Author: mfnnews
Carol Davis, longtime Raiders ‘First Lady,’ dead at 93
Carol Davis, widow of legendary Raiders owner Al Davis and mother of current owner Mark Davis, known as ‘First Lady of Raider Nation,’ passed away at 93.
Browns’ Myles Garrett says he’d ‘throw the whole performance away for a win’ after record 5-sack game
Myles Garrett said he would trade his record-breaking performance for a Cleveland Browns win after his five-sack game ended in a loss to the New England Patriots.
Mamdani Plays The Victim
So, NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani tried to play the victim over the weekend because his aunt (in a hajib) was viewed suspiciously in the aftermath of 9-11 in New York. Was she arrested, tried, beaten or otherwise actually persecuted? No, apparently people just looked at her suspiciously. Now first of all, I have been
The Left Would Rather Leave White House Lawn Buried In Rubble Than Allow Trump A Tangible Victory

It didn’t take long for someone to go to court and attempt to seize control of the president’s White House renovation project.
The bureaucracy strikes back — and we’re striking harder

Old habits die hard. The Oversight Project filed another lawsuit against the FBI today. During the Biden years, we were in court constantly, suing the bureau more than a dozen times over weaponization and abuse. Many of the cases we fought then connect directly to the scandals now surfacing under the Trump administration. We were over the target back then — and Washington doesn’t do coincidences.
But this case is different.
We’re suing the FBI to force transparency — not for politics, but for accountability. Because if we don’t fix this now, we’ll look back and wish we had.
Monday’s lawsuit strikes at a deeper problem: the FBI’s claim that it has been “reformed” and is now “the most transparent in history.” That phrase is absurd on its face. Compared with the post-COINTELPRO reforms and the Church Committee era, today’s FBI is anything but transparent.
We’re suing because the bureau has built a system designed to violate the Freedom of Information Act. Over time, the FBI has developed a “pattern and practice” of breaking the law to hide information. Reporters across the political spectrum can tell you the same thing. The bureau stonewalls, delays, and hides behind boilerplate responses that make a mockery of the law.
Our case asks the federal judiciary to step in and force the FBI to fix this — to overhaul its FOIA process and follow the law it routinely ignores. This isn’t a step we took lightly. For nearly a year, we tried to resolve these problems through other channels. But the bureau’s “fixes” never came.
Bureaucratic shell game
The FBI has perfected a set of tricks to avoid scrutiny. It uses canned denials for well-defined requests, ignores the public-interest standard written into law, and buries documents under layers of redaction. Even by Washington’s anemic transparency standards, the FBI stands out as the worst offender.
This isn’t theoretical. In practice, the Oversight Project submitted requests naming specific agents — like the infamous Timothy Thibault — and identifying internal systems such as the Lync messaging platform. We asked for communications containing key terms like “Republican” or “Mar-a-Lago.” Those are precisely the requests the bureau continues to battle with gusto.
FBI Director Kash Patel deserves credit for some high-profile disclosures, but we can’t depend on him to keep discovering incriminating documents in “burn bags” or forgotten closets. That’s not transparency — that’s triage. The FBI cannot investigate itself or selectively release information without feeding public cynicism.
The point of FOIA is citizen oversight — not bureaucratic discretion. In a republic, the people are supposed to control government institutions, not the other way around.
A pattern of abuse
If the FBI had obeyed its own transparency standards all along, Americans would already know far more about the scandals that shook their confidence in government: Russiagate, the Mar-a-Lago raid, Operation Arctic Frost, the targeting of Catholic parishes and concerned parents, and the January 6 excesses. Each of these was compounded by secrecy and delay.
RELATED: Video sleuth challenges FBI Jan. 6 pipe-bomb narrative, unearths new evidence
filo via iStock/Getty Images
The bureau’s institutional resistance to disclosure doesn’t just protect bad actors — it perpetuates them. It allows corruption to metastasize under color of national security and procedure.
Time to clean house
At some point, the FBI will no longer be in Kash Patel’s hands. That’s why reform should happen now while the issue is in the public eye. The systems that enable secrecy and abuse must be dismantled before the next crisis hits.
We’re suing the FBI to force transparency — not for politics, but for accountability. Because if we don’t fix this now, we’ll look back and wish we had.
Beauty queen-turned-actress Thia Thomalla, ikinasal na

Ikinasal na si Miss Eco International 2018 Thia Thomalla sa kaniyang non-showbiz boyfriend.
Patrick Dela Rosa, former actor and politician, dies

Former actor Patrick Dela Rosa has passed away.
‘Sanggang Dikit FR’ starring Jennylyn Mercado, Dennis Trillo is extended until 2026

“Sanggang Dikit FR” starring Jennylyn Mercado and Dennis Trillo is getting extended!
Aktor na naging politiko na si Patrick Dela Rosa, pumanaw na

Pumanaw na ang ’80s matinee idol na naging politiko na si Patrick Dela Rosa.
PAGASA declares onset of Amihan season

Colder weather in the Philippines is expected in the coming months as the Northeast Monsoon (Amihan) season has arrived, PAGASA announced on Monday.
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