
Day: January 8, 2026
Landmark coin tied to legendary ruler preserved for nation after detectorist’s lucky discovery
Scotland’s oldest known coin has been uncovered by a detectorist near Edinburgh, a 900-year-old artifact bearing the image of King David I from the 12th century.
911 call near slain Ohio dentist’s home reported door ‘banging’ days before he and wife were found shot dead
Ohio dentist and wife allegedly murdered in Columbus home days after mysterious late-night door banging incident. Police release surveillance video.
A red-state lawfare shakedown heads to the Supreme Court

The Republican Party claims to stand against lawfare — especially the obscene, rent-seeking variety that disguises itself as environmental justice. Yet that principle is about to be tested in a highly public and deeply embarrassing way.
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on January 12 in Chevron v. Plaquemines Parish. Louisiana officials will face off against the Trump Justice Department and American energy producers in a landmark case over an attempted shakedown of oil companies for alleged responsibility for coastal erosion dating back to World War II.
Lawfare does not become acceptable because Republicans use it. And environmental shakedowns do not become conservative simply because they originate in a red state.
The basic claim is simple enough. Louisiana and several local governments have filed dozens of lawsuits alleging that oil and gas production over the last 80 years caused the erosion of the state’s coastline. But the structure and substance of these cases reveal something far more troubling.
Although the lawsuits were filed in the name of the state and its municipalities, control has effectively been handed over to politically connected plaintiffs’ lawyers — major donors who stand to reap enormous contingency fees. Through a so-called common interest agreement, the Louisiana attorney general’s office surrendered its obligation to independently assess the merits of the claims. In practice, the state abdicated its role to the trial-lawyer donor class.
That alone should raise alarms. The rest only makes it worse.
The lawsuits seek to impose liability for conduct that was lawful at the time and occurred as far back as eight decades ago. Ex post facto liability is fundamentally un-American, which is why almost no one attempts to defend it on the merits.
Even more awkward for Louisiana’s theory, virtually everyone outside the plaintiffs’ bar agrees on the primary cause of coastal erosion: decades of federal intervention by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which radically altered water flow in the Mississippi Delta. Louisiana once sued the federal government on exactly this basis. Now the same damage is somehow blamed on oil companies instead.
Because these claims reach back to the 1940s, they sweep in oil production carried out at the direction of the U.S. government to support the war effort — specifically the refining of aviation fuel for the military. It is a strange irony that after years of Democrat-led lawfare under the Biden administration, a red state has now delivered environmental litigation over World War II to the Supreme Court.
The hypocrisy is hard to miss.
The venue fight exposes the real game. Plaintiffs’ lawyers insist these cases remain in Louisiana state courts. The reason is obvious. Those courts are heavily influenced by the trial bar and have a record of staggering verdicts. Chevron was recently hit with a $745 million judgment in one such case.
Energy producers want the cases moved to federal court — not because victory is guaranteed but because federal courts are more likely to function as neutral arbiters. There is also a compelling jurisdictional reason: Much of the challenged activity involved federally directed wartime production. If any court belongs here, it is a federal one.
RELATED: America First energy policy is paying off at the pump
Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images
This kind of forum shopping should look familiar. It mirrors the Democrats’ strategy during the Biden years — carefully selecting friendly state courts to pursue political outcomes they could not secure through legislation. Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry (R) and Attorney General Liz Murrill (R) appear to have absorbed all the wrong lessons from all the wrong actors.
This is the same playbook used by New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) when she charged President Trump in state court for conduct governed by federal law. It is the same model California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) embraced when he partnered with trial lawyers to sue energy companies for billions over alleged climate harms.
Step back from the legal details and a larger problem comes into focus.
President Trump’s agenda prioritizes American energy dominance. His actions abroad reinforce that priority. Yet Republicans in Louisiana are not merely opposing that objective — they are using the very lawfare tactics they claim to despise to undermine it.
For voters trying to apply a consistent ideological framework, the whiplash is real. When red states start behaving like California, it is fair to ask whether America First has drifted from a governing philosophy into a monetization strategy.
Lawfare does not become acceptable because Republicans use it. And environmental shakedowns do not become conservative simply because they originate in a red state. If the right intends to oppose lawfare, it needs to oppose it everywhere — especially when its own allies are the ones doing the shaking down.
Michelle Dee on her relationship status: ‘My heart is taken’

Is Michelle Dee currently in a relationship?
SMB’s Leo Austria admits feeling guilty about benching Game 2 hero Jeron Teng in series opener

San Miguel head coach Leo Austria admitted he felt guilty for not fielding Jeron Teng in the series opener, a decision that was rectified when the veteran guard was given the opportunity to rise to the occasion in Game 2 of the PBA Philippine Cup semifinals.
NBA: Deni Avdija, Trail Blazers beat Rockets after game-winner waved off
Deni Avdija scored 41 points and the Portland Trail Blazers recorded a 103-102 victory over the visiting Houston Rockets on Wednesday night when Tari Eason’s tip-in was ruled to be after time expired.
Alex Eala, Iva Jovic advance to ASB Classic doubles semis via walkover

Filipina tennis ace Alex Eala and American partner Iva Jovic are through to the ASB Classic doubles semifinals via a walkover on Thursday in Auckland, New Zealand.
NBA: De’Anthony Melton comes up big as Warriors down Bucks

Stephen Curry had a team-high 31 points, De’Anthony Melton added a season-high 22 and the Golden State Warriors opened an eight-game homestand with a 120-113 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks on Wednesday night in San Francisco.
Philippines’ foreign reserves hit $110.9B in 2025

The Philippines closed 2025 with a foreign liquidity buffer of over $100 billion, still near the record high last seen in September 2024, data released by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed.
At least P14B in 2026 budget for P20/kilo of rice program — DA’s Tiu Laurel

Agriculture Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr. said Thursday that at least P14 billion has been allotted for the implementation of the ”Benteng Bigas Meron Na!” program for fiscal year 2026.
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- ‘Only Doing It For PR Purposes’: Ilhan Omar Says ‘No Justification’ For Trump Admin’s Somali Fraud Crackdown January 12, 2026
- Iranian Regime Escalates Crackdown on Protesters, Slaughtering Hundreds as Trump Weighs Military Action January 12, 2026
- Utah police report claims officer shape-shifted into a frog January 12, 2026
- Filipino volunteers play key role at Vatican”s Jubilee of Hope January 12, 2026
- NBA: Desmond Bane, Anthony Black help Magic beat Pelicans January 12, 2026
- Deaths from Iran protests reach more than 500, rights group says January 12, 2026
- Cruise ship insider reveals simple booking trick for scoring a better cabin January 12, 2026






