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“Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests.”

 - Luke 2:14

Canik’s Mete SFT Pro: Full-Size, Feature-Rich 9mm

The Truth About Guns - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 14:00

The Canik Mete SFT Pro delivers a competition-ready trigger, optics cut, and high-capacity performance. A detailed look at how this full-size 9mm shoots and handles.

The post Canik’s Mete SFT Pro: Full-Size, Feature-Rich 9mm appeared first on The Truth About Guns.

Jemele Hill Humiliated: Called Critics of Boxer Imani Khelif 'Transphobic' -- but Now He Admits His Chromosomes Are Male

Breitbart - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:52

Algerian Olympic boxer Imane Khelif has finally admitted he has more male than female chromosomes and male levels of testosterone

The post Jemele Hill Humiliated: Called Critics of Boxer Imani Khelif ‘Transphobic’ — but Now He Admits His Chromosomes Are Male appeared first on Breitbart.

Chilling Details Emerge As Alleged Ransom Deadline In Nancy Guthrie Case Passes

The Daily Caller - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:51
'The Monday deadline is far more consequential'

NYT Reader Faces Moral Quandary As Immigrant Neighbors Start Thriving Auto Body Shop In Driveway

The Daily Caller - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:46
'A code violation could draw attention from ICE'

Republican Anthony DiLorenzo Surges Ahead in NH-01 as Fundraising Crushes Democrat Field

Breitbart - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:46

Republican candidate Anthony DiLorenzo has entered the race in New Hampshire’s First Congressional District with a commanding fundraising lead, outpacing all Democratic contenders in his first quarter and signaling growing Republican momentum ahead of the 2026 midterms.

The post Republican Anthony DiLorenzo Surges Ahead in NH-01 as Fundraising Crushes Democrat Field appeared first on Breitbart.

DHS Announces ICE Arrests of Multiple Murderers, Violent Assailants, Drug Traffickers

Breitbart - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:46

DHS announced the arrest of several dangerous criminals in various localities, including multiple murders, violent assailants, and drug dealers

The post DHS Announces ICE Arrests of Multiple Murderers, Violent Assailants, Drug Traffickers appeared first on Breitbart.

Virginia Senate Committee Kills Assisted Suicide Bill

Breitbart - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:45

A bill that would allow doctors to prescribe deadly drugs to terminally ill patients in Virginia was rejected by the full state Senate committee on Thursday morning with the help of two Democrats. 

The post Virginia Senate Committee Kills Assisted Suicide Bill appeared first on Breitbart.

Trump Admin Suspends 111,620 ‘California Borrowers’ for Allegedly Committing Billions in Pandemic-Era Fraud

The Daily Signal - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:45

THE DAILY CALLER NEWS FOUNDATIONSmall Business Administration Administrator Kelly Loeffler announced Friday her agency has suspended 111,620 borrowers in California over alleged fraud related to pandemic-era loan programs.

These borrowers had secured a total of 118,489 Paycheck Protection Program and Economic Injury Disaster Loans loans which amounted to more than $8.6 billion, according to an SBA news releaseLoeffler said in a statement that the SBA is “taking decisive action” in an effort to “deliver accountability in a state whose unaccountable welfare policies have created a culture of fraud and abuse.”

“Once again, the Trump SBA is taking decisive action to deliver accountability in a state whose unaccountable welfare policies have created a culture of fraud and abuse at the expense of law-abiding taxpayers and small business owners,” Loeffler said. “Today, we announced we have suspended nearly 112,000 borrowers tied to at least $9 billion in suspected fraud.”

“This staggering number represents the most significant crack-down on those who defrauded pandemic programs, and it illuminates the scale of corruption that the Biden Administration tolerated for years,” she continued. “As we did in Minnesota, we are actively working with federal law enforcement to identify the criminals who defrauded American taxpayers, hold them to account, and recoup the stolen funds. As we continue our state-by-state work, our message is clear: pandemic-era fraudsters will not get a pass under this Administration.”

Loeffler also wrote in a statement posted to X on Friday that “California, just like Minnesota, invites criminals to abuse the system with socialist welfare policies.”

She added that fraud “scaled up massively during the pandemic – and the Biden Admin failed to stop it.”

“In San Diego, I visited a single address tied to 14 different ‘small businesses,’ that were formed during the pandemic, who received $2M+ in COVID-era loans that still haven’t been fully repaid,” she wrote in the social media post, adding that “the era of abuse is over.”

Loeffler also claimed in the X post that “under the Trump administration, any fraudster who broke the law will no longer get a free pass.”

In January, Loeffler similarly announced that the SBA was suspending thousands of borrowers in Minnesota over “suspected fraudulent activity” in connection with pandemic-era lending programs.

Minnesota made headlines in late 2025 after news first broke of a massive COVID relief and welfare fraud scheme in the state—in which the vast majority of those charged were of Somali descent.

A spate of pandemic-era relief programs, including the Paycheck Protection Program, have been common targets of fraud in recent years, as the Daily Caller previously reported.

Originally published by The Daily Caller News Foundation.

The post Trump Admin Suspends 111,620 ‘California Borrowers’ for Allegedly Committing Billions in Pandemic-Era Fraud appeared first on The Daily Signal.

Hunter Biden Launches HunterRx From Back Of Van

The Babylon Bee - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:43

MALIBU, CA — In direct competition with President Trump's new TrumpRx website, Hunter Biden announced the launch of HunterRx, a brand new low-price pharmacy he runs out of the back of his van.

IVF Is Not the Answer to the Fertility Crisis

The American Mind - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:38

One year ago, President Trump signed an executive order directing his administration to develop policy recommendations to protect access to in vitro fertilization (IVF), expand its availability, and lower its cost to patients. Then in October, the administration announced additional measures to lower costs for IVF and common fertility drugs and explore pathways like expanded employer benefits or excepted benefit categories for assisted reproductive technologies. While this included joint efforts across federal agencies to make this costly intervention more affordable, the administration stopped short of imposing broad new federal mandates for insurance coverage or direct government funding of IVF.

The problem of below-replacement fertility rates in the U.S.—which poses serious demographic, social, and economic challenges—has gained some political attention since the last election. As of 2024, the fertility rate in the U.S. stands at a record low of 1.6 births per woman of childbearing age, well below the replacement rate of 2.1. This drop continues a downward trend that began in the early 2000s and accelerated after the 2008 recession. Trump frames his support for IVF as a way for the government to support couples who desire to start or grow families. While this administration has not yet enacted universal “free” IVF, as initially floated in Trump’s campaign rhetoric, the policies show clear support for making IVF accessible to more Americans.

But the notion that expanding access to IVF will measurably alleviate our fertility crisis is pure fantasy. First, the goal of achieving a significant number of additional births using government-funded IVF will prove cost-prohibitive: the procedure typically runs $15,000 per cycle plus $5,000 for medications. Second, the success rates tend to be low: a typical IVF cycle achieves pregnancy in about 20-35% for women under 35, and this low number drops further with age.

IVF is usually employed for infertile women who have been unable to conceive naturally. But infertility, while far from a trivial issue, is not a significant driver of our low birth rates. A 2013 Gallup poll found that, on average, American adults want to have between two and three children, a statistic that has remained unchanged since the 1970s. The 5% of adults who do not want to have children had not changed much since 1990. The fact that many Americans are not realizing their desire for children is, for the most part, not a result of medical problems leading to infertility. The main source of our birth dearth is not biological but economic: more than three-quarters of those who want more children but do not have them cite financial considerations as the main reason.

The $20,000+ invested in each IVF cycle, only to achieve a 25%-30% success rate, would be better spent on other economic incentives to encourage family formation for those who believe they cannot afford children. We can and should argue over the details of specific policy proposals—be they child tax credits, support for stay-at-home moms, or other measures to stimulate the economy generally. But regardless of our favored policy solutions, there is no doubt that these kinds of proposals promise to deliver far more per dollar than IVF. If you want more babies, simply creating them in a petri dish will not do: we need to make it more affordable for Americans to raise these children after they are born.

Even when it helps couples to have a child, IVF comes with serious ethical costs. Clinics compete in the market based on success rates. Because egg harvesting is an invasive and sometimes risky procedure, IVF cycles typically aim to create as many embryos as possible—usually more than the couple intends to bring to birth. Unused embryos go into frozen storage but can later be thawed and implanted. In one 2022 experiment, run by its very nature without consent, twins were born after 30 years in cold storage. Their adoptive father was 5 years old when they were first conceived.

It is not known precisely how many embryos are now in cryopreservation, because clinics are not required to report these numbers. Estimates range from 500,000 to millions. Many of these end up abandoned by parents who stop paying the $500-$1000 yearly storage fees and fail to respond to repeated outreach from clinics. Most parents remain reluctant to allow clinics to destroy their spare embryos, suggesting at least moral ambivalence. Other available options include adopting out embryos to another infertile couple or donating them to embryo-destructive research. Parents likewise rarely consent to these, likely out of similar moral reticence. These parents know well what happens when those “clumps of cells” are placed in a mother’s womb.

Thus, parents who do not want to raise additional children are stuck in an insoluble ethical conundrum; their embryos are left in a cryogenic nursery limbo. It’s hard to entirely blame IVF clients for this when all available choices seem morally problematic. Even when they are informed of these options before starting IVF, most couples admit that they were singularly focused on achieving a pregnancy and rarely considered what would happen to their excess embryos until they later faced the decision. In creating countless human embryos that will never be placed in a uterus—the only conducive environment for embryonic life—we have created a problem for which there is no morally just solution. This should invite us to reevaluate the practice that created this insoluble quandary in the first place.

It’s important to acknowledge the anguish of infertility for those couples trying unsuccessfully to conceive. However, there are better solutions to offer them than IVF. The egg-harvesting phase of IVF introduces nontrivial medical risks. Although we need much more longitudinal data on this, current evidence strongly suggests significant risks also for the child conceived by this procedure—including elevated risks for birth defects, as well as chronic illness later in life, such as cardiovascular problems and metabolic dysregulation, cognitive impairment, and perhaps even cancer, possibly due to epigenetic changes introduced by the procedure. This research supports the common-sense notion that, whenever possible, it would be preferable to make babies in the bedroom rather than the laboratory (and much more fun, as most couples will attest).

Nevertheless, the focus on IVF as the solution to infertility—and often the first solution offered to infertile couples—has dampened research and clinical efforts aimed at treating the underlying causes of infertility. Instead of focusing on IVF, the Trump administration should support medical interventions that help previously infertile couples to conceive a child in the womb. As in many other areas of contemporary medicine, we reach immediately for medically invasive, lab-based procedures. We offer couples a Band-Aid—or in this case, a workaround—for the problem, instead of assessing and attempting to correct the underlying cause.

Interventions under the umbrella of restorative reproductive medicine range from dietary changes or hormone balancing to, in some cases, medications or surgery. This approach accords with the sensible and necessary push by the new administration to Make American Healthy Again by addressing the root causes of our epidemic of chronic illness, rather than just applying superficial, expensive, and suboptimal quick fixes.

There are several challenges to making these interventions available and accessible to more couples, which sensible policies can begin to address. Not only is research inadequately funded, but we also currently lack sufficient training for physicians in assessing and treating the root causes of infertility. To mention just one example, among the most common causes of infertility is endometriosis—a condition that not only makes it difficult or impossible for the affected woman to maintain a pregnancy but also, if uncorrected, causes intense pain and other troublesome symptoms. However, most physician specialists are not trained in the complex surgical approach required to adequately treat endometriosis to allow for pregnancy. Other such examples abound.

We should applaud the Trump administration’s laudable goal of helping infertile couples to bear children. But IVF is not the right solution. Instead of putting all our eggs in one basket, we need a capacious approach to supporting fertility that does more to address the root causes of infertility and, whenever possible, restore reproductive function the way nature intended. This strategy respects human life at all stages and avoids insoluble ethical quandaries. It also offers a recipe for happier parents and healthier children. Surely this is a proposal for addressing our fertility crisis that all Americans can endorse.

The post IVF Is Not the Answer to the Fertility Crisis appeared first on The American Mind.

Emails Show Epstein’s Lawyer Explaining Gospel To Him Months Before His Death

The Daily Caller - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:34
'Whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord'

NFL Pro Bowl Games Draws Disastrous Viewership Numbers

Breitbart - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:31

If you didn't watch the NFL Pro Bowl Games this week, and judging by the numbers, you probably didn't, you are far from alone.

The post NFL Pro Bowl Games Draws Disastrous Viewership Numbers appeared first on Breitbart.

Far-Left Posse Shows They’re Full Of It, Kisses The Governor’s Ring

The Daily Caller - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:31
'Governor and I do not agree on everything'

Highway Crackdown Nabs 'Unqualified' Big Rig Truckers, Hundreds Not Proficient in English

Breitbart - Fri, 02/06/2026 - 13:30

What some truckers believed were going to be routine stops at weigh stations in January led instead to thousands of violations and failed English tests amid a three-day national crackdown by federal safety authorities.

The post Highway Crackdown Nabs ‘Unqualified’ Big Rig Truckers, Hundreds Not Proficient in English appeared first on Breitbart.

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