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Trump Orders Second Aircraft Carrier to Middle East as Iran Mass Killings Continue
WASHINGTON D.C. – President Donald Trump has instructed the Pentagon to get a second aircraft carrier strike group ready for the Middle East. The order ramps up pressure on Iran’s leadership as growing reports describe a harsh crackdown on nationwide protests, with claims that tens of thousands have been killed in recent weeks.
The decision comes as independent estimates put the death toll from Iran’s security response at more than 30,000 in a single week. Some sources and activists describe the violence as genocide against the Iranian people. The carrier move signals a tougher U.S. posture toward Tehran, mixing military deterrence with ongoing diplomacy tied to Iran’s nuclear program and its actions across the region.
Trump confirmed the shift in recent interviews. “We have an armada that is heading there, and another one might be going,” he told Axios earlier this week. He was referring to the USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group, which is already operating in the Arabian Sea under U.S. Central Command.
A second carrier group, reportedly one that could include ships such as the USS George H.W. Bush or USS George Washington, is being prepared for fast deployment, according to The Wall Street Journal and other reports.
Pentagon officials have directed teams to ready the added strike group. That force typically includes guided-missile destroyers, cruisers, and carrier-based fighter aircraft, all designed to provide sustained airpower and deterrence. Analysts say two carrier groups in the area would expand U.S. options for strikes, surveillance, and defense of partners, while also sending a blunt message to Tehran.
“This isn’t just about posturing,” said Brian Carter, a military expert at the American Enterprise Institute. “A second carrier doubles the tactical airpower available and signals that the United States is prepared for sustained operations if necessary.” The buildup follows Trump’s earlier warning that Iran’s leaders would “pay a big price” for what he described as attacks on protesters.
The USS Abraham Lincoln entered the region in late January, as unrest that began in late December 2025 spread amid reports of economic collapse, currency weakness, and long-running anger over Iran’s authoritarian rule.
Horrific toll: Over 30,000 dead in one week of repression
The protests started in late December, driven by soaring inflation and food shortages. They quickly turned into open calls for regime change. By early January, security forces, including the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), responded with what human rights groups and witnesses describe as extreme violence.
Reports from inside Iran, compiled by groups such as the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) and supported by accounts from medical professionals, describe a sharp rise in deaths.
Time Magazine cited senior officials from Iran’s Ministry of Health who estimated as many as 30,000 people were killed on January 8 and 9 alone, based on hospital records. Other reporting, including Iran International, has cited totals above 36,500 during the worst days of the crackdown, framing it as one of the bloodiest episodes of state repression in recent history.
Witnesses describe security forces firing live rounds into crowds, using weapons said to be banned, and carrying out mass arrests followed by forced disappearances. Internet shutdowns have made outside confirmation difficult. Still, leaked documents, morgue accounts, and videos moved out of the country describe widespread killings, including shootings that hit protesters, bystanders, and children.
Rights advocates, including Amnesty International, have described the events as mass unlawful killings and crimes against humanity. Some doctors and opposition figures have used even stronger language, calling it “genocide under the cover of digital darkness.” Iran’s government has acknowledged roughly 3,000 deaths and blames many on “rioters” or foreign-backed actors, but those official numbers are heavily disputed.
International pressure has grown. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Iran has cited conservative estimates of at least 5,000 killed and warned that unverified reports could be far higher. Families who speak publicly about loved ones say they face threats, which further limits what can be confirmed.
Geopolitical stakes: nuclear talks, regional tensions, and Trump’s pressure
The carrier order comes as indirect U.S.-Iran talks continue through Oman, focused on Tehran’s nuclear program. Trump has kept a mix of threats and diplomacy, saying the U.S. could strike if negotiations fail. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s recent visit to Washington added urgency, with reports pointing to shared intelligence on Iran’s missile capabilities.
Iranian leaders have pushed back, accusing the U.S. of using the unrest as a pretext for intervention. Tehran has also rejected broader negotiations and says it won’t make nuclear concessions while facing military pressure.
The expanded U.S. naval presence also serves a defensive role. It is meant to help protect U.S. bases and regional partners, including Israel and Gulf states, amid concern about retaliation by Iran or allied proxy forces.
As the second carrier group is readied, Iran’s internal crisis is colliding with rising superpower pressure. For Iranians protesting in the streets, the U.S. military buildup may look like a sign that the outside world is paying attention to a government accused of turning its weapons on its own people.
Trump has framed the choice in simple terms: reach an agreement or face consequences. With reports saying more than 30,000 lives may have been lost in days, the stakes are enormous.
No one knows if the U.S. escalation leads to talks, a direct clash, or a collapse in Tehran. What is clear is that the Middle East is entering a dangerous phase.
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Trump’s 2006 Call to Police About Epstein Dispels Mainstream Media Narrative
Freshly unredacted Epstein records include an FBI summary of a former Palm Beach police chief describing a 2006 call from Donald Trump. In that call, Trump reportedly thanked investigators for pursuing Jeffrey Epstein and called Ghislaine Maxwell “evil,” a detail that runs against claims of deep involvement.
WASHINGTON. D.C. – A newly public FBI interview tied to the Jeffrey Epstein case is drawing attention as the Department of Justice continues releasing large batches of Epstein-related records.
The interview, conducted in 2019, includes former Palm Beach Police Chief Michael Reiter’s account of a phone call he says he received in July 2006 from then-businessman Donald Trump.
According to the FBI summary, Trump called shortly after news spread about the early Palm Beach investigation into Epstein. Reiter told agents that Trump thanked local authorities for pursuing the case and said “everyone has known he’s been doing this.” Reiter said Trump described Epstein’s conduct with teenage girls as something people already talked about in New York and in local circles.
Reiter also recalled Trump urging investigators to pay attention to Ghislaine Maxwell, whom he described as Epstein’s “operative.” In the interview summary, Trump allegedly told police that Maxwell was “evil” and said they should focus on her. Reiter added that Trump claimed he had once been around Epstein when teenagers were present and “got the hell out of there.”
Those details don’t match the long-running picture often presented in major news coverage that frames Trump as closely tied to Epstein’s criminal activity.
Over the years, reporting has highlighted their social overlap in the 1990s and early 2000s, references in flight logs, and an old Trump quote describing Epstein as a “terrific guy” who liked “beautiful women… on the younger side.” Critics have used those items, especially during election cycles, to suggest something more serious.
This newly surfaced FBI record points to a different version of events, one where Trump distances himself and contacts law enforcement soon after the investigation becomes known.
People familiar with the timeline have also pointed to accounts that Trump had already banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago around that period, reportedly after an incident involving inappropriate behavior toward a member’s teenage daughter. In Reiter’s telling, Trump was among the “very first people” who reached out once the probe was in the open.
Pushing Back on Familiar Headlines
For years, common narratives have treated Trump and Epstein as near inseparable, often leaning on selective quotes and unverified claims to imply deeper involvement. During the 2016 and 2020 campaigns, and again in later cycles, stories circulated tying Trump to Epstein’s private island or to misconduct with minors. Those claims have repeatedly failed to produce court-tested evidence or findings in official investigations.
The Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed in late 2025, required the release of many records that had been partially withheld. As more pages become readable, Trump’s name appears often, but many mentions are routine, such as messages, contact notes, or passing references.
The 2006 call described by Reiter stands out because it reads as favorable to Trump’s position. It also tracks with Trump’s public comments over the years, including claims that he barred Epstein from Mar-a-Lago and cut ties after hearing about behavior he described as “creepy.”
Reiter’s interview was recorded in 2019 and is now part of the DOJ’s phased releases. The Miami Herald was among the first outlets to spotlight the document, noting it could shift how people talk about what Trump knew and when. Trump supporters say it weakens the “Trump-Epstein buddy” storyline that they believe was used to harm him politically.
Attempts to Tie Epstein Directly to Trump
From the first Palm Beach investigation in 2005 to 2006 through Epstein’s 2019 arrest and death, political opponents have tried to use any Trump-Epstein connection as a weapon. At the same time, Bill Clinton’s repeated appearances in flight logs did not always draw the same level of sustained attention, while Trump’s documented contacts were often treated as more central.
Democratic strategists and media voices have floated theories of Trump’s complicity in hearings and news cycles. Some recent releases also include tips and allegations submitted to the FBI, sometimes arriving close to elections. The DOJ has cautioned that many claims in the broader file set are not credible and were not pursued.
In that context, the Reiter account matters because it presents Trump as someone who, after the investigation became public, called the police to express support and to point them toward Maxwell’s role. The call also came before Epstein’s 2008 plea deal and later federal scrutiny, placing it earlier than many of the talking points that surfaced years later.
What This Could Mean for the Larger Epstein Record
The continuing release of Epstein documents, described as running into the millions of pages, has exposed a wide web of contacts that includes politicians, wealthy donors, and celebrities. Some names raise new questions.
Others add context to relationships that have been argued about for years. Reiter’s description of the 2006 call adds a concrete data point to one of the most politicized storylines in the Epstein saga.
Trump has long denied knowing about Epstein’s crimes while they moved in some of the same social circles. He has said the relationship ended because of Epstein’s behavior. The newly unredacted FBI summary supports that defense in at least one key way: it records a law enforcement leader saying Trump encouraged investigators to pursue the case.
As additional files become public, attention may move away from rumor-driven claims and toward what the documents actually show. For victims and for the public, more transparency can help separate hard facts from political messaging, even when the results don’t fit anyone’s preferred narrative.
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Democrats Stance on Voter ID Described as Racists By Many Blacks
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Election rules are back in the spotlight, and national voter ID is once again at the center of the fight. With the 2026 midterms getting closer, Republicans in Congress are pushing bills that would set nationwide standards for voter identification and proof of citizenship. Supporters call it a basic step to protect elections. Opponents say it would block eligible voters and add new hurdles to casting a ballot.
The main bill driving the current debate is the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, listed as H.R. 22 in the 119th Congress. Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) introduced it in the House, and Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) introduced a companion bill in the Senate.
The SAVE Act would change the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 by requiring documentary proof of US citizenship to register for federal elections. Examples of acceptable documents include a US passport, a military ID, or other documents that show citizenship, such as a birth certificate that meets REAL ID Act rules.
The House is expected to vote soon on an updated version of the SAVE Act. The push has grown louder with support from former President Donald Trump and conservative activists. This newer version goes further than earlier drafts. It would require photo ID at the polls, along with proof of citizenship during registration.
Republicans say the bill addresses weak spots in states that do not have strict ID rules. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-LA) has framed it as a way to stop noncitizen voting. That is already illegal, but supporters argue that enforcement and verification vary too much by state.
A separate proposal, the Make Elections Great Again (MEGA) Act, was introduced by House Administration Committee Chairman Bryan Steil (R-WI) in January 2026. It is a larger package that includes a national photo ID requirement, tighter rules for mail-in voting, stronger voter roll maintenance, and post-election audits. It is not only about voter ID, but it also includes similar citizenship checks and has support from GOP leaders who want broader election changes.
Even with momentum in the House, the path is steep in the Senate. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has said the SAVE Act will not move forward there, calling it a modern version of Jim Crow and warning it would keep many eligible voters from voting. Democrats hold a narrow Senate majority, and the bill would still have to clear the filibuster, which usually means finding 60 votes.
It is not close to that number right now. Trump’s public support, including comments about “nationalizing” elections in certain cities, has raised the temperature. It has also triggered pushback, including from local election officials who worry about federal control over state-run elections.
Public Opinion Shows Strong Support, Even With Partisan Tension
Polls show voter ID is popular with the public, across party lines and many demographic groups. A 2025 Pew Research Center survey found 83% of US adults support requiring a government-issued photo ID to vote. That included 95% of Republicans and 71% of Democrats. A 2024 Gallup poll found 83% support for requiring proof of citizenship when registering to vote.
Support also shows up in groups often mentioned in this debate. In the same Pew survey, 76% of Black adults, 85% of White adults, and 82% of Hispanic adults supported photo ID requirements. A Monmouth University poll reported similar results, with 80% support overall, including 62% of Democrats. Those numbers complicate the common claim that voter ID laws are always viewed as discriminatory, since majorities of Black and Latino voters support the idea.
Still, the gap between the parties remains real. Republican voters back these policies at very high rates (some polls show 91%). Democratic voters are closer to the 70% range, while many top Democratic leaders oppose the bills.
Critics say that the split suggests party leaders are not matching what many Democratic voters say they want. On X (formerly Twitter), users such as @RilesZrk have pointed to polling figures like “87% of Blacks & 82% of Latinos support voter ID” while challenging Democratic opposition.
The Case For a National Voter ID Law
Supporters of a national voter ID law say it would reduce fraud and increase trust in election results. Research often finds that in-person voter fraud is rare, with some studies putting rates as low as 0.00004%. Backers respond that even a small number of cases can damage confidence. The Heritage Foundation argues that voter ID rules can prevent more than one type of fraud, including impersonation and noncitizen voting, and that these laws do not meaningfully reduce turnout.
Supporters also point to the broad popularity of voter ID as proof that it feels reasonable to many voters. A Heritage analysis argues that voter ID laws have not shown negative effects on registration or turnout across demographic groups. A 2023 study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that ID laws can increase participation from both parties, which can reduce the idea that one side gains an advantage.
Heading into 2026, allies of Trump and many Republicans say nationwide standards would reduce confusion and conflict, especially in battleground states. They argue that a patchwork of state rules invites disputes like those seen after the 2020 election.
The Case Against It: Voter Barriers and Real-World Logistics
Opponents, including the ACLU and the Brennan Center for Justice, argue that strict ID laws can create obstacles that hit some groups harder. They point to low-income voters, older voters, minority voters, and rural voters as groups more likely to struggle with document access. Estimates often cited in this debate say up to 11% of eligible voters do not have a qualifying ID.
Some figures put the share higher for certain groups, including 25% of Black voters and 18% of voters over age 65. Critics also highlight costs tied to getting documents, sometimes estimated at $75 to $175, plus travel challenges in areas with fewer government offices.
They also argue that the fraud concern is overstated. Noncitizen voting is rare and already illegal, and they say existing penalties and enforcement tools already cover it. A Bipartisan Policy Center analysis of the SAVE Act points to possible unintended effects, including a Kansas example where similar rules blocked 31,000 eligible citizens. Research on turnout is mixed, but opponents often cite findings that show lower participation among some minority groups under stricter rules.
For the 2026 cycle, critics also warn about day-to-day election administration. They expect local offices to get overloaded, lines could grow, and more voters could be pushed into provisional ballots. The National Conference of State Legislatures has warned that conflicts between federal rules and state election laws could create confusion for voters and election workers.
Democratic Leaders vs. Democratic Voters
Many Democratic leaders have attacked the SAVE Act in strong terms. They argue it shifts the burden onto voters and could result in eligible citizens getting removed from the rolls. Schumer has compared it to older voter suppression tactics. Rep. Glenn Ivey (D-MD) has called it a “solution in search of a problem.”
At the same time, polling continues to show that many Democratic voters support photo ID requirements. That gap has fueled criticism that party leadership is taking a harder line than its voters.
Some commentators argue Democrats often frame voter ID as racist, even though polling shows solid support among Black voters (76% in the Pew survey) and Latino voters (82%).
A KFF/theGrio survey found Black voters see racism as a major problem in the GOP (76%), and also a minor problem in the Democratic Party (53%). Critics, including filmmaker Ami Horowitz, have also pushed back on the “racist” label by interviewing Black voters in New York who say they do not see voter ID laws that way.
For Democrats heading into 2026, the risk is political as much as policy-based. If voters see party leaders as ignoring popular reforms, it could weaken support among moderates.
What Minority Voters Say: Support Is Strong, Access Concerns Are Real
Polling shows Black and Latino voters largely support voter ID laws. At the same time, some research suggests these groups are more likely to lack IDs. One commonly cited figure says 13% of Black Americans do not have the needed ID, compared with 5% of White Americans. Groups like the Brennan Center argue that strict rules can widen turnout gaps if states do not make IDs easy to get.
Some Black conservatives, including people aligned with Trump, argue that voter ID is not racist and should be treated as a normal requirement. Pew polling has also shown many Black voters view Trump negatively (72% rated his presidency poorly), while also showing some movement in political preferences, including only 63% backing Biden in 2024. Some commentators say Democrats focus too much on the voter ID framing and not enough on issues many voters rank higher, like jobs and prices.
How This Could Affect the 2026 Midterms
If a national voter ID law becomes reality, it could reshape how the 2026 midterms play out. Supporters think consistent rules could cut down on disputes. Opponents expect lower turnout among some groups, especially in states that do not currently require strict ID, such as California and New York. The NCSL has also pointed to implementation hurdles, including matching mail ballot timelines and running citizenship checks through systems tied to SAVE-style requirements.
Lawsuits would likely follow quickly. The Brennan Center has called the idea “catastrophic” for voters. If courts block the law, Republicans could use that as more proof that the system is vulnerable, which could deepen partisan distrust.
Some studies suggest overall turnout changes are small, but any decline could fall harder on Democratic-leaning groups. On X, the argument shows up from both sides, including people like @fawfulfan who say a clear federal ID rule could reduce claims of selective suppression.
Either way, the fight over a national voter ID law is about more than paperwork. It is about trust in elections, the balance between access and security, and how much control Washington should have over rules that states have long managed. As 2026 gets closer, the outcome may depend on Senate math, public pressure, and how far each party is willing to push.
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Tim Walz Exposed By Minnesota DHS Whistleblower
WASHINGTON, D.C. – A former Minnesota Department of Human Services (DHS) employee says she paid a steep price for speaking up. Faye Bernstein, a long-time agency worker, claims she faced years of retaliation from Tim Walz after raising concerns about weak controls that she believes helped fuel Minnesota’s growing social services fraud crisis.
Bernstein says she warned leaders about risks in 2018 and 2019, before federal prosecutors began putting public numbers on the damage. Prosecutors now estimate that as much as $9 billion in taxpayer money may have been stolen since 2019 across multiple programs.
A 20-year DHS veteran who worked in contract management and compliance, Bernstein has shared her story on national TV, including Fox News. She says that after she reported irregular contracting practices, she became the target of what she calls a coordinated effort to discredit her.
Her claims come as federal investigators continue to probe fraud tied to child nutrition programs, Medicaid housing supports, autism services, and other benefits. Prosecutors say many of these cases involve networks concentrated in Minnesota’s Somali-American community.
The controversy has reached Congress. The U.S. House Oversight Committee has held hearings where state lawmakers accused Gov. Tim Walz’s administration of brushing off warnings, punishing whistleblowers, and failing to put strong safeguards in place. Bernstein has also pushed back on Walz’s public statements that he didn’t know about the problems, calling that claim “absolutely false.”
Warnings Met With Pushback
Bernstein says her problems started early in Tim Walz’s term, which began in 2019. After she was promoted to a lead role within the Behavioral Health Administration, she says she had a broader view of contracts across the agency.
What she saw worried her. Bernstein described contracting as sloppy and poorly controlled, with few clear checks to stop bad actors. She said the state was “completely open to fraud.”
“I saw just extreme sloppiness, messiness in our contracting processes,” Bernstein said in interviews. She says she raised the issue internally and warned that fraud would follow if DHS didn’t tighten its systems. She says her concerns weren’t welcomed.
Bernstein claims managers cut her duties, left her out of meetings, and treated her complaints as a problem. She says she was accused of racial bias when she brought up patterns she believed were tied to fraud.
“The smear campaign starts where you are told you are racist and your job duties are lessened till you basically have no job duties,” she said.
Bernstein says DHS later barred her from agency properties, revoked her credentials, and moved her into roles that had little real work. She also says she endured state investigations that were expensive and draining. In letters and interviews, she describes ongoing harassment and being pushed to the sidelines. She now warns that reporting fraud without anonymity can ruin a career.
Prosecutors Say the Losses Reach Into the Billions
Federal authorities, including the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minnesota, have charged close to 100 people in related cases. Dozens have already been convicted.
The best-known case centers on Feeding Our Future. Prosecutors say the nonprofit submitted false claims about feeding children during the COVID-19 pandemic and took at least $250 million. Investigators say large sums went to luxury purchases, real estate, and transfers abroad.
From there, investigations widened. Authorities began focusing on Medicaid-linked fraud tied to housing supports, autism therapy, and other services. In public reporting and testimony, estimates have climbed as high as $9 billion or more since 2018, spread across 14 programs flagged as high risk.
Prosecutors say a large share of defendants in major cases, often reported as about 85% to 90%, are of Somali descent. Walz and some community leaders have pushed back against broad claims about the community, arguing that sweeping labels are unfair and inflammatory.
The fraud has been described as among the largest U.S. cases tied to pandemic-era relief. Some allegations also point to overseas links, including concerns about connections to groups such as Al-Shabaab, though those claims are still being investigated.
Political Pressure and Demands for Answers
The fallout has been intense and partisan. Republican lawmakers and some federal officials have blamed Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison for what they describe as an overly trusting culture that made the scams easier to pull off. Whistleblowers, including Bernstein, have given testimony or statements to Congress describing ignored reports and a hostile work environment at DHS.
Bernstein’s story also fits a broader pattern raised by other employees. Several workers have claimed their warnings were dismissed, or they faced punishment after speaking up. A congressional document has described allegations that include electronic monitoring and threats of being shut out of future state jobs.
Tim Walz’s administration has disputed the $9 billion estimate and says it has taken steps to fight fraud, including forming task forces. Critics say those efforts came late and only after insiders had sounded the alarm for years.
Bernstein Keeps Speaking Out
Bernstein says the cost has been lasting, including damage to her reputation, isolation at work, and ongoing stress. Still, she continues to speak publicly. Her account points to deeper breakdowns inside DHS that, in her view, allowed fraud to spread and grow unchecked.
As federal investigations continue through subpoenas, searches, and more convictions, Bernstein’s experience highlights the risks whistleblowers say they face inside government agencies. For Minnesota taxpayers, the scandal isn’t only about the money. It’s also about trust in programs meant to protect people who need help.
The full scope of the fraud, and who should be held responsible for missing or ignoring warnings, is still coming into view. Bernstein’s claims have kept attention on that question, and she says she won’t stop pushing for answers.
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