
@megbasham As a rule of thumb, I refuse to support PDFiles. Crazy right?
Mark
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@AlFther1eye
Husband, Father, Veteran.

@megbasham As a rule of thumb, I refuse to support PDFiles. Crazy right?

The Supreme Court on Wednesday is considering whether the Trump administration unlawfully ordered hundreds of thousands of immigrants living in the U.S. from Haiti and Syria to return home. abcnews.link/vIpDjDm





China has once again deployed heavy machinery to demolish Tibetan temples. Before the CCP’s takeover, Tibet had around 2,500 temples—today, only about 70 remain. Nearly 97% of monks have been forcibly stripped of their religious roles. Even in 2025, stupas are being destroyed with bulldozers, with monks forced to witness the devastation under harsh and brutal conditions. Video from @QuanLujun #Tibet #Brutalchina




BREAKING: In a 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court rules that racial gerrymandering, which has been used to create majority black congressional districts for decades, is unconstitutional. Justice Samuel Alito wrote the opinion for the majority.


“Last March, a fog took hold in my head and never left. It settled there somewhere between the moment a DHS agent asked me, ‘Are you Mahmoud Khalil?’ and the moment I realized that I would miss the birth of my first child,” writes Khalil. A year ago, the Trump administration unlawfully arrested Khalil at his home and detained him for 104 days. “I walk free now, only after an army of lawyers sued the administration for targeting me because of my pro-Palestine speech. But the government is relentless in targeting me,” he writes. “So when I walk, I watch my back.” “When strangers approach me and ask, ‘Are you Mahmoud Khalil?’ — the same words in the same expectant tone the DHS agent used before the handcuffs — I do not know if they want to shake my hand or spit in my face. I do not know whether they will say, ‘Thank you for what you're doing,’ or follow me through midtown aggressively shouting, ‘Am Yisrael Chai.’ Both have happened. At first glance, I can never tell them apart.” In a new essay, Khalil writes about grappling with these two truths: “That I walk through the city afraid and that the city, in small and persistent ways, tells me I am welcome. That I am watched and that I am seen.” Read it in full: nymag.visitlink.me/tM03B5






