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Napoles gets reclusion perpetua anew after Sandiganbayan convicts her for malversation

The Sandiganbayan Special Third Division has sentenced Janet Lim Napoles to reclusion perpetua again – or up to 80 years in prison – for two counts of malversation of public funds in connection to the unlawful use of the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) of a former congressman.
37ad1cdd-6ed1-57d6-afe3-b66edc661a22 • fnc • Fox News • fox-news/tech • fox-news/tech/topics/cybercrime
Harvard hit by new breach after phone phishing attack
A phone phishing attack compromised Harvard’s alumni and donor database, marking the second security incident at the university in recent months.
9b721580-ed26-52dd-a0f8-3d56bf4477bc • fnc • Fox News • fox-news/health • fox-news/health/beauty-and-skin/cosmetic-surgery
Cosmetic fillers can cause deadly complication, experts warn — but new tech exposes it
Breakthrough research shows ultrasound can spot filler-related vascular complications early, enabling precise treatment and preventing lasting damage.
7c757124-30dc-58c7-b0f3-39e3c4041613 • fnc • Fox News • fox-news/entertainment • fox-news/entertainment/movies
Melissa McCarthy’s ‘Saturday Night Live’ appearance sparks major fan frenzy over weight loss transformation
Melissa McCarthy’s dramatic weight loss on “Saturday Night Live” has fans stunned, with viewers praising her appearance during her opening monologue.
9eec9ce9-c227-5fb1-b51c-4311b115132f • fnc • Fox News • fox-news/sports/ncaa • fox-news/sports/ncaa-fb
Indiana gets top billing in College Football Playoff as Miami sneaks into field
The 2025-26 College Football Playoff bracket was revealed on Sunday after several conference championships affected how the seeding would go.
f4df6465-9139-5d09-9dce-f125918cd2a3 • fnc • Fox News • fox-news/health/mental-health/drug-and-substance-abuse • fox-news/person/donald-trump
Democrats escalate war-crime accusations as White House calls ‘innocent fisherman’ the new ‘Maryland Man’ hoax
Trump administration defends 22 military strikes against suspected drug traffickers in Caribbean as Democrats claim potential war crimes occurred.
0952804d-2dfd-586b-be7b-3b90bdc9a3cb • fnc • Fox News • fox-news/topic/anti-semitism • fox-news/world/world-regions/israel
Josh Shapiro urges Philly schools to ‘take very seriously’ antisemitism as Congress opens investigation
Governor Josh Shapiro has urged the School District of Philadelphia to address antisemitism as congressional investigation reveals alleged anti-Jewish incidents in classrooms.
3279d4e9-e95f-5470-9959-75db583a060c • fnc • Fox News • fox-news/corruption • fox-news/person/tim-walz
‘Schemes stacked upon schemes’: $1B public benefits fraud fuels scrutiny of Minnesota’s Somali community
Minnesota fraud schemes involving hundreds of millions in stolen taxpayer money spark House investigation and intense scrutiny of Tim Walz administration.
God Is On His Throne And All Is Right With The World
I have been a regular listener to the Hugh Hewitt Show since 2001. That’s a long time to endure the host’s unfailing, loud and unbearable braggadocio regarding the college football team that plays in Columbus, OH. The host has not lived in Ohio for his entire adult life, just as I have not lived in the place I grew up – Indiana – for my entire adult life. My connections to the state of my rearing remain as strong as his. Therefore it brings me great joy, happiness (and no small amount of return fire) to announce that last night INDIANA UNIVERSITY, BEAT OHIO STATE – solidly – FOR THE BIG TEN FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP. (It was routine in basketball for many years, but not football.) The Cleveland newspapers and Sports Illustrated are noting just how good IU actually is. This might just get mentioned in every post moving forward for a while – but on to serious business.
The post God Is On His Throne And All Is Right With The World appeared first on The Hugh Hewitt Show.
Blaze Media • Brendan kilcoyne • Catholic • Christian • Christianity • God
The West is terrified of reality — but this Christian priest says it out loud

Fr. Brendan Kilcoyne is one of the few priests in Ireland with the courage to say what others won’t.
Week after week, he tells the truth that the rest of public life tiptoes around: Ireland, like Britain and much of the West, is being reshaped by two forces at once — an aggressively secular culture that mocks belief, and a rising influx of people whose values come from religious traditions deeply at odds with Christianity.
This is the part the West refuses to face: A culture without God doesn’t stay neutral.
Both currents weaken what remains of Ireland’s Christian foundations. One breaks it down. The other builds something else in its place.
Kilcoyne doesn’t simply call for “legal immigration” — the safe line politicians repeat to sound reasonable — but he goes farther.
He calls for Christian-only immigration, not as a provocation but as a survival strategy for a civilization that once took the gospel for granted. In a country where faith once shaped the architecture of daily life, he argues that if people must come from abroad, they should be people who can carry that faith forward.
He’s right. It’s the only sane path left.
I know this to be true from experience. Ireland hosts thousands of Filipino workers, many of them nurses and care staff. They are some of the warmest people I have ever met. In many ways, they remind many Irish people of an older Ireland — devout, hardworking, grateful, family-centered.
My mother works closely with a Filipino woman in her home-nursing work. She describes her as one of the kindest souls she has ever known. This isn’t some abstract argument about cultural cohesion. Instead, it’s something I’ve watched play out in real life. Their Catholic faith shapes their character, their sense of duty, and their reverence for life. Wherever they go, they make the place stronger.
Contrast that with what just happened in the U.S.
Sarah Beckstrom, a 20-year-old Army specialist, was shot and killed in Washington, D.C. The alleged gunman, Afghan national Rahmanullah Lakanwal, came into the country after the Biden administration’s disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan. One can’t pretend cases like this exist in a vacuum, any more than one can pretend the grooming-gang scandals in Britain came out of thin air.
These tragedies sit inside a larger pattern. The West has opened its doors to people with radically different expectations about women, law, authority, violence, and faith — and then acts stunned when those differences surface in the streets.
RELATED: Correcting the narrative: What the Bible actually says about immigration
AndreyPopov/iStock/Getty Images
In America, Islam is on track to become the second-largest religion by 2040, outpacing Judaism and mainline Protestantism. That shift isn’t driven by conversion but by immigration patterns and birth rates.
Let that sink in. A country built on Christian memory and Christian morals is heading toward a religious landscape its founders would barely recognize. None of this is speculation. It’s demographic math.
This matters because religions aren’t interchangeable. They shape law, culture, expectations for public life, attitudes toward authority, dissent, forgiveness, and the value of the individual. A society shaped by the Sermon on the Mount will never think or function the same as one shaped by Islam’s foundational texts.
The two traditions couldn’t be farther apart.
One formed cultures around decency and love of neighbor. The other arose in an age of conquest, tribal loyalty, and rigid obedience. These differences aren’t cosmetic but civilizational. And with Christianity in the West losing its fighting spirit, it’s not hard to see which force will fill the vacuum. Islam is not a private spirituality, but a complete system of life — legal, social, political — built on the expectation that it will shape the society around it.
Again, this isn’t speculation. It’s written into its earliest texts and confirmed by its history, which raises the obvious question: What kind of West emerges when the religious balance tips this far?
Kilcoyne’s message isn’t aimed at Ireland alone. It applies to any nation whose culture was built on Christianity — meaning most of Europe, the U.S., Canada, and Australia.
A society can’t function without shared belief and shared boundaries. Christianity once provided both. It shaped civic standards, festivals, art, manners, and the meaning of freedom. Remove it, and the God-sized space is claimed by something else immediately, like nihilism, resentment, and ideologies far more savage and unforgiving.
While being Christian doesn’t automatically make people decent, it does mean they’re far more likely to share the values that hold a society together.
This is the part the West refuses to face: A culture without God doesn’t stay neutral. It slides into something far less humane. And a country that imports large numbers of people who follow a religion with no respect for Christian norms doesn’t stay stable. It absorbs that religion’s worldview whether it wants to or not.
If immigration is necessary — and in many aging nations it is — Kilcoyne asks why we wouldn’t welcome those whose faith strengthens, rather than weakens, the society they enter.
Why not bring in people who see children not as burdens but blessings, who honor marriage, who take charity seriously, who treat the elderly with care, who believe suffering has meaning, and who know the world is more than appetite and impulse?
These are the qualities that once made the West strong. And while being Christian doesn’t automatically make people decent, it does mean they’re far more likely to share the values that hold a society together.
Sarah Beckstrom is dead. A young woman who trusted her country, trusted its leaders, trusted the system that put her in uniform. If America had been more serious about value-based immigration — if it had prioritized people who share its creed and its cultural instincts — she might still be alive. Her death shouldn’t be treated as another tragic headline to scroll past.
If anything, let it mark the moment the country finally admits that immigration policy isn’t a paperwork issue but a question of national survival in the most literal sense. Let her death mean something.
Let it push America toward choosing people who lift the nation up — not those who drag it into the abyss.
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