Adam Kinzinger joins CNN days after leaving Congress, sparking viral mockery: ‘Nobody saw this coming’

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Adam Kinzinger has quickly lined up a new gig after concluding his tenure one of the most outspoken anti-Trump lawmakers on Capitol Hill as a cable news pundit. 

CNN announced Wednesday that Kinzinger, who officially left Congress this week after choosing not to seek reelection in the 2022 midterms, has joined the network as a senior political commentator. 

Kinzinger made his debut as a CNN contributor on “Erin Burnett Outfront.”

“Congressman, we really are thrilled to have you onboard. Welcome,” CNN anchor Erin Burnett told the ex-lawmaker. 

THIS IS CNN? BELEAGUERED NETWORK HAS TUMULTUOUS YEAR, MARKED BY HIGH-PROFILE FIRINGS, CONTINUED RATINGS WOES

“It’s great to be on the team, by the way,” Kinzinger replied. “Thank you. I’m excited.” 

Kinzinger, one of the lawmakers on the House Jan. 6 Committee, was a frequent guest on CNN over the past two years, invited on-air to bash former President Trump and the majority of Republicans.

Critics have long asserted that Kinzinger’s anti-Trump commentary signaled his desire to join a liberal news network at the end of his term.

DON LEMON SAYS CNN WAS NEVER ‘LIBERAL,’ INSISTS NEW BOSS ISN’T TRANSFORMING NETWORK

Now that Kinzinger is CNN pundit, many mocked the not-so-surprising career move. 

“Hahahahahahaha,” radio host Dana Loesch reacted. 

“In a shock to literally no one,” political satirist Tim Young wrote. 

“Nobody saw this coming. Nobody,” Cornell Law Professor and media critic William A. Jacobson sarcastically tweeted.

“Was basically giving CNN his resume for the past year,” Axios reporter Tim Baysinger quipped. 

“It’s the least CNN could do after his 2-year apprenticeship there,” Washington Free Beacon reporter Chuck Ross mocked the announcement. 

“Quick turnaround,” The Hollywood Reporter media writer Alex Weprin pointed out.

“And folks thought CNN+ was going to be rock bottom for that network,” Ruthless podcast co-host Comfortably Smug joked. 

FOX NEWS CRUSHES CNN, MSNBC IN 2022, FINISHES NO. 1 AMONG ALL OF CABLE FOR 7TH STRAIGHT YEAR

“Hustled out his integrity, country and voters in exchange for TeeeVeee time to sound like a random lib,” political commentator Yossi Gestetner tweeted. 

“I guess it’s nice to see someone land their dream job,” GOP strategist Matt Whitlock wrote.

“I know it’s a cliché for a lot of people to say they’re only doing this for a media contract. It also turns out to be true most of the time,” Versus Media podcast host Stephen L. Miller tweeted. 

Kinzinger was one of the ten GOP lawmakers who supported former President Trump’s impeachment following the events of Jan. 6. 

The former Illinois representative announced in October 2021 that he was retiring though he would have faced an uphill battle for reelection due to redistricting. 

He now joins CNN’s roster of so-called “Never-Trump Republicans” including Ana Navarro, Alyssa Farrah Griffin, and former Rep. Charlie Dent. 

 

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TUCKER CARLSON: This was a ‘manufactured panic’ about Russia

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Good evening and welcome to Tucker Carlson Tonight. Here’s the latest summarized. Kevin McCarthy badly wants to be the next speaker of the House, but as of tonight, he is not going to be. He doesn’t have the votes. It’s not a question of who’s good or who’s bad, who’s well-intentioned, who’s not. It’s a question of simple electoral math, something that Kevin McCarthy is highly familiar with since he does this for a living.

At this point, as of right now, facing that mathematical reality, Kevin McCarthy has two choices. He can either step aside and let somebody else do the job, acknowledging in the process that he is not the only person in Congress capable of being speaker. Or he can try and win over the people who oppose him, as you traditionally do in elections. Oh, you’ve got reservations about Kevin McCarthy? You don’t want to be ruled by a man who wears a Ukrainian flag lapel pin and lives with Frank Luntz? No problem. We get it.

FETTERMAN’S NEW CHIEF OF STAFF CO-FOUNDED THE MOSCOW PROJECT THAT PUSHED TRUMP-RUSSIA COLLUSION NARRATIVE

Let us tell you how he’s better than you think he is. Let us try and change your mind. Let us try to convince you. In a normal race, that’s what you would do. But that is not what Kevin McCarthy’s team is doing. Instead, like the left, they purport to oppose. They’re using threats and fear to force people to support the candidate. Anyone who opposes Kevin McCarthy, one of his surrogates explained today, is, quote, “an enemy.” A, quote, “terrorist.” That’s their message. In a moment, we’ll tell you how that message is working.

But first tonight, in the summer of 2016, the government transparency organization WikiLeaks released thousands of emails from the servers of the Democratic National Committee. Those documents showed conclusively that Hillary Clinton partisans had worked to rig the Democratic primary against her rival, Bernie Sanders. It was obvious from the start that that email dump had come from an internal source, probably from a DNC staffer who was offended by the corruption of the Clinton team. But of course, the Democratic Party couldn’t admit that. Too embarrassing, too revealing.

So instead, in order to cover this wrongdoing, the Clinton campaign claimed that Russia did it. The Russians hacked the servers. Remember that? Now, you may have believed it or not, but intel agencies in this country must have known at the time that it was not true. They would know, but they said nothing. And they said nothing because blaming Russia turned out to be a very useful political tool. In fact, before long, it became the default response to every perceived disaster in Washington. Hillary lost. Why? Russia! Donald Trump can’t be President. Why? Russia! Hunter Biden’s laptop is here. Russian! Audit aid to Ukraine? Can’t. Russia! And so on and so on.

So over time, probably inevitably, the inflated threat of Russia became a pretext for everything bad, including censorship in this country. It’s Russian disinformation. Shut it down. Thanks to new reporting from Matt Taibbi, who has spent weeks sifting through previously secret Twitter files, we know the federal government’s intelligence and law enforcement agencies enthusiastically joined the effort to censor the political speech of American citizens illegally. It was a sophisticated effort.

At one point, for example, the State Department released a report falsely claiming that thousands of Twitter accounts were controlled by foreign governments. Russia! And then, unnamed sources in the intel world leaked scary headlines about Russian disinformation running rampant on Twitter. “Twitter deleted data potentially crucial to the Russia probes,” screamed Politico, ever obedient to the intel agencies. And then the Washington Post published a piece threatening to increase regulation of Twitter’s advertising because, of course, Russia. So it was a manufactured panic about Russia. But on the basis of that manufactured panic, lawmakers in Washington demanded more censorship.

[VIDEO]

ED MARKEY: The issue is not that the companies before us today are taking too many posts down. The issue is that they’re leaving too many dangerous posts up. In fact, they’re amplifying harmful content so that it spreads like wildfire and torches our democracy.

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Oh. Too much speaking. Your opinions are a threat to our “democracy.” That would be sitting United States Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts. But almost nobody said anything because Russia. And so it accelerated. Not long after that tape was shot in November of 2020, Congressman Adam Schiff of California, who was then the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, demanded that Twitter censor any discussion about the House Intelligence Committee. Quote, “suppress any and all search results about Committee staff,” a Schiff aide demanded of Twitter. Schiff was particularly furious that a journalist called Paul Sperry had reported on Schiff’s connection to the CIA whistleblower behind Donald Trump’s impeachment. So Schiff demanded that Twitter censor Sperry. Quote, “suspend the many accounts, including Paul Sperry,” commanded Schiff’s office.

This is illegal. It’s openly unconstitutional. Government officials cannot suppress speech. That’s the Bill of Rights. And even at Twitter, executives seem to understand that. “No, this isn’t feasible. We don’t do this,” replied one Twitter executive. But ultimately, however, they caved. In time, in fact, Paul Sperry was censored by Twitter, along with many thousands of others. Twitter had effectively become a government propaganda outlet. How that happened and the effect that it had on American electoral politics is one of the most important stories of our time. And as we said, we know about it because of Matt Taibbi, who has been at the center of it.

 

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Biden says he intends to visit US-Mexico border during next week's trip



CNN
 — 

President Joe Biden said on Wednesday he intends to visit to US-Mexico border when he travels next week to the North American Leaders’ Summit in Mexico City.

“That’s my intention, we’re working out the details now,” Biden told reporters before boarding Air Force One.

The visit would mark Biden’s first to the border since he took office and comes as officials continue to grapple with a migrant crisis and an immigration system officials across the administration call “broken.” CNN reported earlier Wednesday that White House officials are weighing the addition of a visit to the US-Mexico border when Biden travels to the summit, according to sources familiar with the matter.

A final decision on whether to add the border stop has not been made, one of the sources said.

Biden’s potential trip to the border was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

White House officials have resisted calls by Republicans for Biden to visit the border for two years, dismissing the idea as political theater. But in the weeks since the midterm elections, officials have explored potential pathways for immigration legislation in a divided Congress.

But any attempts at immigration reform are likely to be an uphill battle. In December, a long-shot bipartisan immigration deal led by Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona fell apart following scant Republican support. The framework would have extended provided protections for undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children and extended the use of a Trump-era border policy.

The administration has repeatedly called on Congress to find a solution as it wrestles with mass migration in the Western Hemisphere.

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas acknowledged Wednesday that the number of migrant encounters at the US-Mexico border is “straining our system,” but stressed that the department is managing the situation.

“We’re operating within a system that is fundamentally broken. No one disagrees with that. We just can’t seem to agree upon the solution and a solution is long, long overdue. Within the broken immigration system that we are operating, we are managing the number of encounters and we are prepared to address the end of Title 42,” he said during a Washington Post event Wednesday..

DHS was preparing for the end of Title 42 – a Trump-era Covid restriction that allows authorities to turn away migrants at the US southern border – but the termination of the authority was put on hold following an order from the Supreme Court.

This story has been updated with additional reporting.

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Idaho murder suspect Bryan Kohberger lands in Washington to face charges

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MOSCOW, Idaho — Bryan Kohberger flew into Pullman, Washington, Wednesday evening and is expected to face murder charges in Moscow, Idaho, connection with the brutal killings of four college students in an off-campus house in November.

Kohberger, 28, has been in custody since Dec. 30 when authorities raided his parents’ home in Monroe County, Pennsylvania. He was flown to Idaho on a Pennsylvania State Police plane a day after he waived his extradition to Idaho on Tuesday.

The suspected killer left on a Pennsylvania State Police Pilatus PC-12 single-engine turbo-prop plane, which has a range of 1,800 nautical miles and a max speed of more than 300 MPH, out of Wilkes-Barre Scranton International Airport around 7 a.m. PT Wednesday, flight records show.

The plane then departed Champaign, Illinois, around 10 a.m. PT, likely to refuel, and then took off again headed west around 11 a.m. PT. There was another stop in Rapid City, South Dakota, and took off again around 3 p.m. PT. By 6:22 PT, police escorted Kohberger off the plane in Pullman, Washington, across the state line and just 7 miles from the Idaho crime scene. 

UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO STUDENT STABBINGS TIMELINE

Internet sleuths from across the globe on Wednesday tracked the nearly 12-hour flight across three time zones from the time it took off to the time it landed. The flight had 19,000 viewers as of Wednesday evening on the Flight Radar app.

The four victims, 20-year-olds Ethan Chapin and Xana Kernodle, who were in a relationship, and 21-year-olds Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen, were stabbed multiple times, likely while sleeping, on the second and third floors of a six-bedroom house just steps off the University of Idaho campus, according to Latah County Coroner Cathy Mabbutt. Two roommates on the lowest level were not attacked. The victims and their roommates were students at the University of Idaho.

Kohberger was pursuing a doctorate in the Criminal Justice and Criminology Department at Washington State University, 7 miles away from UI. He had driven with his father in a 2015 white Hyundai Elantra from Pullman, Washington to Pennsylvania before authorities caught up with him.

Police said they were looking for a 2011 to 2013 white Elantra that was believed to have been seen near the crime scene.

Local and federal authorities used DNA evidence to track down the accused killer nearly seven weeks after the four students were found killed in the early morning hours of Nov. 13.

CRIMINOLOGIST GRAD STUDENT HIT WITH FOUR COUNTS OF FIRST-DEGREE MURDER

Kohberger’s family members said in a statement that they “have fully cooperated with law enforcement agencies in an attempt to seek the truth and promote his presumption of innocence rather than judge unknown facts and make erroneous assumptions.”

Prior to the attacks, Chapin and Kernodle were seen at a party at the university’s Sigma Chi fraternity house on campus around 9 p.m. on Nov. 12, a Saturday. They returned home around 1:45 a.m. on Nov. 13. Goncalves and Mogen spent the evening of Nov. 12 in downtown Moscow, stopping at a popular college bar and then a food truck on the way home. The returned to the house around 1:56 a.m. 

IDAHO MURDER SUSPECT KOHBERGER’S PENNSYLVANIA CLASSMATES SAY HE WAS ‘BRIGHT,’ AWKWARD, BULLIED IN SCHOOL

Officials believe the victims were stabbed between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m. that morning. Around noon that day, Moscow police officers responded to a 911 call reporting an “unconscious person” from the house where the murders occurred, but several people had gathered at the crime scene by the time police arrived, officials said.

The Moscow Police Department continues to urge the public to submit any images or information that they think could be important or useful to their investigation. They can do so by calling 208-883-7180, submitting tips through [email protected] and sending digital media here. 

Fox News’ Stephanie Pagones contributed to this report.

 

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Simon Cowell reveals why he turned down an opportunity to have his own talk show

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Simon Cowell is getting candid about why he’ll likely never host a talk show.

During a recent interview, Cowell revealed he almost had his own talk show but decided he couldn’t go through with it at the last minute.

“I got to the point where they built the set, and I started to get anxious and then really stressed out. And I just walked out the meeting,” Cowell told E! News. “I just said I literally couldn’t do this. I just couldn’t talk to people all day long. I’m not very good at talking.”

Had Cowell gone through with his show, he wouldn’t have been the first “American Idol” alum to go that route. The first season winner, Kelly Clarkson, is hosting her fourth season of “The Kelly Clarkson Show” on NBC, and Jennifer Hudson, who came in seventh on season 3 of the show, is hosting “The Jennifer Hudson Show.”

SIMON COWELL REVEALS HOW HIS SON CHANGED HIS JUDGING STYLE: ‘I HAVE MUCH MORE EMPATHY’

Cowell rose to fame as part of the original judging panel of “American Idol” alongside Paula Abdul and Randy Jackson. He was known for being the harsher judge, unafraid to say what everyone else was thinking. He also judged the British and American versions of “X Factor” and is currently on the judging panel of both “America’s Got Talent” and “Britain’s Got Talent.”

The famous judge recently spoke to Fox News Digital about how his judging style has evolved since welcoming his son Eric in 2014. He explained that since his son was born, he now has “much more empathy for the younger acts” who audition.

“The truth is you want everyone to succeed. I just get frustrated when people … don’t do well or make their own decision. … It’s frustrating,” Cowell said. “When I first started making these shows, they just got loads of terrible people and asked me to comment on them. ‘Well, they’re all terrible. What do you want me to say?’ Then, over the years, I think people got better now.”

Cowell has been credited for the formation of musical groups One Direction and Fifth Harmony and launching Leona Lewis’ career.

In celebration of the 12th anniversary of the formation of One Direction, a never-before seen video of Cowell and his fellow judges Louis Walsh and Nicole Scherzinger putting One Direction together was released in July 2022. 

The video showed Scherzinger suggesting they form “an imaginary boy group instead of just saying no” to those who weren’t necessarily ready to make it as a solo act. Niall Horan was the first member selected, and he was paired with Harry Styles. 

Scherzinger became excited when Louis Tomlinson was added, saying, “Yes. They’re the cutest boy band ever. … The little girls are gonna love them.

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“They’re just too talented to get rid of, and they’ve got just the right look and the right charisma on stage. I think they’ll be really great in a boy band together,” Scherzinger added. “They’re like little stars, so you can’t get rid of little stars, you know? So you put them all together.”

Soon Liam Payne and Zayn Malik were added. 

“Now that is a good idea,” Cowell said. “Oh my God. That is the category I want. It’s them.” 

Scherzinger addressed the video during an appearance on an episode of “Sherri.”

“Honestly, I never thought this footage would see the light of day. … I thought Simon burned it,” Scherzinger said after host Sherri Shepherd said, “I always thought it was Simon Cowell who birthed One Direction.”

 

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[Business] Amazon to shed over 18,000 jobs as it cuts costs, CEO says

BBC News world 

Amazon aims to shed more than 18,000 roles as it cuts costs, the technology giant’s boss says.

Affected workers will be informed from 18 January, chief executive Andy Jassy said in a note to staff.

The cuts amount to around 6% of the firm’s roughly 300,000-strong corporate workforce.

In November Amazon said it was starting a round of layoffs but did not give a figure of how many jobs it would cut.

“We are working to support those who are affected and are providing packages that include a separation payment, transitional health insurance benefits, and external job placement support,” Mr Jassy said.

He added: “Amazon has weathered uncertain and difficult economies in the past, and we will continue to do so.”

Mr Jassy did not specify where affected employees were located, but he said the firm would communicate with organisations that represent employees “where applicable in Europe”.

He also said the “majority of role eliminations” would be in the Amazon Stores operations and its People, Experience, and Technology team.

Two months ago the firm said it would focus on reducing expenses in its annual review of business operations.

Amazon had already introduced a hiring freeze and halted some of its warehouse expansions, warning it had over-hired during the pandemic.

It has also taken steps to shut some parts of its business, cancelling projects such as a personal delivery robot.

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The Amazon depot in Dartford has been processing millions of orders

 

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2 arrested in power substation vandalism in Washington state

SEATTLE (AP) — Two men have been arrested and charged with vandalizing electrical substations in Washington state, attacks that left thousands without power over the holidays, and one suspect told authorities they did it so they could break into a business and steal money, U.S. authorities said Tuesday.

Matthew Greenwood, 32, and Jeremy Crahan, 40, both of Puyallup, were arrested Saturday and made initial appearances in U.S. District Court in Tacoma on Tuesday.

A newly unsealed complaint charged both with conspiracy to damage energy facilities, and it charged Greenwood with possession of a short-barreled rifle and a short-barreled shotgun. Cellphone location data and other evidence tied them to the attacks on the four substations in Pierce County, the complaint said.

The attacks on Dec. 25 left more than 15,000 customers without power. Officials have warned that the U.S. power grid needs better security to prevent domestic terrorism and after a large outage in North Carolina last month took days to repair.

According to the complaint, Greenwood told investigators after his arrest that the two knocked out power so they could burglarize a business and steal from the cash register. The business was not identified in the complaint.

“We have seen attacks such as these increase in Western Washington and throughout the country and must treat each incident seriously,” Seattle U.S. Attorney Nick Brown said in a news release. “The outages on Christmas left thousands in the dark and cold and put some who need power for medical devices at extreme risk.”

Attorneys who represented the men at their appearances in federal court did not immediately return emails seeking comment on the case. Greenwood faces a detention hearing Friday, Crahan on Tuesday. Federal prosecutors are seeking to have them remain in custody pending trial.

The four substations targeted were the Graham and Elk Plain substations operated by Tacoma Power and the Kapowsin and Hemlock substations operated by Puget Sound Energy. The complaint said transformers at the Tacoma Power substations would have to be replaced and damage was estimated to be at least $3 million.

According to the complaint, the pair hit the first three substations early on Christmas Day, then struck the last — the Kapowsin substation — that evening. In each case, they used bolt cutters to access the properties and manipulated switches to knock out power. At the Kapowsin substation, their actions cause arcing and sparking, the complaint said.

Greenwood and Crahan were identified as suspects because location data showed cellphones linked to them to be in the vicinity of all four incidents, FBI Special Agent Mark Tucher wrote in the complaint. Agents surveilled them from Dec. 27 to Jan. 3 and they appeared to be sharing a home in Puyallup, he said.

“The substations are spread out over dozens of miles; the attacks occurred early in the morning and in the evening; and the first and fourth attacks were separated by over twelve hours,” the complaint said. “This makes it at least unlikely that an individual would simply happen to be at all four locations around the times they were each vandalized.”

When he was arrested, Greenwood had several articles of clothing that matched images of one of the suspects in surveillance images, and agents found him to have two unregistered short-barreled weapons, the complaint said.

Conspiracy to attack energy facilities is punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Possession of an unregistered firearm is punishable by up to 10 years.

At least four electrical substations were targeted in earlier attacks in Oregon and Washington beginning in late November. Attackers used firearms in at least some of the incidents and some power customers in Oregon temporarily lost service. In one of the attacks, two people cut through a fence surrounding a high-voltage substation and then shot several pieces of equipment.

The utilities affected in those cases — Portland General Electric, the Bonneville Power Administration and Puget Sound Energy — said they were working with the FBI.

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Arizona judge’s decision on election misconduct challenged by Kari Lake

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Former Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake filed two appeals on Wednesday, related to an election lawsuit she commenced last month, according to reports.

Lake lost her bid for Arizona governor by half a percentage point to Katie Hobs. After the results of the election were tallied, Lake challenged the result and claimed there were problems with ballot printers at some polling places on Election Day, which were the result of intentional misconduct.

Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Peter Thompson ruled against Lake’s challenge after finding the court was not presented with clear and convincing evidence in the widespread misconduct, she alleged influenced the election results.

ARIZONA JUDGE REJECTS REPUBLICAN KARI LAKE’S CHALLENGE TO GUBERNATORIAL ELECTION

Fox station KSAZ in Phoenix, Arizona reported that Lake, on Wednesday, filed an appeal with the Appeals Court on Judge Thompson’s ruling.

She also filed a motion to have the appeal sent to the Arizona Supreme Court, asking to basically skip a step with the Appeals Court.

Arizona’s Supreme Court denied the request to transfer the appeal, according to KSAZ.

ARIZONA JUDGE RULES TWO OF KARI LAKE’S ELECTION CHALLENGE CLAIMS CAN GO TO TRIAL

In its decision, the Supreme Court said, “no good cause appears to transfer the matter to this court.”

Election law attorney Tom Ryan told KSAZ he believes the court will toss the lawsuit.

“Election contests are supposed to be done and completed within 10 days of the canvass,” said Ryan. “They were given all the opportunity to have a trial. Judge [Peter] Thompson allowed in a lot of evidence most judges would not allow in, but he wanted to do it so he could show he gave due consideration and weighed the evidence.”

Lake’s gubernatorial opponent Hobbs was sworn into office on Jan. 2, just two days after the appeals were filed.

 

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Wisconsin historic canal filled with butter after dairy plant catches fire

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A historic Wisconsin canal was filled with butter Monday evening after a fire broke out at a historic dairy plant. 

Firefighters in Portage, Wisconsin were called to the Associated Milk Producers Inc. (AMPI) plant after 9 p.m. Monday for a fire alarm

Fire crews attempted to gain access to the building, but heavy smoke and, primarily, butter runoff prevented them from entering, the Portage Fire Department said. 

VIDEO SHOWS HISTORIC PORTLAND CHURCH ENGULFED IN FLAMES; CRIME UNIT INVESTIGATING CAUSE

Fire Chief Troy Haase told WMTV that firefighters were “up to their knees” in butter. 

“When we first tried to go up the stairs to that part that collapsed, this stuff, the butter was running down like 3 inches thick on the steps so our guys were up to their knees trying to go up the steps to get to the top, and they’re trying to drag the hose line, the hose line got so full of butter they couldn’t hang onto it anymore,” Haase said.

The Fire Department later determined that the blaze had started in the room where butter was being stored. As it heated, the butter began to flow throughout the structure. 

Crews extinguished the fire before it could spread past the firewalls and throughout the building. A hazmat team was called in to contain the runoff into the storm sewers and the canal using a boom and other absorbents. 

No injuries were reported. The fire remains under investigation. 

 

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JESSE WATTERS: Biden White House met with the biggest crypto scam artist in US history

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Fox News host Jesse Watters questions what was discussed between Biden advisers and Sam Bankman-Fried during his White House visits on “Jesse Watters Primetime.”

JESSE WATTERS: Tonight, we’re learning “Mini-Madoff” visited the Biden White House not once, not twice, not three times, but four times just last year. “Mini-Madoff” was at the White House as recently as September. At the exact same time, he was siphoning money from drug cartels and sending it to the Democrats’ Senate campaigns.

LIBERAL MEDIA’S ATTEMPTS TO REHAB SAM BANKMAN-FRIED’S IMAGE TORCHED: ‘SOMETHING IS GOING ON HERE’

So, who’s Steve Ricchetti? Well, he’s the counselor to the president, one of Biden’s most trusted guys. And who’s Bruce Reed? Well, he just happens to be the White House chief of staff deputy, basically the gatekeeper to Joe Biden. Hmm. So, what did “Mini-Madoff” talk to Biden’s closest advisers about four times last year? 

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The Biden White House was meeting all year about cryptocurrency with the biggest crypto scam artist in U.S. history. And all of that crypto money just wound up buying the Democrats the Senate? And then the Biden administration turns around after he won the Senate with the illegal campaign contributions and arrests the guy. Is anybody else in the media covering this story? This story is crazy. 

 

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