Debate: What Actually Happened to Rep. Ro Khanna in the West Bank?


Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss Ro Khanna's trip to Israel | Illustration: Adani Samat

In this segment of Free Media, Senior Editor Robby Soave and Daily Caller Editor in Chief Amber Duke discuss Rep. Ro Khanna’s (D–Calif.) recent trip to the West Bank, where he reportedly had a run-in with the Israel Defense Forces and says he was briefly detained.

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Nuclear Regulatory Commission Ignores Trump’s Order To Revise Radiation Exposure Limits


A drawing of nuclear plant reactors | Oleksandr Lutsenko/Dreamstime

President Donald Trump issued Executive Order 14300 on May 23, 2025, aiming to reform the red tape–wrapped Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), which has long stood in the way of the development and deployment of nuclear power. That order noted:

The NRC utilizes safety models that posit there is no safe threshold of radiation exposure and that harm is directly proportional to the amount of exposure. Those models lack sound scientific basis and produce irrational results, such as requiring that nuclear plants protect against radiation below naturally occurring levels. A myopic policy of minimizing even trivial risks ignores the reality that substitute forms of energy production also carry risk, such as pollution with potentially deleterious health effects.

In place of this “myopic policy,” the agency was ordered to “adopt science-based radiation limits.” In particular, the order noted, “the NRC shall reconsider reliance on the linear no-threshold (LNT) model for radiation exposure and the ‘as low as reasonably achievable’ standard, which is predicated on LNT.” The agency was told that it “shall specifically consider adopting determinate radiation limits.”

LNT assumes that there is no level of exposure to nuclear radiation that does not increase the risk of cancer. Regulators use “ALARA” as shorthand for “as low as reasonably achievable.” In practice, instead of reasonably achievable, ALARA has amounted to requiring power plants to reduce radiation exposures to workers and the public to as low as possible.

On July 1, the NRC basically ignored the requirements of the executive order when it finally got around to proposing its new radiation exposure safety rules. While purporting to get rid of ALARA, the NRC’s proposed regulations do nothing of the sort. The NRC’s new proposals recognize that “there are limitations to the accuracy of the LNT model at very low doses, however, the NRC has also not identified a suitable alternative model.” So the agency merely proposes to excise the pesky term ALARA from its regulations while still endorsing the continued use of LNT to justify its radiation dose limits.

Recall that the executive order required the NRC to consider determinate radiation limits instead of LNT. The NRC’s analysis outright rejected this instruction. The agency asserted that “establishing a determinate regulatory dose limit” is “not currently supported by scientific evidence.”

Is that so? Just a year earlier, a team of nuclear radiation researchers at the Idaho National Laboratory issued a comprehensive report that came to the opposite conclusion. Overall, they concluded that “studies have generally not demonstrated statistically significant adverse health effects at doses below 10,000 millirems delivered at low dose rates, despite decades of research.” The Health Physics Society agrees that “below levels of about 100 mSv [10,000 millirems] above background from all sources combined, the observed radiation effects in people are not statistically different from zero.” For comparison, a chest X-ray is about 2 millirems, and an abdomen and pelvis C.T. scan is about 770 millirems.

The Idaho researchers recommend scrapping the current approach in favor of annual determinate exposure limits of 5,000 millirems for occupational workers and 500 millirems for the public. Easing overly strict limits, they argue, “could dramatically improve the cost-competitiveness of nuclear energy, expand access to nuclear-medicine procedures, enhance industrial applications of nuclear technologies, benefit environmental remediation of former nuclear sites, and improve management and disposal of commercial nuclear wastes.”

In contrast, the NRC calculates that its timid revisions would save the nuclear power industry a piddling $9.53 million annually.

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The Push for an Embargo on Israel Is Vague and Confused


Rahm Emanuel, Ro Khanna, and military weapons against an orange background | Ron Sachs - CNP for NY Post/Newscom/Bob Daemmrich/ZUMAPRESS/Adani Samat

Two prominent Democrats visited the Holy Land over the past few days. Rahm Emanuel, chief of staff to former President Barack Obama and the son of an Israeli independence fighter, gave a speech to Tel Aviv University about how the U.S. can “stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Israel on the long journey toward peace.” Meanwhile, Rep. Ro Khanna (D–Calif.) was visiting a Palestinian village in the West Bank when his car was held up by an Israeli settler militia. The Israeli army says it dispersed the militia to let Khanna through; Khanna says that the army is “lying” and that the soldiers took the settlers’ side.

Both Emanuel and Khanna embraced the idea of U.S. sanctions on Israeli settlements in the Palestinian territories. Khanna told socialist talk show host Hasan Piker that a categorical “arms embargo” on Israel would be “probably too far,” and presented sanctions on companies and officials dealing with settlements as a more moderate option. But Emanuel made it clear to The Jerusalem Post that sanctions on settlements were intended to be an all-out attack on the Israeli economy. “You want to pursue a greater Israel?” he said, referring to a term for the Israeli maximalist vision. “You pay full price for it. Everything. That’s a choice you make.”

Sanctions are one of the most powerful but misunderstood tools of U.S. power. And in their rush to realign the U.S.-Israeli relationship, Democrats (and some Republicans) risk getting ahead of their skis. The ambiguity over the word embargo is one example. An arms embargo means that the U.S. government would decline to provide the Israeli government with any weapons. A trade embargo, on the other hand, would involve the U.S. government using its enforcement powers to target private, civilian business in Israel as a form of indirect pressure on the government. These sanctions have a spotty track record in other countries, and even in theory, they only work by causing huge collateral damage.

The main Israeli-Palestinian lightning rod in U.S. politics used to be aid; Israel was the largest foreign recipient of American taxpayer money since World War II. That debate is more or less over, as the Israeli government itself is asking to end direct U.S. subsidies. The pro-Palestinian movement has moved toward demanding a full arms embargo—stopping the U.S. government from sending weapons, whether they are paid for by American or Israeli taxpayers. Indeed, polling shows that most Americans oppose sending weapons in general to Israel.

A New Policy, a pro-Palestinian lobby group founded by two officials who resigned from the Biden administration, argues that the U.S. should use arms sales as “leverage” to change Israeli policy. The Institute for Middle East Understanding Policy Project, another pro-Palestinian lobby group, claims that any weapon sale to Israel would violate U.S. arms control law, which forbids arming militaries involved in large-scale torture or wars of aggression.

These critics are right that the U.S. government has a lot of leverage in this regard. The international arms trade is not really a free market. U.S. weapons sales are either done by the Pentagon itself or are carried out under the direct control of the State Department. They often come with long-term U.S. commitments. Saudi Arabia, the largest customer for American weapons, gets U.S. training and support (including American maintenance technicians on the ground) with its purchases. To replace direct U.S. aid, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is pushing to fully integrate U.S. and Israeli supply chains, and a bill to that effect is about to pass Congress, despite attempts by Khanna and Rep. Thomas Massie (R–Ky.) to stop it.

Some Democratic proponents of continued U.S. arms sales to Israel, such as Slow Boring editor Matt Yglesias, argue that cutting those sales would hurt American manufacturing jobs. That’s not an entirely honest argument. There is, in fact, an excess of demand for American weapons around the world. In many ways, Israel has been allowed to push ahead of the line. The U.S. government guarantees that the Israeli military can receive preferential access to American ammunition (the War Reserves Stockpile Allies-Israel) and better weapons than its neighbors (the qualitative military edge mandate) while other countries are stuck in a backlog. If Israel doesn’t buy those weapons, someone else will.

There is more to the argument that U.S. leverage is overrated. Comparing Saudi Arabia to other cases, former Pentagon officials Elizabeth Dent and Grant Rumley wrote in 2024 that cutting off arms sales has proven to be “a fickle tool” of coercion. Although Israel could not wage its foreign wars without various types of U.S. support, the Israeli-Palestinian issue is a much older and lower-tech form of ethnic conflict. The people who stopped Khanna’s car, after all, were a ragtag militia. Still, perhaps that’s an argument for getting the U.S. out of the mix, if only to wash Americans’ hands of an intractable problem.

Economic sanctions are a different creature altogether. Some sanctions involve seizing the assets of specific foreign officials. Other sanctions are comprehensive bureaucratic attacks on a country’s economy. Over the past few decades, the U.S. Treasury has developed increasingly sophisticated ways to impede other nations’ ability to trade. There is an active, extensive effort to stop oil from flowing into Russia, natural gas from flowing into North Korea, dollars from passing through Iran, or tourists from visiting Cuba.

For all the efficiency of sanctions enforcement, the theory behind comprehensive sanctions is quite crude: Throw a country into economic chaos and its government will be forced to give in to your demands, or better yet, it will be overthrown. In other words, the plan is to use ordinary people’s suffering as leverage. It’s dubious whether that suffering even “works.” Instead of achieving U.S. goals without war, sanctions campaigns have often been the prelude to war. The Trump administration escalated from sanctions on Venezuela to a blockade and then a direct regime change operation. Then it did the same in Iran, much less successfully.

Emanuel and Khanna’s proposal for settlement sanctions is supposed to be a smarter, more precise form of economic pressure. The two Democrats have named a specific target set (officials, construction companies, and banks) and a specific behavior (dealing with settlers in the West Bank) that the targets can cease in order to escape punishment. In theory, the plan is well-tailored to its goals, especially since the settlement movement relies so much on American money, and the issue with settlements is a property dispute at heart.

But the campaign could easily escalate into sanctions on the entire Israeli financial sector because of how many banks deal with settlement real estate. Emanuel at least admitted that this risk existed, perhaps as a way to rattle his right-wing interviewer. Khanna, on the other hand, portrayed economic sanctions as a less extreme measure than an arms embargo. He either did not fully understand the implications of his proposal, or wasn’t completely honest about them, neither of which is a good sign for how it would be implemented.

Democratic critics are right that U.S. involvement, especially military aid and arms dealing, has enabled violence and tyranny across the Middle East. Even if ending that meddling isn’t sufficient to solve all the region’s problems, it is a necessary step toward lowering the temperature. They’re also right to notice that the exceptional U.S. support for Israel has unleashed an exceptional domestic backlash among Americans. But that backlash has grown so quickly that it seems politicians don’t quite know how to translate it into policy changes.

The U.S. government can passively withhold support from its Israeli counterpart before moving on to active coercive measures. Weapon sales are one major example. Another is the direct defensive support from U.S. troops stationed in Israel, or the U.S. intelligence sharing that enables Israeli operations. U.S. diplomats have also put in a lot of effort into rewarding Israel’s friends and punishing its opponents. And there are scores of smaller pro-Israeli exemptions in U.S. law and policy. Ending these measures would make the environment less favorable to the kinds of Israeli actions that progressives oppose, while also reducing the overall U.S. involvement in the Middle East.

In summer 2023, before the current series of wars, I wrote that financial aid “should not be the beginning and end of the conversation” about Israel, because “America is tied and obligated to Jerusalem in ways that go far beyond just $3.8 billion a year.” (That number nearly tripled over the next couple of years.) Indeed, the current U.S.-Israeli entanglement was created through a lot of thoughtlessly passed or seemingly inconsequential laws. That’s why politicians trying to disentangle the relationship have to think carefully and understand exactly what they’re doing.

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Some Thoughts on Law Professor Richard Epstein’s Ideas for Fixing FIFA’s Flawed Rulebook

Today law professor Richard Epstein published an intriguing blog post, entitled “FIFA’s Flawed Rulebook.” Epstein urges that we should reexamine some of the “rot” in soccer’s current rules, which leads to unfair outcomes. He makes three recommendations for  improving the great game: (1) revising yellow-card accumulation and automatic suspensions following red cards; (2) awarding two points for a run-of-play goal and only one point for a penalty-kick goal; and (3) changing overtime by gradually reducing the number of players on the field. As an avid soccer fan, I endorse Epstein’s call for reviewing the rules and improving them where possible. But on the merits of his particular proposals, I like only the first but not the last two.

Revising the yellow card and red card next-game-consequences rules

Epstein proposes reconsidering how yellow cards and red cards currently operate. They both carry consequences over from one game to the next. A yellow card carries little immediate consequence in the first game where it is given. Indeed, because there is no real penalty, players often resort to “tactical fouls” to stop breakaways and other scoring opportunities. It is only when a player receives a second yellow card—even in the next game—that a serious consequence results: expulsion. Red cards also typically carry over to the next game: almost invariably, the player is suspended.

The problem with these next-game repercussions, as Epstein nicely explains, is that “they violate a fundamental principle of justice … by refusing to keep the pluses and minuses of each game self-contained, which could matter any time a red or yellow card is given.” Thus, they carry “the sins of one game over to the next.”

Epstein proposes that, instead of the current yellow card accumulation rule, a better approach is to track hockey by making the offending player sit out for a few minutes—an approach that can be further tweaked by extending the time a player is required to sit for a “major” foul. Similarly, for a red card in one game, the issue of a next-game suspension could be carefully reviewed during the several days leading up to the next game, with a focus on the intent of the offending player. For example, Balogun’s red card suspension (which I discussed at length here and here) could have been reviewed under a predetermined set of principles and overturned.

Epstein’s main point—generally keeping consequences of fouls contained to a single game—makes considerable sense. And, putting in place a more articulated set of principles for reviewing red card suspensions also makes sense, particularly in the wake of the way Balogun’s suspension was reviewed under (seemingly) vague principles. Epstein’s ideas should be given a test run in organized play to see how they work.

Awarding two points for a run-of-play goal and one point for a penalty kick goal.

Epstein’s next proposal is much more controversial. Epstein argues that “it is imperative that scoring rules change so that a penalty shot is worth only one point and a goal from the field is worth two.”

Epstein draws inspiration from fouls in basketball, where a foul shot is worth only one point while field goals are worth two (or three, if taken from long range). Epstein argues that the penalty calls by officials inside the box “are very hard to make.” Given that a penalty kick (PK) has a roughly 70% chance of their success, the “likelihood that any foul in the field disrupts a 70% chance of scoring is highly unlikely.” Accordingly, Epstein concludes, the penalty-kick goal should count for less, just as in basketball.

Epstein’s proposal contains a fundamental flaw: it would encourage defenders to commit penalty-kick fouls in close games. Consider, for example, a situation where Team A has scored in the run of play—earning (under Epstein’s plan) two points. Then, with time running down to the last minute, Team B desperately throws players forward, launching a long ball into the penalty box. Miraculously, the ball finds Team B’s striker, who lines up the potentially tying shot from close range. But …

Just before Team B’s striker can shoot, a defender throws both hands around him and pulls him down—a “tackle” in the American football style. The defender can be confident that this is the right tactical move, because the striker will then be awarded a penalty kick that, under Epstein’s scheme, cannot tie the game. The striker will, at most, gain one point from the PK. And, of course, during the time it takes to do the penalty kick, return the ball to the middle of the field, and then finish the game, time will have expired—meaning that Team A has protected its two-point lead by deliberately surrendering only a one-point PK opportunity.

Thus, Epstein’s rule change creates incentives for the ultimate “tactical foul”—defenders deliberately giving up one-point penalty kicks rather than the possibility of a two-point, run-of-play goal. I see no way around this basic problem, which is presumably why Epstein’s idea (long advanced) has not gained any traction.

Deciding tied games

Epstein also takes a crack at changing soccer’s overtime rules. Right now, a tied game is resolved by a thirty-minute overtime period (with no “golden goal”). If the game remains tied after those thirty minutes, then the game is decided through PKs, five per side, continuing if necessary until one team is ahead.

Epstein’s proposal is to change how the thirty-minute overtime period operates. He would allow additional substitute players and require that, every ten minutes of the overtime period, a team would remove one player from the field. According to Epstein, this drop-off plan would “translate into more goals and an increase in the number of tactical choices.”

I understand Epstein’s intuition that fewer players on the field should mean more goals. But that assumes a static model of defensive tactics. Perhaps teams would adapt to the “drop-off” situation by organizing into tighter, more defensively oriented schemes, holding players in more defensive positions.

A more defensive posture was the result of the “golden goal” rule that FIFA followed for a short time. The rule was “widely perceived as [a] failed experiment[].” The rule did not bring about more active and attacking play as originally intended, but instead led to more cautious play. I suspect that Epstein’s drop-off proposal might similarly lead to more defensive responses.

But even if Epstein were correct that the drop-off rule is an improvement over the current thirty-minute overtime period, there remains the question of whether a thirty-minute overtime period is good for soccer. The overtime period is clearly bad for television schedules, since it extends the length of the game in an unpredictable way. And, in turn, this is bad for TV viewers, who likewise can’t count on knowing when a game will end.

A way to mitigate this problem is to bring a game that is tied at the end of ninety minutes to a rapid conclusion. If the game is tied at the end of regulation time, a PK shootout could be immediately held. But, in my view, a better approach would be to eliminate static PKs entirely and move to something like the old NASL/early MLS 35-yard shootout rule. This involved an attacker starting 35 yards out and having five seconds to score on the goalkeeper.

This general format has been tweaked by Tim Farrell into a more sophisticated proposal, known as ADG (attacker-defender-goalkeeper). The idea is that a single attacker would take on both a defender and a goalkeeper from 32 yards out, with  fifteen seconds to score. Computer simulations suggest this creates about a 30% chance of scoring. And to help improve player safety, a short rest period (ten minutes is the suggestion) is given to players before the shootout. Farrell has urged that his proposal be given a trial in organized play. And it seems like a good idea to me, either immediately at the end of 90 minutes or at the end of an overtime period.

More broadly, it is great that Epstein, Farrell, and others are thinking about tweaks to the beautiful game. If experience reveals ways to improve the game, they ought to be adopted.

HT: Thanks to Josh Blackman for calling Epstein’s Civitas article to my attention.

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Ohio Cut Red Tape. Now Its Business Sector Is Thriving.


A map of the United States | Illustration: BrandPacks/Envato

If you’re an entrepreneur, you might want to consider relocating to the Rust Belt. 

CNBC recently released its 20th annual America’s Top States for Business rankings, which rated Ohio as the most business-friendly state in the country. North Carolina, Virginia, Texas, and Minnesota rounded out the top five. 

CNBC scores states on seven categories—infrastructure, economy, workforce, cost of doing business, tech and innovation, quality of life, and business friendliness—that businesses prioritize when deciding where to plant their flag. The scores are then weighted by how frequently states use those categories as selling points. With a nationwide focus on energy, water access, and the return of onshore manufacturing, CNBC chose infrastructure as its top-weighted category, factoring in grid reliability, energy capacity, and ease of permitting for the first time in its rankings.

It should come as no surprise that Ohio and other states that eschew red tape are near or at the top of the rankings. Since 2012, lawmakers in the Buckeye State have made it a priority to attract new business by easing regulations. Last year, Ohio passed House Bill 15 to reform its permitting process for new infrastructure projects. The bill set a 150-day deadline for the Ohio Power Siting Board to review complete applications, reduced the property tax rate on new energy generation and conversion equipment to 7 percent (from 25 percent), and set the tax rate on new transmission, distribution, and pipeline infrastructure to 25 percent (instead of the 85 percent–88 percent charged for existing assets). 

Under this law, utilities and transmission operators must publish public-facing transmission capacity heat maps that show where developers can plug in and where the grid is maxed out. It also lets data centers, factories, and other large electric-load customers plug directly into their own power plants rather than tapping the existing grid, meaning projects can get up and running faster without raising rates for other consumers. 

It’s a similar story in North Carolina. After finishing first in the CNBC rankings in 2025—its third top-place finish in four years—the Tar Heel State came in second this year. Since 2015, North Carolina has transformed itself, much like Ohio, by prioritizing permitting and land-use reforms that have made the state a haven for entrepreneurs. 

In 2015, the state passed House Bill 795, which reduced the number of projects subject to its State Environmental Policy Act by raising the monetary threshold for review and expanding the list of exempt projects. The state’s Permit Toolbox guides prospective applicants through its regulatory process and includes an Express Permitting Program that provides projects with an expedited review, albeit at a higher cost. In 2023, the state passed Senate Bill 677, which set strict time limits for municipal governments to review infrastructure projects and allowed developers to use third-party reviewers instead of local permitting offices. 

North Carolina also has the lowest corporate tax rate in the nation—a flat 2 percent rate—which will be fully phased out by 2030. 

Recognizing that businesses need abundant energy to thrive, Virginia, Texas, and Minnesota have all undergone substantial changes to their permitting process for energy projects. 

In 2024, Minnesota simplified its environmental review process, which was expected at the time to cut permitting times for energy projects by “nine months to a year” and reduce the timeline for project approval by at least 50 percent, according to Utility Dive. However, a year later, there’s no data on the policy’s effects. Virginia’s success is more apparent. Reforms signed into law in 2022 by former Virginia Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin have led to a 66 percent reduction in permit processing times in the commonwealth. Texas, meanwhile, allows power generators to connect to the grid with fewer permits than are needed in other states.

Of course, there’s still room for improvement. The top five states have also made a habit of pairing permitting reform with grants, subsidies, and tax credits that unnecessarily prop up one industry over another, casting lawmakers as the arbiters of who wins and loses in business. 

Ohio, for instance, uses revenue from its liquor monopoly to fund JobsOhio. This private nonprofit helps companies navigate the permit process and find incentives and tax breaks to set up shop in Ohio. North Carolina offers several grants and tax incentives to attract high-value companies, such as sales and use tax exemptions for data centers, software publishers, manufacturers, fulfillment facilities, warehouses, and research and development activities.

Luckily, this favoritism is beginning to receive pushback from the general public. In Ohio, the backlash against tax breaks offered to data centers and other priority businesses prompted Republican Gov. Mike DeWine to pause the state’s tax exemptions, a sentiment Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott echoed in a letter to state regulators. Virginia, which has the most data centers in the country, recently passed a first-of-its-kind electricity consumption tax on data centers instead of eliminating its tax incentives.

Permitting reform and deregulation aren’t sexy policy ideas, but they are effective in driving job creation and making people better off. As these states take the lead, hopefully other states and the federal government will soon follow suit.

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Did a “Minneapolis Effect” and Later De-Policing Cause Firearms Crimes to Spike in 2020?

In 2020, major cities across the country suffered dramatic spikes in homicides and shootings. One hypothesis for explaining these spikes is de-policing: the idea that anti-police protests in the wake of George Floyd’s killing in Minneapolis led police across the nation to pull back from some forms of proactive policing. The basic idea is that anti-police protests in the wake of George Floyd’s killing in Minneapolis led police across the nation to pull back from some forms of proactive policing. The possible consequence, according to this hypothesis, was an increase in homicides and gun violence. This thesis, which I have called the “Minneapolis Effect,” continues to warrant research and investigation. It remains a strong candidate for explaining a significant part of the nation’s homicide and shooting spikes in major cities in 2020.

My chapter in a forthcoming book on violent crime argues that more research should be conducted to specifically examine the relationship between de-policing and firearms offenses. As I explain in the chapter, it is well known that, in 2020, many major cities across the country suffered from dramatic spikes in homicides and shootings. According to the National Center for Health Statistics, the homicide rate in the U.S. increased from 6.0 homicides in 2019 to 7.8 per 100,000 in 2020. This was the largest one-year increase in homicide rates ever recorded. Similarly, a major analysis of a sample of 34 cities by Professor Richard Rosenfeld et al. for the Council on Criminal Justice reported that homicides in 2020 were 30% higher than in 2019. The study also found that a structural break occurred in the homicide trends in June of that year, indicating large, statistically significant increases in homicide rates after adjusting for seasonality and long-term trends. Nationally, nearly 5,000 more Americans died that year due to the increase in homicides. And much of the increase in homicides was concentrated in the nation’s major cities, apparently in impoverished areas.

While explaining trends in homicide rates in general is a long-debated topic, explaining why thousands of additional victims were killed in a recent year remains a discrete issue that would seem to be within the ken of modern social science.

Early in 2021, I presented my “Minneapolis Effect” thesis in an article published in Federal Sentencing Reporter. My analysis launched from the structural break identified by the Rosenfeld report, which identified June 2020 as the beginning point (the break point)  in the homicide trendline. I described this phenomenon as the “Minneapolis Effect,” drawing a parallel to the earlier “Ferguson Effect” that was offered to explain certain increases in homicides following the shooting of Michael Brown in 2014.

My analysis relied on what appeared to be almost simultaneous increases in homicides and declines in proactive policing—that is, declines in self-initiated policing tactics designed to reduce crime through preventive strategies, such as street stops or anti-gun patrols. Looking at Rosenfeld’s national data, as well as data from five specific cities—Minneapolis, Chicago, Philadelphia, Milwaukee, and New York—I noted that homicides appeared to have spiked above normal trendlines around the beginning of June 2020. I then observed that, just as homicides were spiking, various forms of policing were declining. In particular, some data indicated that after the anti-police protests surrounding George Floyd’s death, some forms of proactive policing declined. For example, police were redeployed to manage the protests, diverting them from directed anti-gun patrols, vehicle and pedestrian stops, frisks for firearms, and other activities that deter the  carrying of illegal firearms. And even after protests began to wane, police pulled back (for various reasons) from aggressive efforts to combat gun crimes. My thesis was that the consequence of reducing law enforcement activity directed against gun violence was, perhaps unsurprisingly, an increase in gun violence. (In America, the vast majority of homicides are committed with firearms.) I found support for this thesis in the data from the cities mentioned above.

My Minneapolis Effect thesis fits within a larger body of research, which tends to support the idea that proactive policing may be particularly effective in reducing gun crimes. I collected the then-existing research in my 2020 article. In the aftermath of George Floyd’s death and subsequent calls for police reform, scholars have discussed de-policing, where officers reduce proactive law enforcement activity in response to heightened scrutiny, police reforms, or negative public sentiment. Now, the empirical literature on de-policing is growing, with several recent studies investigating whether and how police disengagement contributes to broader changes in crime rates, particularly following high-profile police killings.

You can read the details in my chapter. It reviews recent literature on de-policing that has been published since May 2020. In general, this literature provides evidence that some de-policing has occurred in some cities, particularly reductions in discretionary police activities, such as vehicle and pedestrian stops. These studies then analyze whether those reductions have produced increases in certain crime categories. In particular, this chapter summarizes nine new contributions to the de-policing debate, highlighting areas of emerging consensus as well as areas where further research is needed.

My chapter concludes that the emerging empirical evidence, while not conclusive on causation, generally supports the hypothesis that de-policing increases firearms-related crime. Given the magnitude of the crime spikes that may be attributable to de-policing, further research on this firearms-specific hypothesis should be a high priority.

 

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Nuclear Regulatory Commission Ignores Trump’s Order To Revise Radiation Exposure Limits


A drawing of nuclear plant reactors | Oleksandr Lutsenko/Dreamstime

President Donald Trump issued Executive Order 14300 on May 23, 2025, aiming to reform the red tape–wrapped Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), which has long stood in the way of the development and deployment of nuclear power. That order noted:

The NRC utilizes safety models that posit there is no safe threshold of radiation exposure and that harm is directly proportional to the amount of exposure. Those models lack sound scientific basis and produce irrational results, such as requiring that nuclear plants protect against radiation below naturally occurring levels. A myopic policy of minimizing even trivial risks ignores the reality that substitute forms of energy production also carry risk, such as pollution with potentially deleterious health effects.

In place of this “myopic policy,” the agency was ordered to “adopt science-based radiation limits.” In particular, the order noted, “the NRC shall reconsider reliance on the linear no-threshold (LNT) model for radiation exposure and the ‘as low as reasonably achievable’ standard, which is predicated on LNT.” The agency was told that it “shall specifically consider adopting determinate radiation limits.”

LNT assumes that there is no level of exposure to nuclear radiation that does not increase the risk of cancer. Regulators use “ALARA” as shorthand for “as low as reasonably achievable.” In practice, instead of reasonably achievable, ALARA has amounted to requiring power plants to reduce radiation exposures to workers and the public to as low as possible.

On July 1, the NRC basically ignored the requirements of the executive order when it finally got around to proposing its new radiation exposure safety rules. While purporting to get rid of ALARA, the NRC’s proposed regulations do nothing of the sort. The NRC’s new proposals recognize that “there are limitations to the accuracy of the LNT model at very low doses, however, the NRC has also not identified a suitable alternative model.” So the agency merely proposes to excise the pesky term ALARA from its regulations while still endorsing the continued use of LNT to justify its radiation dose limits.

Recall that the executive order required the NRC to consider determinate radiation limits instead of LNT. The NRC’s analysis outright rejected this instruction. The agency asserted that “establishing a determinate regulatory dose limit” is “not currently supported by scientific evidence.”

Is that so? Just a year earlier, a team of nuclear radiation researchers at the Idaho National Laboratory issued a comprehensive report that came to the opposite conclusion. Overall, they concluded that “studies have generally not demonstrated statistically significant adverse health effects at doses below 10,000 millirems delivered at low dose rates, despite decades of research.” The Health Physics Society agrees that “below levels of about 100 mSv [10,000 millirems] above background from all sources combined, the observed radiation effects in people are not statistically different from zero.” For comparison, a chest X-ray is about 2 millirems, and an abdomen and pelvis C.T. scan is about 770 millirems.

The Idaho researchers recommend scrapping the current approach in favor of annual determinate exposure limits of 5,000 millirems for occupational workers and 500 millirems for the public. Easing overly strict limits, they argue, “could dramatically improve the cost-competitiveness of nuclear energy, expand access to nuclear-medicine procedures, enhance industrial applications of nuclear technologies, benefit environmental remediation of former nuclear sites, and improve management and disposal of commercial nuclear wastes.”

In contrast, the NRC calculates that its timid revisions would save the nuclear power industry a piddling $9.53 million annually.

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De-Banked: It’s Only A Matter Of Time Before It Happens To You

De-Banked: It’s Only A Matter Of Time Before It Happens To You

Via InternationalMan.com,

“We are writing to inform you that we cannot continue serving you.

As a result of this decision, your account will be closed within 14 days from the date of this letter.

Any remaining account balances will be sent by check to the address we have on file.”

Sooner or later, expect your bank to send you a letter like this.

They won’t even tell you why they are closing your account, and you will probably have trouble opening accounts at other banks.

De-banking is a disturbing and growing trend.

In short, the ruling elite – parasites, more accurately – have weaponized the banking system to enforce conformity to their preferred narrative.

If you don’t lap up their lies about Covid, climate, elections, wars, rising crime, or whatever the media is hyping as the “current thing,” expect the financial hammer to come down on you without warning.

You could lose your ability to take payment from your customers and pay your bills at the drop of a hat.

We’ve seen banks close the accounts of prominent doctors critical of the Covid mass hysteria and politicians opposed to schemes to centralize power on a global level (globalism).

However, for every example of a bank closing a high-profile person’s account, hundreds – or thousands – of other ordinary people likely receive the same despicable treatment but are never heard from.

Every day people are losing their ability to interact in the economy because the elite have determined they committed a thought crime.

Interestingly, the banks never canceled the accounts of the warmongers who spread the lies about WMD in Iraq or the liars that led to the toppling of the Ghadafi government in Libya and the liars that fueled the Syrian conflict.

All of their bank accounts are in good standing, even though they contributed to the unnecessary deaths of countless innocents.

Nor did the banks close the accounts of those who, for years, peddled the Russiagate lies that tore the country apart or those who claimed the Hunter Biden laptop story was phony when it was, in fact, real and probably affected the outcome of an election.

All of their bank accounts are in good standing too.

The banks also did not close Jeffrey Epstein’s accounts, even though they were likely aware of what he was up to.

These are just a few examples of the blatant double standard.

If you are skeptical about whether men can get pregnant or if cow farts will destroy the planet, you should expect very different treatment than Jeffrey Epstein or people whose lies align with the military-industrial complex.

De-banking is another example of how formerly free societies are rapidly descending into high-tech totalitarianism.

It’s only prudent to expect de-banking to worsen as governments fall deeper into bankruptcy and become more desperate to maintain control. Controlling the narrative – partly by de-banking anyone with opposing views – is crucial for them to try to hold on to their power.

Today you can be de-banked for having the wrong opinion. Tomorrow you could be de-banked for even more trivial reasons.

For example, even if you loyally follow whatever the TV tells you to think, the banks may notice you are purchasing “too much” meat or gas and are therefore exceeding your monthly carbon allowance. In the name of saving the planet and maintaining their ESG scores, they’ll close your account.

Think that’s far-fetched?

Consider that already, today, Bank of America shares all gun purchases from its clients with the FBI. It would be naive to assume they and other banks don’t automatically share additional data.

Or that PayPal recently floated the idea of charging people $2,500 for promoting so-called “misinformation” – a vague propaganda term that really means “information the people in charge don’t want you to know because they’re afraid you will come to a conclusion they don’t like.”

It’s not hard to see where the de-banking train is going.

We’re only a few stops away from a full-blown social credit system.

There Is No Free Market in Money and Banking

Money is simply supposed to be something useful for storing and exchanging value.

Banks are simply supposed to be money warehouses.

However, that is not how it works today.

Governments have perverted money and banking into tools to control the population.

An unconvincing argument you may hear is that banks are private companies exercising discretion on their clients. They are within their right to de-bank whoever they want.

They say it is no different from a baker having the right to refuse to bake a cake for someone they don’t like.

You could make that argument if only there was a totally free market in money and banking… but there isn’t. Not even close.

Here’s a more accurate analogy.

Imagine a situation where the only bread available on the market is government bread, and the only way you could obtain such bread is through government-approved bakeries. Independent bakeries would not exist.

The government could then exert overt and subtle pressure on the bakeries to ensure they aligned with their preferred narrative by removing their permission to operate or threatening to. They could also impose fines, start invasive investigations, or add more regulations.

There would be no shortage of ways a bureaucrat could find to make things unpleasant for the bakeries.

The bakeries’ owners know such a dynamic exists, so they enthusiastically fall in line with the “current thing” to avoid problems.

Then, suppose it became known to the bakery that one of their customers had committed a thought crime. They wouldn’t hesitate to throw him to the curb, even if he had been a loyal customer for many years. It simply wouldn’t be worth the potential problems. Word would spread to other bakeries that he was trouble, and they’d avoid his business too.

Since the only bread on the market is government bread, which is only available from government-licensed bakeries, he would be unable to obtain bread.

A similar situation exists today in money and banking.

In Marx’s Communist Manifesto, the 5th plank calls for the “centralization of credit in the hands of the state, by means of a national bank with state capital and an exclusive monopoly.”

That perfectly describes fiat currency and the Federal Reserve, which oversees the banking system.

The free market wouldn’t choose easy-to-produce government confetti as money without laws forcing their use.

Here’s another way to think of it.

Imagine if Tony Soprano forced his neighborhood to use pieces of paper with his signature as money and threatened violence against anyone who disobeyed. That’s what governments are doing with their currencies today.

It’s a far cry from when people used gold – a politically neutral, hard-to-produce asset voluntarily chosen on the market – as money.

That’s why the notion of a free market in money is laughable.

We don’t have free market money; we have communist money forced upon us with violence and threats of violence. Further, for most practical purposes, the banking system is needed to use this lousy “money.”

Similarly, modern banks are not creatures of the free market like the independent money warehouses of the past. Today banks exist at the pleasure and service of the state – and obtain special privileges as a result.

Perhaps the most obvious observation is that there would be zero government bailouts in a free market and certainly no such thing as “too big to fail” banks. Incidentally, it’s no coincidence that the most egregious de-bankers are the “too big to fail” banks.

Further, modern banks resemble government-sanctioned Ponzi Schemes, as they rely on the false belief that depositors’ (fake) money is readily available when, in fact, it isn’t because of fractional reserve banking. If only a tiny portion of depositors demanded their money back, most banks would be in big trouble.

Governments allow banks to commit this fraud that would be illegal in any other industry.

For example, imagine a fractional reserve car dealership or jewelry store where the car salesman and jewelry store owner could create 10x more claims for cars and pieces of jewelry than what actually exists in their inventories. They would be selling claims for goods that don’t exist.

Not only would such a practice be fraudulent, but it would also not be sustainable.

If even a few people who purchased fractional reserve claims on the nonexistent cars and jewelry asked for delivery, it would blow the whole scam up.

The government and the banks understand this dangerous dynamic, which is one reason they created the so-called “lender of last resort,” the Federal Reserve. When the banks get in trouble, the Fed can create new currency units out of thin air to bail them out.

Let me translate it into plain English.

A “lender of last resort” means legalized counterfeiting of the currency to backstop a legalized Ponzi Scheme.

Such blatant fraud would have no place in a free market for money and banking. However, because it is institutionalized and has the government’s blessing, most people thoughtlessly accept the situation as normal.

In a truly free market for money, people would voluntarily choose whatever was most suitable for storing and exchanging value. Historically, that meant gold because it was the one physical commodity that was hardest to produce and most resistant to debasement. Tomorrow it might be Bitcoin.

In a truly free market, banks would cease to be government-sanctioned Ponzi Schemes and revert to their historical role as independent money warehouses. Further, anyone could enter the banking business in a free market; you wouldn’t need the approval of the Federal Reserve cartel, as banks do today.

That’s why the argument that de-banking is simply private companies rightfully exercising discretion is disingenuous.

The Solution

The ideal solution is to get the government entirely out of banking and money and have a totally free market. But that’s probably not going to happen anytime soon.

So what can you do about de-banking?

First, don’t expect to use physical cash as a solution for long.

The elites have long had nefarious plans to eliminate cash. Today they’re

Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/14/2026 – 15:05

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/QGSNXuU Tyler Durden

Billionaire Ken Griffin Has Spent $40 Million To Keep The Senate Red, But Snubs Trump’s Favorite Texan

Billionaire Ken Griffin Has Spent $40 Million To Keep The Senate Red, But Snubs Trump’s Favorite Texan

Ken Griffin has put roughly $40 million into Republican midterm efforts this year and could double that by November, according to the Wall Street Journal. The money runs through nearly every competitive Senate race in the country – except for one… Ken Paxton’s run for a seat in Texas, which won’t see a dime of it.

According to the report, the Citadel founder has no plans to help the Texas Republican nominee – the candidate President Trump pushed onto the ballot by helping end John Cornyn’s Senate career. The Journal notes that donors rarely broadcast who they’re refusing to fund. When one does – a day before super PACs file their quarterly reports, and eight days before Senate Majority Leader John Thune headlines a Washington fundraiser for Paxton – it’s fair to assume other donors are meant to hear it.

The refusal lands in the middle of an argument Republicans have been having since late May, sometimes privately and increasingly on the record: who pays for the candidates Trump forced on the party? The president’s own political action committee, MAGA Inc., was sitting on roughly $382 million as of last month, the Boston Globe reported, and hasn’t said what the money is for. Cornyn, asked about funding the man who beat him, told Semafor: “I think he can spend his money.”

Where Ken Is Spending

Griffin’s biggest check this cycle, $10 million, went to the Senate Leadership Fund, the super PAC aligned with Thune, according to the Journal. He gave $2.5 million apiece to groups backing Sen. Dan Sullivan in Alaska and Sen. Susan Collins in Maine, and $1.5 million to one supporting Rep. Ashley Hinson in Iowa’s open-seat race. The Cook Political Report rates Alaska and Maine as tossups, while Iowa leans Republican – a state Trump carried by double digits in 2024. On the House side, he gave $5 million in May to the Congressional Leadership Fund and $5.5 million split between two other groups, including one that backs veterans running as Republicans. “I am able to fully fund these races because of his steady investment cycle over cycle,” said Chris Winkelman, the Congressional Leadership Fund’s president.

The people familiar with his giving told the Journal that Griffin is focused on the Senate because six-year terms give his money the longest reach into the party’s future after Trump, whose term ends in January 2029. A senator elected this fall serves until January 2033. Whoever wins the White House in 2028 will be confirmed, funded and investigated by the class Griffin is paying to elect right now.

He has already said which 2028 candidate he’d rather see. At the Allen & Company conference in Sun Valley on July 8, interviewer Andrew Ross Sorkin asked Griffin to pick between Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance in a hypothetical primary. Griffin said he’d be “predisposed” toward Rubio, whose 2016 campaign he backed with $5 million to a supporting super PAC, Axios reported. (The Journal notes the question offered only those two names.) According to Revenge, Axios reporter Alex Isenstadt’s book on the 2024 campaign, Griffin urged Trump not to put Vance on the ticket at all. Vance has said he’ll decide on a presidential run after the midterms.

Griffin’s distance from Trump goes back years. Worth an estimated $50 billion-plus, he was the country’s fifth-biggest political donor in 2024, giving $108 million by OpenSecrets’ count – about 37 percent of what top donor Elon Musk spent that cycle – and none of it went to Trump, whose campaigns he has never funded. He spent $5 million that cycle keeping Nikki Haley’s primary bid alive. He voted for Trump – “not with a smile on my face,” he said afterward – gave $1 million to the inaugural committee, and has since praised the administration’s border enforcement while criticizing its tariffs and its pressure on the Federal Reserve. If his giving doubles as projected, Griffin would join the cycle’s top tier of donors, which a New York Times analysis this spring put at Andreessen Horowitz ($115.5 million), George Soros ($102.9 million) and Elon Musk ($85 million).

Then There’s Texas

Paxton, the state attorney general, launched his challenge in April 2025, and Senate Republican leadership spent heavily to stop him. Cornyn and his allies put more than $90 million into the primary, according to the Texas Tribune, including $11 million from One Nation, the nonprofit arm of Thune’s political operation; pro-Cornyn groups outspent Paxton’s side by roughly nine to one. Cornyn finished a point ahead in the March 3 first round but short of a majority. A week before the runoff, Trump endorsed Paxton, calling him “a true MAGA warrior.” Cornyn became the first Republican senator in Texas history to lose his party’s nomination, in a spring when Trump-backed challengers also took out Sen. Bill Cassidy in Louisiana and Rep. Thomas Massie in Kentucky.

Democratic nominee James Talarico, an Austin state representative, had raised more than $40 million through his primary and took in $600,000 in the two hours after Paxton won, his campaign said. Paxton had raised $7.6 million and had $2.3 million left as of early May, per FEC records cited by NBC News. Republican operatives told the network that holding the state, with its roughly 20 media markets, could cost outside groups $100 million. Meanwhile, anti-Paxton Republicans handed Democrats their script: a 2023 impeachment on corruption charges by the Republican-led Texas House (the state Senate acquitted him) and years of legal and ethics controversies besides.

That history, the people familiar with Griffin’s giving told the Journal, is why he’s staying out.

The $10 million question

There’s a catch to Griffin’s ghosting of Paxton – The Senate Leadership Fund hasn’t ruled Texas out. If the group goes in this fall, Griffin’s $10 million goes in with it; money doesn’t stay in labeled jars. So either “no plans to help Paxton” has some give in it, or the leadership PAC’s most prominent donor has effectively told it where not to spend. Neither Griffin’s office nor Latcham has answered that question on the record.

The backdrop: Republicans hold the Senate 53-47, Democrats need to net four seats, and Griffin’s side of the ledger has strengthened without him lifting a finger. In Maine, Democrat Graham Platner – who won the June 9 primary with about 70 percent of the vote – formally quit the race July 10 over a sexual assault allegation he denies, leaving the party to pick a replacement at a 601-delegate convention on July 25, two days ahead of the ballot deadline. Collins, backed by Griffin’s $2.5 million and $42 million in SLF reservations, currently has no opponent at all.

The quarterly filings land Wednesday, and the Paxton fundraiser is a week later.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/14/2026 – 14:45

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/RMzA5ke Tyler Durden

Sheriff Says Somali Youth Gangs Are Running Wild In Minneapolis

Sheriff Says Somali Youth Gangs Are Running Wild In Minneapolis

Authored by Joe Schaeffer via Liberty Nation,

A Minneapolis sheriff has triggered an uncomfortable conversation by saying out loud what you are not supposed to talk about in Minnesota. “Out of control” gangs of Somali youths are terrorizing the city, and the mayhem is poised to get worse.

(Photo by Christopher Mark Juhn/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Ramsey County Sheriff Bob Fletcher released a livestream video on July 6 decrying widespread violence by Somali gang members over the Fourth of July weekend. He also took the opportunity to criticize media outlets in the Twin Cities and the state for refusing to cover the problem.

Fletcher “stated that the Somali gangs are responsible for at least 14 murders in the last two years as well as over 100 shootings – many of them at high-profile events like graduations and the State Fair. Fletcher also said in his promo video that he heard from a Minneapolis police officer who said that 20 percent of their homicides are now Somalis,” local news site Alpha News reports.

The situation is blowing up right in front of the public eye.

‘It’s All About Ego for 99% of It’

“Investigators say Somali gang violence is growing quickly and now spans the metro [area], with 12 Somali gangs tracked from Minneapolis and St. Paul to St. Cloud, Apple Valley and Burnsville. Most of the violence involves guns, according to the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office,” Fox-9 TV in Minneapolis reports. “Authorities say the gangs are still young and growing, with about 300 people involved right now.”

Ramsey County Deputy Ben Seidel said the Somali youth gangs don’t operate like traditional inner-city gangs in the sense of being motivated by money. “From what I’ve seen… it’s all about showboating. It’s all about ego for 99% of it. They aren’t selling narcotics. It’s all about just gloating,” Seidel states in the video.

There’s a history to Somali gang violence in Minneapolis that explains the seeming novelty of these officers’ remarks. In blue-dominated Minnesota, criticizing the Somali community in any way is immediately defined as racist. The “R card” has been so weaponized in the state that health-care fraud was allowed to flourish for years, which may have cost American taxpayers up to $9 billion.

There is nothing new about Somali gangs in Minnesota. They have been identified as a growing problem for 20 years or more. And it has never sounded like child’s play. Every few years, the issue is ventilated, only to recede amid de rigueur pressure from “anti-racist” organizations and personalities.

The City of Minneapolis commissioned a study in 2007 after a series of robberies by Somali teens in 2005. As Minnesota Public Radio detailed at the time:

“The report’s author, consultant Shukri Adan, presented her findings to members of the city council.

“Adan says at first it was thought the Somali youth were involved in loosely organized groups of ‘troublemakers.’ However, Adan says as these young people ended up in jail, they met established gang members and learned from them how to organize.

“‘They’re very sophisticated and they’ve adapted some of that into the Somali gang structure. But for the Somali gangs that I’ve identified, they were specifically Somalis and all their membership were Somalis, even though they had associations with other gangs.'”

Yet leftist MPR made sure to point out that “[t]he report says gang activity is relatively small. Statistics from the Minnesota Gang Strike Force identifies 52 Somali gang members – less than one percent of all known gang members in Minnesota.”

Three years later, the Somali youth had moved on to serious organized criminal activity.

Somali Gangs Trafficking African American Girls

A “federal indictment unsealed in November [2010] in Tennessee charges 29 people with crimes from sex trafficking to credit card fraud to witness intimidation. It said the accused were members or associates of three Somali gangs – often acting as one larger gang – bent on forcing girls into prostitution for their own profit,” the Associated Press reported in 2011. The gangs were trafficking girls from Minneapolis to Nashville and Columbus, Ohio – three cities with significant Somali populations.

The article featured a harrowing account of the brutalization of a 12-year-old girl. And there was a further revelation that the professional “anti-racists” would rather you not hear about.

“The indictment details several instances in which young Somali or African American girls were taken from place to place and forced to engage in sex acts with multiple people. One girl was under 13 when she was first prostituted. Another girl was 18 when she was raped by multiple men in a hotel room,” the AP reported in November 2010.

Whereas much of the violence perpetrated by Somali youth gangs is targeted at their fellow East African immigrant communities, underage native-born American black girls were among those being sexually exploited by this ring, as well. Where was the outrage from the Congressional Black Caucus?

Just as with MPR, the AP seemed to downplay the number of Somali gang members in 2011. “There are seven Somali gangs in Minneapolis, and a total of about 200 documented Somali gang members and associates, [Minneapolis police officer and Somali community liaison Jeanine Brudenell] said – about 10 percent of the roughly 2,100 documented active gang members in the Minneapolis Police Department’s system. The gang members are a small fraction of the Somali population,” the AP stressed.

Fast forward to 2026 and we’re up to 300 gang members (and who knows how many more yet to be identified?). Even Sheriff Fletcher, while calling out the problem nobody wants to talk about, treads carefully.

“Fletcher was careful not to castigate the entire Somali community or even all of their youth in his comments,” Alpha News noted of the livestream video. “Rather, he said that the violence is stemming from a small number of misguided, mostly male youth, which he later clarified is about 300 young people participating in about 12 gangs across the metro [area] and Minnesota.”

There’s one final element we should emphasize. As Somalis moved en masse to states like Minnesota, they retained their fiercely held tribal identities.

“[C]lan rivalry is often the most important reason for gang violence” within the Somali community, Viktor Marsai at the Center for Immigration Studies wrote in March. “Clan violence is fueled not only in the offline space. More and more Somali TikTokers and Youtubers are using online platforms to glorify their own clan tradition and savage rival groups. In many cases, tens of thousands of people are following these accounts and add hundreds of comments. The inflammatory effects spill over from the online… these influencers utilize their clout to support violence in their country of residence and in Somalia.”

Americans may not be able to comprehend the meaning behind what Deputy Seidel refers to as “showboating” among Somali gang members. How much of this comes from lingering clan identification dating back to the old country? How much is fueled by a foreign culture wholly incompatible with the American way of life?

Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/14/2026 – 14:25

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/iOIyURb Tyler Durden