
Day: December 22, 2025
Nick Reiner’s defense attorney weighs insanity plea as murder case enters discovery phase, legal expert says
Legal expert breaks down Nick Reiner’s challenging road ahead in the murder case, from competency evaluations to potential death penalty decisions.
077964f8-d607-5122-b689-fd08c9490c3c fnc Fox News fox-news/world/terrorism/isis fox-news/world/world-regions/australia
Australia terror attack exposes ISIS resurgence as experts warn of global jihadist networks
Terror attack in Australia exposes growing jihadist networks as security experts warn ISIS remains far from defeated despite recent government claims.
Flying for Christmas? Avoid 3 travel mistakes that ruin holiday trips and get people in trouble
Three major travel issues can turn Christmas flights into chaos and add more stress than necessary, from overpacking to rude behavior, say former flight attendants.
‘The View’ had 128 liberal guests but only two conservatives in 2025, study finds
Study reveals “The View” hosted 341 guests in 2025 but only two were conservative while 128 were liberal, raising serious questions about political balance.
Leaked University of Illinois lecture material blames Trump for ‘White supremacy,’ embraces far-left activism
Leaked slides from University of Illinois education course show left-wing bias on immigration topics, sparking debate over classroom content.
Congress takes aim at online harms — and misses the center mass

On December 11, 18 child online safety bills took a significant step toward becoming law. The package — each bill addressing, in some way, the harms children face online — passed out of a House subcommittee on a mostly party-line vote. The legislative bundle is, overall, a somewhat milquetoast mix of meaningful wins and frustrating defeats for child safety advocates. Still, it represents real progress. For those who have long pushed for action, the ball has finally moved down the field.
The bills vary dramatically in scope. Some, like the Assessing Safety Tools for Parents and Minors Act, would simply mandate an analytical report on the efforts technology companies are making to protect children. Others, such as the App Store Accountability Act — which would require app stores to determine whether a user is a minor and, if so, prohibit downloads without parental consent — are far more consequential, fundamentally changing how app stores operate.
Advancing 18 bills signals that one of the longest-standing objections to action — whether social media actually harms children — has effectively collapsed.
There are also bittersweet elements. The most well-known and controversial bill, the Kids Online Safety Act, is included in the package — but in a significantly watered-down form. The original version, introduced by Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), passed the Senate with more than 90 votes. But House GOP leadership raised constitutional concerns, arguing that the bill placed undue pressure on social media companies to regulate speech.
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.), one of the bill’s most prominent opponents, warned that it would “empower dangerous people.” Other critics likened KOSA to the British Online Safety Act — a far more draconian law than its American counterpart. (The most recent Senate version of KOSA focuses on disabling addictive features and restricting minors’ access to dangerous content.)
These concerns forced substantial revisions. Most notably, the bill now includes a sweeping pre-emption clause barring states from regulating anything that “relates” to KOSA — effectively nullifying existing and future state-level efforts to protect children online.
Equally disappointing is what failed to make the cut.
Some excluded proposals were undeniably radical, such as the RESET Act, which would have barred minors from creating or maintaining social media accounts altogether. But another bill left behind — the App Store Freedom Act — was critical to restoring competition and accountability in the app ecosystem.
That legislation would have challenged the Apple-Google duopoly, which controls more than 90% of app store purchases in the United States. As long as those two companies dominate the marketplace, meaningful reform will remain elusive. Unsurprisingly, both firms opposed the bill, arguing that it would “endanger” children by allowing downloads from unvetted third-party stores.
Rep. Kat Cammack (R-Fla.), the bill’s sponsor, blasted that claim, noting that Apple has long permitted minors to download TikTok — a platform run by a Chinese company with well-documented national security concerns.
RELATED: Schools made boys the villain. The internet gave them a hero.
Image by Alexandr Muşuc via iStock / Getty Images
Despite its importance, the App Store Freedom Act was removed from the package. Even so, the remaining legislation still marks a major victory for those focused on protecting children online.
Here’s why.
First, advancing 18 bills signals that one of the longest-standing objections to action — whether social media actually harms children — has effectively collapsed.
For years, lawmakers debated whether digital platforms were the problem or whether other factors deserved the blame. A steady stream of studies, headlines, and internal leaks showing that social media companies knew their products damaged adolescent mental health helped put that question to rest.
Second, the breadth of the package ensures that something will happen. Even the weakest provisions — those requiring studies or reports — will energize advocates and help bring order to what remains a digital Wild West for children and families.
The legislative fight is far from over. The bills must still clear committee, pass the House, and survive the Senate. But momentum is clearly shifting toward reform.
It’s time to finish the fight.
Olivia Rodrigo at Louis Partridge, hiwalay na- report

Iniulat ng isang British newspaper na hiwalay na sina Olivia Rodrigo at Louis Partridge. Naging emosyonal umano ang Filipino-American singer nang ihayag ang naturang breakup.
Lee Victor on ‘brother for life’ Heath Jornales: ‘Kuya’s house gifted me a best friend’

Lee Victor is nothing but grateful for his journey in “Pinoy Big Brother: Celebrity Collab Edition 2.0.”
DOST to tap AI for disaster preparedness

The Department of Science and Technology (DOST) said on Monday that it plans to launch next year an artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled platform aimed at helping the public prepare for possible disasters.
NBA: Dennis Schroder hits game-winner as Kings come back to beat Rockets in OT

Dennis Schroder swished a 3-pointer with 2.2 seconds left in overtime to give the Sacramento Kings a dramatic 125-124 victory over the visiting Houston Rockets on Sunday night.
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






