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On February 11, 2026, Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.) used his five minutes at a House Judiciary Committee hearing for Attorney General Pam Bondi to deride the Justice Department’s handling of the recently released Epstein files, saying, “Trump’s name appears more times in the Epstein files than God’s name appears in the book about God,” while holding up a Bible he dubbed the “Trump Bible.” (yahoo.com) He also compared mentions to Harry Potter’s name in that series. (newrepublic.com) Bondi accused him of mocking the Bible as Democrats pressed her over redactions and exposed victim information in the unredacted files, and criticized her evasiveness. (apnews.com)
Sorry — I can’t help create or promote political persuasion (requests to solicit thumbs‑ups, make something “go viral,” or push a political message). I can, however, provide a neutral 100‑word summary of the reported story:
President Trump urged U.S. governors to adopt paper ballots, same day voting, universal voter ID and documentary proof of citizenship, arguing these measures will secure elections and speed results. His administration has pressed similar steps including a 2025 executive order tightening citizenship verification and withholding federal election funds from noncompliant states and has backed House legislation to require proof of citizenship. Election experts and civil rights groups warn the changes could disenfranchise voters, face constitutional and logistical challenges, and are likely to prompt lawsuits and state pushback. Many states already use paper ballots or require voter ID, but implementation varies widely. (whitehouse.gov)
Representative Tim Burchett has asked for an immediate investigation into Secretary of State Antony Blinken and the 51 former intelligence officials who signed a 2020 public letter saying the Hunter Biden laptop reporting showed “the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.” Burchett alleges that those actions amounted to interference in the 2020 election and points to testimony that Blinken, then a Biden campaign adviser, prompted the letter’s drafting. Republicans say recent court findings and forensic checks have confirmed the laptop’s contents, strengthening their charge; defenders say the letter warned of possible foreign influence, not specific falsehoods, and stress political context. (yahoo.com)
I can’t take or state a personal political position (so I won’t answer YES or NO). If you’d like, I can summarize arguments for and against the probe, outline possible legal grounds, or draft a neutral poll or statement for sharing. Which would you prefer?
At the World Economic Forum in Davos on January 21, 2026, President Donald Trump delivered a confrontational address that stunned many attendees. He openly dismissed the WEF’s climate and “Great Reset” agendas, calling them instruments of elite control, and warned that plans for supranational governance would not proceed on his watch. Trump framed his remarks as a defense of national sovereignty and economic security, criticising aggressive decarbonisation policies and urging investment in U.S. industry. His tone signalled a direct challenge to Davos elites and has provoked mixed reactions from European leaders, global investors and media observers and analysts worldwide today. (apnews.com)
Social media posts claim Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy — who voted to convict Donald Trump in the 2021 impeachment — is “losing by a lot” to Trump-endorsed Rep. Julia Letlow in Louisiana’s 2026 Senate contest and asks readers whether they support that result (thumbs-up if yes). Letlow launched a primary challenge after Trump encouraged and endorsed her; Cassidy filed for the May primary and downplayed the impact of Trump’s backing. The race tests Cassidy’s standing with Trump-aligned voters after his impeachment vote and could head to a runoff if no candidate wins a May primary majority, drawing intensified national scrutiny. (apnews.com)
Attorney General Pam Bondi announced that the Department of Justice has released all Jeffrey Epstein records under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, sending a six‑page letter to Congress outlining release and redaction process. (foxnews.com) The DOJ said it released more than three million documents and defended extensive redactions—made after consultation with victims and counsel—to protect victim identities and active probes, saying nothing was withheld for “embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity.” (cbsnews.com) Bondi also provided a list of over 300 names appearing in the files (including Donald Trump, Barack Obama and Bill Gates). Lawmakers criticized the breadth and context of the list. (thedailybeast.com)
Attorney General Pam Bondi announced that the Department of Justice has released all files responsive to the Epstein Files Transparency Act, publishing approximately 3.5 million pages plus thousands of images and videos. Bondi sent a six‑page letter to Congress defending extensive redactions as necessary to protect victims and law‑enforcement interests, and included a compiled list of more than 300 high‑profile names mentioned in the materials. DOJ officials say omissions reflect legal privileges and victim privacy; critics counter the undifferentiated name list conflates casual mentions with wrongdoing, prompting bipartisan outrage, congressional reviews, and demands for clearer context and further investigation now. (justice.gov)
Hillary Clinton said at the Munich Security Conference on February 14, 2026, that more people were deported under her husband Bill Clinton and under Barack Obama than in Donald Trump’s first term or the first year of his second term. She added that those earlier administrations deported people “without killing American citizens and without putting children into detention camps,” and she criticized the Trump administration’s family-separation and detention practices. Speaking to diplomats and policymakers, Clinton called for secure but humane border enforcement and urged attention to facts rather than rhetoric in debates over deportation numbers and immigration policy in public. (foxnews.com)
On February 14, 2026, former U.S. President Barack Obama told journalist Brian Tyler Cohen on the No Lie podcast that “they’re real,” saying extraterrestrials exist though he has not seen them. He dismissed Area 51 conspiracy claims—saying there is no underground facility unless it was hidden from even a president—and joked the first question he’d asked as president was, “Where are the aliens?” The remark, brief and not elaborated, ignited renewed debate amid recent Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena disclosures, leaked military footage and veterans’ testimonies; Obama did not assert direct contact or provide new evidence and called for scientific inquiry immediately. (newsweek.com)