
Day: January 3, 2026
cccfa962-5ae2-5f57-afad-04d37215e927 fnc Fox News fox-news/sports/ncaa-bk fox-news/sports/ncaa/notre-dame-fighting-irish
Notre Dame head coach goes ballistic, rushes after official in wild scene following controversial loss
Notre Dame player Cole Certa and head coach Micah Shrewsberry were spotted rushing after an official following a controversial call that ultimately ended in his team’s loss.
72b8b3b5-bf12-5b62-bf51-13fe0e682195 fnc Fox News fox-news/person/donald-trump fox-news/topic/venezuelan-political-crisis
Trump vows US will ‘run’ Venezuela until ‘safe’ transition of power
President Donald Trump announces U.S. will ‘run the country’ in Venezuela temporarily after special forces captured dictator Nicolas Maduro, promising transition.
a1aee784-cc62-5ff3-86d7-b6b35b171b69 fnc Fox News fox-news/topic/venezuelan-political-crisis fox-news/world
Maduro gave car interview about possible Trump olive branch days before he was captured by US
Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro was captured by U.S. forces days after he discussed possible drug trafficking deal negotiations with President Donald Trump.
Andy kim Conservative Review Donald Trump Newsletter: Politics and Elections Ruben Gallego Venezuela
Congressional Democrats Rage At Trump’s Venezuela Operation
Democratic lawmakers railed against President Donald Trump’s overnight military operation in Venezuela on Saturday that resulted in the successful capture and indictment of socialist dictator Nicolás Maduro and his wife. Congressional Democrats argued Trump lacked legal authority and that it was counter to American interests to use military force against Maduro’s regime. Republican lawmakers largely […]
This Is How You Clean Up The World
The world is a dirty place, but it is not about carbon emissions or some other such stuff – it’s about people. People that kill people. People that effectively enslave people with drugs or false religion. Evil people. They are what make the world filthy. You get rid of such people and everything else will take care of itself. Two of the bigger cesspits in this world are Venezuela and Iran. Venezuela spreading its narco-terrorist death throughout the western hemisphere and Iran wanting nothing less than the death of an entire nation and to threaten the world with nuclear destruction. Clean those up and you have gone a long way to actually cleaning up the world.
The post This Is How You Clean Up The World appeared first on The Hugh Hewitt Show.
Universities treated free speech as expendable in 2025

The fight over free expression in American higher education reached a troubling milestone in 2025. According to data from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, efforts to censor speech on college campuses hit record highs across multiple fronts — and most succeeded.
Let’s start with the raw numbers. In 2025, FIRE’s Scholars Under Fire, Students Under Fire, and Campus Deplatforming databases collectively tracked:
- 525 attempts to sanction scholars for their speech, more than one a day, with 460 of them resulting in punishment.
- 273 attempts to punish students for expression, more than five a week, with 176 of these attempts succeeding.
- 160 attempts to deplatform speakers, about three each week, with 99 of them succeeding.
That’s 958 censorship attempts in total, nearly three per day on campuses across the country. For comparison, FIRE’s next-highest total was 477 two years ago.
The 525 scholar sanction attempts are the highest ever recorded in FIRE’s database, which spans 2000 to the present. Even when a large-scale incident at the U.S. Naval Academy is treated as just a single entry, the 2025 total still breaks records.
The common denominator across these censorship campaigns is not ideology — it’s intolerance.
Twenty-nine scholars were fired, including 18 who were terminated since September for social media comments about Charlie Kirk’s assassination.
Student sanction attempts also hit a new high, and deplatforming efforts — our records date back to 1998 — rank third all-time, behind 2023 and 2024.
The problem is actually worse because FIRE’s data undercounts the true scale of campus censorship. Why? The data relies on publicly available information, and an unknown number of incidents, especially those that may involve quiet administrative pressure, never make the public record.
Then there’s the chilling effect.
Scholars are self-censoring. Students are staying silent. Speakers are being disinvited or shouted down. And administrators, eager to appease the loudest voices, are launching investigations and handing out suspensions and dismissals with questionable regard for academic freedom, due process, or free speech.
RELATED: Liberals’ twisted views on Charlie Kirk assassination, censorship captured by a damning poll
Deagreez via iStock/Getty Images
Some critics argue that the total number of incidents is small compared to the roughly 4,000 colleges in the country. But this argument collapses under scrutiny.
While there are technically thousands of institutions labeled as “colleges” or “universities,” roughly 600 of them educate about 80% of undergraduates enrolled at not-for-profit four-year schools. Many of the rest of these “colleges” and “universities” are highly specialized or vocational programs. This includes a number of beauty academies, truck-driving schools, and similar institutions — in other words, campuses that aren’t at the heart of the free-speech debate.
These censorship campaigns aren’t coming from only one side of the political spectrum. FIRE’s data shows, for instance, that liberal students are punished for pro-Palestinian activism, conservative faculty are targeted for controversial opinions on gender or race, and speaking events featuring all points of view are targeted for cancellation.
The two most targeted student groups on campus? Students for Justice in Palestine and Turning Point USA. If that doesn’t make this point clear, nothing will.
The common denominator across these censorship campaigns is not ideology — it’s intolerance.
RELATED: Teenager sues high school after tribute to Charlie Kirk was called vandalism
rudall30 via iStock/Getty Images
So where do we go from here?
We need courage: from faculty, from students, and especially from administrators. It’s easy to defend speech when it’s popular. It’s harder when the ideas are offensive or inconvenient. But that’s when it matters most.
Even more urgently, higher education needs a cultural reset. Universities must recommit to the idea that exposure to ideas and speech that one dislikes or finds offensive is not “violence.” That principle is essential for democracy, not just for universities.
This year’s record number of campus censorship attempts should be a wake-up call for campus administrators. For decades, many allowed a culture of censorship to fester, dismissing concerns as overblown, isolated, or a politically motivated myth. Now, with governors, state legislatures, members of Congress, and even the White House moving aggressively to police campus expression, some administrators are finally pushing back. But this pushback from administrators doesn’t seem principled. Instead, it seems more like an attempt to shield their institutions from outside political interference.
That’s not leadership. It’s damage control. And it’s what got higher education into this mess in the first place.
If university leaders want to reclaim their role as stewards of free inquiry, they cannot act just when governmental pressure threatens their autonomy. They also need to be steadfast when internal intolerance threatens their mission. A true commitment to academic freedom means defending expression even when it is unpopular or offensive. That is the price of intellectual integrity in a free society.
Editor’s note: This article was originally published by RealClearPolitics and made available via RealClearWire.
WBA drops Jake Paul out of cruiserweight rankings
YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul is no longer ranked by the World Boxing Association following his knockout loss to former heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua on Dec. 19.
PBA: June Mar Fajardo leads stats race for Philippine Cup Best Player of the Conference award
_2025_12_25_19_42_17.jpg)
June Mar Fajardo of the San Miguel Beermen topped the statistical points (SP) standings in the race for the PBA Philippine Cup Best Player of the Conference award at the conclusion of the quarterfinals.
US captures Venezuela’s Maduro after strikes, Trump says
WASHINGTON – The US attacked Venezuela and deposed its long-serving autocratic President Nicolas Maduro on Saturday, President Donald Trump said, in Washington’s most direct intervention in Latin America since the 1989 invasion of Panama.
Bangkay ng babae, natagpuang nakasilid sa storage box sa ilalim ng tulay sa Camarines Norte
_2026_01_03_22_46_59.jpg)
Nakitang nakasilid ang isang bangkay ng babae sa loob ng isang storage box sa ilalim ng Pinagwarasan Bridge sa Basud, Camarines Norte.
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- Liza Soberano, Ogie Diaz reconnect after 3 years January 11, 2026
- Dasuri Choi opens up on being a former K-pop trainee: ‘Parang they treat me as a product’ January 11, 2026
- Dennis Trillo addresses rumors surrounding wife Jennylyn Mercado, parents January 11, 2026
- Kristen Stewart open to ‘Twilight’ franchise return, but as director January 11, 2026
- NBA: Five Cavs score 20-plus points as Wolves’ win streak ends January 11, 2026
- NBA: Hornets sink 24 treys in 55-point rout of Jazz January 11, 2026
- NBA: Victor Wembanyama, De”Aaron Fox score 21 each as Spurs top Celtics January 11, 2026






