Spotify podcaster Joe Rogan called out the San Francisco Board of Supervisors’ “tremendously insane” vote to allow robots to used deadly force against civilians.
Author: Jack Crane
Twitter CEO Elon Musk certainly dropped some bombshells in the first release of information regarding the social platforms suppression the Hunter Biden laptop story, and one revelation led conservative actor James Woods to vow that he would sue the Democratic National Party.
NCAA football and the NFL faced controversies this week that saw a college coach and player arrested in separate incidents, while an arrest warrant was issued for a prominent player, and LeBron James called out the media for ignoring Cowboy’s owner Jerry Jones’ presence at a 1957 anti-integration rally.
A new report details how embattled rapper Kanye West ambushed former President Donald Trump with unexpected dinner guests, white supremacist Nick Fuentes and alt-right provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos, at what was supposed to be a private meal.
Sam Brinton, the first openly non-binary official in the federal government, faces up to five years in prison for felony theft of women’s clothing.
President Joe Biden was compared to a “creepy” horror movie villain for staring through a glass window while a pair of young girls took a series of selfies with him on Saturday.
Charmed witch Alyssa Milano bragged about ditching her Tesla due to CEO Elon Musk’s alleged “alignment” with “white supremacy” for taking over Twitter, but didn’t realize her new vehicle’s maker was founded by literal Nazis.
San Francisco law enforcement have proposed a new weapon to combat the liberal city’s skyrocketing crime rates: Robots with a license to kill.
A group of American soldiers were harassed and subjected to racist slurs by a homophobic heckler who tried provoke them into action while he recorded them.
A CNN anchor refused to refer the suspect behind the Colorado Springs gay nightclub massacre by their preferred pronouns, although the shooter’s lawyer’s request that their client be addressed by they/them pronouns in court.