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Immigrant killed, ICE officer injured in Chicago operation: DHS

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An immigrant was killed and a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer was injured in Chicago on Friday during an enforcement operation, according to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). 

ICE officers conducted a traffic stop in Franklin Park, Ill. to detain Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez on Friday morning. Villegas-Gonzalez allegedly resisted arrest and tried to flee the scene, dragging an ICE officer a “significant” distance with his car. The officer opened fire, fatally shooting the migrant. 

“We are praying for the speedy recovery of our law enforcement officer. He followed his training, used appropriate force and properly enforced the law to protect the public and law enforcement,” Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement on Friday. 

“Viral social media videos and activists encouraging illegal aliens to resist law enforcement not only spread misinformation, but also undermine public safety, as well as the safety of our officers and those being apprehended,” McLaughlin added. 

An ICE spokesperson said that both the officer and migrant “immediately received medical treatment and were transferred to a local hospital.” 

“The suspect was pronounced dead at the hospital,” the spokesperson added. “The officer sustained severe injuries and is in stable condition.” 

DHS said that Villegas-Gonzalez, whom the department said was a “criminal illegal” migrant with a “history of reckless driving,” was the target of the enforcement operation. 

Villegas-Gonzalez entered the U.S. at an “unknown date and time,” DHS added. 

The incident took place as President Trump’s administration is intensifying immigration enforcement in Chicago this week as part of the so-called “Operation Midway Blitz.”

Chris Colfer, Mike O’Malley Have Glee Reunion

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Just like in the hallways of McKinley High, the Glee set featured a lot of flirtation and relationships between its young stars. (And even before the show, as Lea Michele revealed in her 2014 memoir Brunette Ambition that she and Matthew Morrison “actually dated back in for the day for a Broadway beat.”)

Michele and Cory Monteith, whose characters were one of the show’s most iconic couples,” dated for several years before Monteith’s tragic death in 2013, while Blake Jenner and Melissa Benoist, who now stars on Supergirl, married in 2015 after meeting on the set in 2012 when they also played love interests; they split in 2016 and their divorce was finalized the following year.  

Naya Rivera and Mark Salling briefly dated in the show’s earlier days and it wasn’t an amicable split, as Rivera would write in her 2016 memoir, “I think everyone should have that one relationship where you look back and ask yourself, ‘What the hell was I thinking?’ You’ll learn something and you won’t regret it. Unless, of course, that relationship was with someone who had a sizable stash of child porn on his computer. Then, by all means, regret everything.” Rivera was referring to Salling’s child pornography indictment in 2017. In January 2018, Salling committed suicide at the age of 35.

While they first met when she guest-starred on Glee, Gwyneth Paltrow didn’t begin dating future husband Brad Falchuk, one of Glee‘s co-creators, until she returned to the show in 2014, over a year after her split from Coldplay frontman Chris Martin

“When you’re going through a divorce and you think about going out with somebody, it’s a weird thing,” she told Howard Stern of taking it slowly with Falchuk, a recently-divorced father of two. “So I don’t think it’s the same as being 23 and running into someone at a coffee shop. It’s just different. You have kids, you have divorce—it’s just a lot of stuff.”

They got married in October 2018. 

While there were whispers of a romance between Kevin McHale (Artie) and Jenna Ushkowitz (Tina) during the show’s run, it turns out they were just in a showmance, which became the new of their hit podcast.

Canelo vs Crawford: Terence Crawford looks ripped as he weights same as Canelo Alvarez for Vegas super-fight

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Jumping up in weight has historically left challengers vulnerable against naturally bigger champions.

Yet in Las Vegas this week, many pundits and fighters are tipping Crawford to win – a testament to his adaptability and ring IQ.

Crawford looks ripped and defined, not having put on weight at the expense of his athleticism, but whether he can carry the same speed, timing, and precision into the ring remains the question.

He says the extra pounds have been more blessing than burden.

“It’s been different because I don’t have to worry about anything – the weight room, strength and conditioning, when I’m eating and things like that. I’m as happy as could be,” he told BBC Sport on Tuesday.

The freedom has even extended to breakfast.

“I woke up and ate pancakes this morning. I would never have been able to eat pancakes before,” he said.

If Crawford can dethrone Alvarez in Nevada, it won’t just be another indulgence. It will be the syrup on top of a career already dripping with greatness.

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Hegseth says Pentagon 'tracking' service members, civilians who celebrate Charlie Kirk killing

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Secretary Pete Hegseth of the recently renamed Department of War is warning civilian and military employees that the Pentagon is “tracking” any comments from them that celebrate or mock the Wednesday assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. 

“We are tracking all these very closely — and will address, immediately. Completely unacceptable,” Hegseth wrote in a social media post on Thursday.

Hegseth was responding to a statement from chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell, who earlier said it is “unacceptable for military personnel and Department of War civilians to celebrate or mock the assassination of a fellow American. The Department of War has zero tolerance for it.”

They did not mention any specific examples of personnel who had reacted positively to Kirk’s death.

Kirk, the 31-year-old co-founder of Turning Point USA, was fatally shot in the neck at the campus of Utah Valley University on Wednesday. After a manhunt, officials identified the suspected shooter as Tyler Robinson, a 22-year-old Utah man.

Both Republican and Democratic political figures – including all living former U.S. presidents – have condemned Kirk’s assassination, but a small number of social media users have mocked or celebrated the killing, drawing outrage. 

The heads of military services also have warned those under them that any inappropriate comments on Kirk will be met with retribution. Navy Secretary John Phelan cautioned sailors, Marines and civilians that they “will be dealt with swiftly and decisively” should they bring “discredit” on the department.

“I am aware of posts displaying contempt toward a fellow American who was assassinated,” he wrote on X late Thursday. “I want to be very clear: any uniformed or civilian employee of the Department of the Navy who acts in a manner that brings discredit upon the Department, the [U.S. Navy] or the [Marine Corps] will be dealt with swiftly and decisively.”

The official X account for the U.S. Coast Guard, meanwhile, also said it “is aware of inappropriate personal social media activity made by a member regarding recent political violence,” though did not provide specifics.  

“That social media activity is contrary to our core values. With the support of DHS, we are actively investigating this activity and will take appropriate action to hold the individual accountable,” according to the post. “We recognize the harm such behavior can cause and remain steadfast in ensuring that the conduct of our personnel reflects the trust and responsibility placed in us by the American people.”

Encyclopedia Britannica and Merriam-Webster sue Perplexity AI for copyright and trademark infringement

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The AI web search company Perplexity is being hit by another lawsuit alleging copyright and trademark infringement, this time from Encyclopedia Britannica and Merriam-Webster. Britannica, the centuries-old publisher that owns Merriam-Webster, sued Perplexity in New York federal court on September 10th.

In the lawsuit, the companies allege that Perplexity’s “answer engine” scrapes their websites, steals their internet traffic, and plagiarizes their copyrighted material. Britannica also alleges trademark infringement when Perplexity attaches the two companies’ names to hallucinated or incomplete content.

The word “plagiarize” illustrates the point of the lawsuit. The court document includes back-to-back screenshots that show Perplexity’s result is identical to Merriam-Webster’s definition.

Nine Met Police officers suspended after BBC investigation

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The Metropolitan Police has suspended nine officers and referred itself to the watchdog following a BBC investigation into Charing Cross station.

The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) said it was investigating the behaviour of 11 individuals based at the central London station.

The accusations, which feature in a forthcoming BBC Panorama documentary, include excessive use of force, discriminatory and misogynistic comments, and failing to report or challenge inappropriate behaviour, the police watchdog said.

The officers range in rank from police constable to sergeant.

The allegations – which relate to the conduct of nine Met officers, a former Met officer and a serving designated detention officer – are said to have taken place both on and off duty between August 2024 and January 2025.

The IOPC said it had received a referral from another force relating to the conduct of a former Met officer who was previously based at Charing Cross and has since transferred.

“These are concerning allegations involving a large number of individuals and we understand there will be public concern, particularly in light of our previous investigation into similar allegations at the same police station,” IOPC director Amanda Rowe said.

Met Police Assistant Commissioner Matt Twist described the alleged behaviour as “disgraceful”.

He added that the Met was taking “immediate steps to dismantle the current custody team at this station, significantly changing the leadership in our custody command and the Westminster leadership team”.

“In addition, we are scrutinising more widely the leadership and culture within these teams, led by Professional Standards and senior leaders, to root out any further failings,” Mr Twist said.

The IOPC in 2022 found “disgraceful” behaviour in the ranks at the same police station, including a homophobic, racist and misogynistic Whatsapp group.

The Charing Cross report was part of a string of damaging scandals to hit the force that led former Met Police commissioner Dame Cressida Dick to announce she was stepping down from her role in February 2022.

We've failed Charlie Kirk, and ourselves

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Charlie Kirk spent his career showing up where he wasn’t welcome. Mostly on college campuses, where he would set up a tent and invite students to argue with him. At 31, the Turning Point USA founder and father of two was fatally shot Wednesday afternoon while doing what he had built his career around for more than a decade: encouraging dialogue over violence and shouting matches.

Kirk believed deeply that “when people stop talking, really bad stuff starts. When marriages stop talking, divorce happens. When civilizations stop talking, civil war ensues. What we as a culture have to get back to is being able to have reasonable disagreement where violence is not an option.”

The only rational response to such an act of terror is sympathy. Keep the political statements in your pocket. But the response to Kirk’s death has been depressingly predictable. Within hours, partisan actors on both sides weaponized the tragedy for political gain. Some Republicans immediately declared war on liberal extremism, despite no known suspect or motive for the shooting. Some Democrats focused more on relitigating Kirk’s rhetoric than mourning his death.

This is our test as a civil society: Can we protect those we despise and refuse to use our losses to score political points? We are failing spectacularly.

I always thought Kirk argued with cherry-picked facts that supported his agenda. His debate style involved talking fast and self-righteously to overwhelm intimidated college students. But personal disagreement becomes irrelevant when someone dies for their political beliefs. The important thing to recognize — and this requires looking above the mess of social media and ordinary life — is that many Americans no longer accept that, in a free society, nobody should die for their political beliefs, no matter how wrong those beliefs might be.

Conservative pundits filled X with declarations of “war.” Douglas Murray claimed on Sky News just after the assassination that “most conservatives tend to think the left is wrong, but in its entirety, not evil; but that favor is not returned.”

Yet this narrative conveniently overlooks Republicans’ own complicated relationship with political violence. Jan. 6 stands as stark evidence, as does the hammer attack on Paul Pelosi by a mentally ill man echoing far-right conspiracy theories (whose motives Elon Musk recklessly mischaracterized). And recall the assassination of a Minnesota Democratic state representative and her husband by an alleged Trump supporter just three months ago.

Far worse is the left. On MSNBC, now-fired analyst Matthew Dowd declared that those like Kirk who share “hateful” rhetoric should “expect awful actions to take place.” If hateful thoughts lead to hateful actions, as Dowd suggests, then what of the hateful words Dowd himself spoke about a man whose body was still warm? Would he accept the same logic if his own family were attacked?

On X, a post reading “Breaking: Charlie Kirk loses gun debate” went viral with 424,000 likes; the hashtag #charliesquirt is trending on the platform. Former Sen. Al Franken (D-Min.) condemned political violence, but only after clarifying that he “never thought [he’d] say a prayer for Charlie Kirk.” Such smears are vile and contemptible. 

What does it say about us that assassination is first and foremost an opportunity for political point-scoring? We have lost the ability to recognize that some basic human boundaries must never be crossed. This is the logical endpoint of political discourse that no longer believes good-faith disagreement.

The onus falls especially on those of us who vehemently disagreed with Charlie Kirk to resist the inflammatory rhetoric and demand better. When someone tries to drag you into the gutter, ask them what vision they have for America. Do they still believe in democratic principles? Do they respect the rule of law? Do they value human life universally, not selectively? Many on the right will use this tragedy to silence dissent, arguing that criticism killed Charlie Kirk. That’s wrong too. We should never be afraid to express our views — that’s a fundamental right in a free society. But it’s equally fundamental to participate in that society without fear of violence.

This is the consequence of years of people peddling the line that “words are violence.” That’s typically nonsense designed to quell free speech and incite retaliatory violence. Words are words; shooting someone in the throat is violence. But words do have consequences. Those who have systematically dehumanized political opponents should examine what they have created.

Charlie Kirk believed in the possibility of reasonable disagreement. America needs more who, as Ezra Klein described today, “Practice Politics the Right Way”: willing to talk across divides, to find common ground, to remember that our political opponents are still human beings with families and dreams and fears. Just one day before his death, Kirk posted a photograph of Iryna Zarutska, the young woman murdered on a Charlotte light rail, and wrote beneath it: America will never be the same. America will not be the same. His own murder proved it. But his life’s work will inevitably shape what comes next. He fought the good fight, he kept the faith, and he finished his race. 

Kirk once wrote, “You can tell a lot about a person by how they react when someone dies.” He was right. My thoughts are with Charlie’s young wife and the two children he leaves behind. With them, and with anyone in this country who still cares about preserving a sense of common humanity.

William Liang is a writer living in San Francisco.



Nepal to get first female PM after deadly unrest

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Nepal’s former Supreme Court chief justice Sushila Karki is set to become the country’s interim prime minister after deadly anti-corruption protests ousted the government.

Karki, 73, will be the first woman to lead the impoverished Himalayan nation after a deal was reached with the protest leaders for her to be sworn in.

More than 50 people were killed in clashes with riot police during this week’s mass protests sparked by a ban on social media platforms.

The ban was lifted on Monday – but by then protests had swelled into a mass movement. Angry crowds set fire to parliament and government buildings in the capital Kathmandu on Tuesday, forcing Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli to resign.

Karki would take the oath of office on Friday evening, President Ram Chandra Poudel’s press adviser confirmed to the BBC.

The agreement between the president and the protest leaders was reached after days of consultations. Legal experts were also involved.

Parliament is expected to be dissolved shortly.

Karki is widely regarded as a person of clean image, and is being supported by student leaders from the so-called “Gen Z” to lead the interim government.

Nepal’s army has deployed patrols on the streets of Kathmandu, as the country reels from its worst unrest in decades.

The protests were triggered by the government’s decision last week to ban 26 social media platforms, including WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook – but they soon widened to embody much deeper discontent with Nepal’s political elite.

In the weeks before the ban, a “nepo kid” campaign, spotlighting the lavish lifestyles of politicians’ children and allegations of corruption, had taken off on social media.

And while the social media ban was hastily lifted on Monday night, the protests had by that stage gained unstoppable momentum.

Democrats should abandon MAGA tactics for the moral high ground

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) is leaning into his aggressive attacks against President Trump, mimicking his online style and adopting his peculiar lexicon.  

His efforts have invigorated a Democratic party that’s eager to challenge MAGA on its home turf, using its tactics and adopting its style. Other Democrats are following his lead.  

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) says he is not running for president, but he takes actions that make a run viable. He recently called President Trump a “chicken hawk” and later told him to “keep our name out of your mouth”, receiving enthusiastic applause from a supportive crowd.

This is a change for Moore, who previously presented himself as a pragmatist interested in holding the moral high ground.

Moore’s changing tone may be rooted in genuine exasperation with the president’s policies. But the timing suggests his behavior is driven by a desire to keep pace with Newsom as he redefines the contours of Democratic resistance to President Trump.

Democrats are at a crossroads. They can mimic MAGA or choose to set an example of virtuous politics. 

The latter requires trust that most Americans will support leaders who bring them out of the Trump era, rather than politicians who surrender to its worst parts by adopting its mannerisms. 

Becoming MAGA with a different tax policy won’t extricate the country from its current malaise or begin to heal our divisions. Even if Democrats are successful at eking out narrow electoral victories by inspiring their base with name calling and mockery, our core problems remain.

Except for rabid partisans, Americans sense that neither party has been the good guy, and both are responsible for this unhappy moment in our politics. 

Republican redistricting in Texas is legal but unfair. Democrats are poised to recreate that dishonorable action in California and elsewhere. But there’s an alternative. 

Democrats could make a grand gesture and un-gerrymander some of the districts in a place like Illinois that make it hard for Republicans to win. 

This would draw a clear contrast for voters and might be enough to discourage Republican states other than Texas from undertaking similar maneuvers. 

A grand gesture by Democrats might extricate us from the current cycle of partisan redistricting and doesn’t preclude them from regaining control of the House of Representatives.

As recently as 2018, Democrats flipped 40 seats, and Texas is only redistricting five.  If our country and economy are as bad under Trump as Democrats claim, winning big in 2026 is quite possible. Republicans also realize this.  

Beyond the boisterous rhetoric lies several unpopular Republican policies. Parties that engage in unusual efforts at unexpected times to create safer legislative districts, as the Republicans are doing, probably aren’t approaching the next election with confidence. 

There are two ways of resisting President Trump and the cultural change he’s unleashing on America. The first is to adopt his tactics and demeanor but doing this concedes that the president has changed us forever.  

If Democrats are Trumpian now, our most important reason to resist him is already lost. We’re either a country whose leaders call each other mean-spirited names via tapped out messages on cell phones or we’re not.  

The fact that a plurality of Americans identify as political independents suggests that large numbers prefer a more serious and sober politics.

Democrats are struggling to accept the idea that maintaining the moral high ground matters. They point to election losses as proof that being the better-behaved party doesn’t win. 

In fact, Democrats have never presented Americans with a clear distinction.  Democrats accused President Trump of acting like a dictator and then propagated a “cancel culture” that complicated free speech.

They complained about gerrymandering but undertook egregious gerrymandering of their own.  

They told Americans that MAGA was a threat and then supported MAGA candidates in Republican primaries. They lamented the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United but spent $1.2 billion in 2024 through groups that didn’t need to disclose their donors.

Democrats who advocate for fighting fire with fire should realize that the party has already tested that approach.

The result is the lowest approval ratings of Democrats in 30 years and the 2024 loss to MAGA Republicans.  Fighting fire with fire isn’t a new idea and isn’t working.  Doubling down on that effort isn’t the answer. 

Most Americans, don’t want to live in a petty world of social media taunts and retorts. What we want are serious leaders who tackle hard problems and admit when they make mistakes.  

Newsom’s latest caricature of himself doesn’t move us closer to that vision. If Democrats follow his lead, as Moore and others seem inclined, our country will complete its transition to something completely shaped by Trump and his presidency.

Colin Pascal is a retired Army lieutenant colonel and a graduate student in the School of Public Affairs at American University.