' Pulitzer Prize-winning DC-based scribe Maureen Dowd wrote over the weekend. Then, hold your horses, La Dowd suddenly hit the brakes, skidded, and did a complete 180. 'It is also true that many D.C. residents are secretly glad to see more uniforms. No matter what statistics say, they don't feel safe.' This about-face was brought on by her sister's close encounter with slovenly car thieves. As Dowd tells it, she was having dinner with her sibling Peggy in the upscale Georgetown neighborhood recently when the metaphorical mugging zapped the liberal right out of her: Peg's beloved Buick vanished from its parking spot by Maureen's house. 'Two polite officers who responded to our call said they could do little, amid a rash of brazen car thefts by teenagers,' Dowd wrote. 'One officer said that, even if they saw the perp driving in her car, they could not chase him, because of laws passed by the D.C. Council.' Dowd initially seemed to dismiss Trump's hard-core stance on juvenile crime as over-the-top payback against two 15-year-olds charged with assaulting and attempting to carjack a former Department of Government Efficiency employee. That is, until Peggy's Buick showed up in a park in nearby Maryland the morning after it was snatched — still running, nearly out of gas, with a $215 tow charge she was required to pay, Dowd griped. There was a half-eaten pizza, grape soda cans, fast-food wrappers, a used condom and a pair of debit cards inside, Dowd reported. But cops said they could do nothing to nail the fiends. Insult to injury, Peggy soon received more than $1,800-worth of speed-camera tickets for driving 70 miles an hour in a 25 mph zone, and had to prove the car was stolen in order to get the summonses tossed. Dowd's co-workers haven't gotten the message. Last week, shortly after the president declared war on DC crime, The Times worked double-time to minimize the threat. One article refuted Trump's statement that the 2023 murder rate was the highest 'probably ever.' False! crowed the paper. The homicide rate of about 40.4 deaths per 100,000 people was the highest in 26 years, not ever. And in 2024, that number dipped to some 26.6 corpses per 100,000 Washingtonians But Dowd is not favorably impressed. 'While the district's homicide rate has fallen,' she writes, 'it's almost as high as New York's at its most dangerous, in 1990.' Dowd, whose father was a cop, confesses she packs pepper spray these days to protect her from troublemakers when walking around town, a habit she adopted years ago when her mother drove her to her college dorm with a butcher knife on the seat between them. Her mom also gave her a Chinese letter opener with written instructions on how to find the jugular of an assailant. Over the weekend, Times reporters visited DC neighborhoods populated primarily with people of color to find out how residents felt about attempts to wipe out crime. Perhaps surprisingly to the Times, not everyone in these communities opposes being safer. Though every attempt was made to find people who said they did not trust the president, others admitted liking to continue breathing. Dowd summed things up, writing, 'But progressives should not fall into Trump's trap and play down crime, once more getting on the wrong side of an inflammatory issue. As with inflation, they should remember that personal experiences can count more than sanguine statistics. 'Even if Trump is being diabolical, Democrats should not pretend everything is fine here. Because it's not.' Finally — all the news that's fit to print.

Geraldo Sucks Up to Trump With Lame Reason to Give Him Nobel Peace Prize
Geraldo Sucks Up to Trump With Lame Reason to Give Him Nobel Peace Prize

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Geraldo Sucks Up to Trump With Lame Reason to Give Him Nobel Peace Prize

Geraldo Rivera thinks that President Donald Trump deserves the Nobel Peace Prize—even if he doesn't actually deliver any peace. The former talk show host and Fox News personality appeared on Newsmax's Finnerty on Wednesday morning to discuss the U.S. effort to end the war in Ukraine. 'If he does end this war, Geraldo, can they deny him the Nobel Peace Prize?' host Rob Finnerty asked. 'Hell no,' Rivera said. 'I think that this and/or Gaza would put him on the fast track, and anyone to deny that, I think, would really be putting their partisan politics in front of their logic.' 'If you have a president of the United States trying so hard... for peace, even if he's not totally successful, just the effort is so, it's so overt, it's so public, it's so aggressive. You know, he deserves recognition at least for that.' Rivera, a longtime Republican who describes himself as socially liberal, has said that Trump was the 'first rich guy [he] ever knew' and that the two were close friends for decades. However, the TV personality told Interview Magazine that their friendship ended after January 6, which Rivera said showed Trump was 'a sore loser who could not be trusted to honor the Constitution.' Rivera endorsed Kamala Harris in 2024, but now he seems to have changed his tune. Both the war in Ukraine and the war in Gaza seem far away from resolution, despite Trump's upcoming summit with Vladimir Putin on Friday to discuss the conflict. On Wednesday, Trump was asked if Putin would face any consequences if he did not agree to stop the war after their meeting—which will take place without the presence of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. 'There will be very severe consequences,' he said, without specifying what those consequences will be. Meanwhile, the Israeli government announced plans to occupy Gaza City last week in order to 'free Gaza from Hamas.' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's announcement sparked an international outcry and an arms embargo from Germany. In July, Netanyahu formally nominated Trump for the Nobel Prize, which has been awarded to three U.S. presidents (most recently to Barack Obama in 2008). Netanyahu's letter to the Norwegian Nobel Committee praised Trump for his role in negotiating the Abraham Accords in 2020 and claimed that Trump was 'forging peace, as we speak, in one country in the region after another.' Trump has made no secret that he wants the award and envies his predecessor for winning it. 'If I were named Obama, I would have had the Nobel Prize given to me in 10 seconds,' he said at the Detroit Economic Club last year. Trump fought ISIS with intense air strikes in Iraq and Syria in his first term and ordered the assassination of a prominent Iranian general. So far in his second term, he has conducted airstrikes on Iran and suggested that the U.S. should occupy the Gaza Strip. 'Let the United States get involved and make it just a freedom zone,' he said in March.

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