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987 results for “opencommit”
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It's #ROCm getting better? Yes
Will you still use #CUDA? Yes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCBLMXgk3No&t=933
What #AMD should focus on is to bring all of their SKU to use ROCm stable on all platforms. Currently that isn't possible, which is frustrating given their cards have more memory than #RTX at the same price.
#AI #LLM #OLlama #Llama #NVIDIA #GeForce #ArtificialIntelligence #OpenCompute #GPUOpen #Computer #Computers #Technology #PC #PCHardware #Hardware #GPU #dGPU #Laptop #Laptops #StrixHalo #Radeon
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2/3
El valor de #swappines permite al sistema gestionar la memoria.
Podemos consultar su valor usando:
$ sysctl vm.swappiness
Y podemos cambiarlo modificando su valor editando el archivo /etc/sysctl.conf (si les interesa me avisan y luego puedo ampliar detalles de cómo se hace).
Otra opción interesante de la encuesta es "vm.overcommit_memory". Brevemente, controla la política del núcleo del sistema para asignar memoria virtual cuando los procesos solicitan bloques dinámicamente (#malloc).
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Hello, #PortfolioDay
I'm Evaristo Ramos, a comic artist and illustrator working with commissioned art.
Commissions are currently open for any kind of work (as long as it’s nothing illegal), and you can check out more of my art in my gallery: https://mastodon.art/@evaristoramos/media
And also on Behance: https://www.behance.net/evaristoramos
and DeviantArt: https://www.deviantart.com/evaristoramosarte/gallery
Feel free to contact me here or by email at [email protected]
#MastoArt #drawing #krita #artist #latino #brart #comicart #comicartist #freelancer #portfolio #opencomission -
In this post, I explore how #Agileprojectmanagement blends clarity, alignment, and adaptability for effective #projectnavigation. Starting with an Agile Charter, teams set a vision and mission. approaches like #userstories, #Kanban, and #Scrumban guide communication and workflow. Although beneficial, teams must avoid pitfalls such as overcommitting and neglecting feedback to ensure success.
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David Groves' (https://www.fibrecat.org/) talk at #NetMCR about measuring and calculating the current time was really interesting, explaining crazy timezones, how DST has changed over the years, leap years and seconds, and then how computers sync time to each other via #NTP and #PTP.
I learnt that you can even get expansion cards that have mini atomic clocks on them! (https://www.opencompute.org/products/319/ocp-time-card-made-by-time-beat)
Sadly I couldn't stay and chat afterwards as I had to get my train ☹️
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I am consistently blown away at the breadth and depth of expertise that transpires from eLife reviews, and from the many comments in the internal discussion forums that authors don't get to see. For scientists by scientists – it works.
Yes, sometimes it takes time: it's scientists, we are all overcommitted. Yes, sometimes a manuscript isn't sent out for review, because we didn't understand it, or because we deem ourselves not expert in the field and not capable of doing it justice. But overall, it's amazing.
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🩷 Network Shenanigans Saturday 🩷
Quick post here, lots to attempt to do today...
Let's say that you have a bunch of OCP NICs but not so many systems that will take that form factor; what to do?
Unexpectedly find some OCP to PCIe slot adapters! Mount them, use them, move on with life. 🤩
Carriers are from Dell and the NICs are Mellanox ConnectX-5 25GbE (SKU MCX542A-ACAN), but they work with all of the other OCP NICs that I have as well (Intel, Broadcom, Qlogic, other Mellanox).
#neteng #networking #freebsd #linux #homelab #nerdery #mellanox #dell #ocp #opencompute #servers #engineering
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Interestingly, #seL4 would be a worse choice that #Xen for #QubesOS, due to its worse support for x86 speculative execution mitigations. Xen typically provides patches the day the embargo breaks, and Qubes OS users rely on that. There are various ways to make speculative execution less of a concern, but they don’t work for Qubes OS. This is because Qubes OS heavily overcommits CPU and allows execution of arbitrary untrusted code in VMs.
I don’t fault the seL4 developers for not focusing on a use-case that is practically the worst-case scenario for it. It just means that Qubes OS is very much more like a server than an embedded system, and so it needs a hypervisor that is designed for the kinds of workloads it runs.
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I've been contacted by a university from the UK, asking me to act as an external expert to assess an application for promotion to professor
Is this usual?
For context:
- I'm not from the UK
- It's not sure how close the applicant's area will be to mine
- Perhaps they are looking for my namesake
- I'm overcommitted
- I'm not sure there's anything for meUpdate: Thanks everyone!
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I chose to signup up with the #fosstodon server because I strongly believe in using #opensource software that respects our privacy. I am the lead developer of the python based @shtools software that allows you to easily manipulate data expressed in #sphericalharmonics. I wish I had more time to code and contribute to other projects, but alas, I am overcommitted.
Please keep in touch with what our research group is doing by following @IPGP_Planets.
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I chose to signup up with the #fosstodon server because I strongly believe in using #opensource software that respects our privacy. I am the lead developer of the python based @shtools software that allows you to easily manipulate data expressed in #sphericalharmonics. I wish I had more time to code and contribute to other projects, but alas, I am overcommitted.
Please keep in touch with what our research group is doing by following @IPGP_Planets.
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I chose to signup up with the #fosstodon server because I strongly believe in using #opensource software that respects our privacy. I am the lead developer of the python based @shtools software that allows you to easily manipulate data expressed in #sphericalharmonics. I wish I had more time to code and contribute to other projects, but alas, I am overcommitted.
Please keep in touch with what our research group is doing by following @IPGP_Planets.
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I chose to signup up with the #fosstodon server because I strongly believe in using #opensource software that respects our privacy. I am the lead developer of the python based @shtools software that allows you to easily manipulate data expressed in #sphericalharmonics. I wish I had more time to code and contribute to other projects, but alas, I am overcommitted.
Please keep in touch with what our research group is doing by following @IPGP_Planets.
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I chose to signup up with the #fosstodon server because I strongly believe in using #opensource software that respects our privacy. I am the lead developer of the python based @shtools software that allows you to easily manipulate data expressed in #sphericalharmonics. I wish I had more time to code and contribute to other projects, but alas, I am overcommitted.
Please keep in touch with what our research group is doing by following @IPGP_Planets.
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Of course.
Will take a while. Five authors and the deadline for the first phase (favorite examples from each author) in November 2023 was only met by three of us. The other two promised to deliver this month, not holding my breath, though.
I'm optimistic we can get there, all authors seem enthusiastic, but also overcommited.
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CW: Mental heath, planning
I'm taking 2 mental health days off work because I'm overwhelmed and heading for burnout. Here is a list of things I want to do:
- Spend some time in a coffee shop
- Catch up on #MusicPromotion (e.g. #SubmitHub, video making) for upcoming release
- Go outside
- Get a haircut
- Get a massage
- Make some music
- Write some code
- Attend an AGM (mandatory)
- Get more sleep
- Snuggle the catsI feel I have overcommitted and this kind of behaviour is part of the problem.
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last chance!! we're currently accepting off-stream comms for next month!
COMMISSION FORM - https://forms.gle/fX4jeu2fDrAKJfMC6
TOS AND PRICES - https://www.crownedvictory.art/closing the form at 11:59PM (PST) tonight! this is the final day!
#anthro #chibi #colored #comm #commission #commissionsopen #comms #commsopen #crowned #crownedvictory #cute #doop #feral #greyscale #open #opencomms #paid #ref #refsheet #refsheets #reference #shaded #stippling #uncolored #victory #ych #2022 #cv2022
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hey you! yeah you... we're currently accepting off-stream comms for next month!
COMMISSION FORM - https://forms.gle/fX4jeu2fDrAKJfMC6
TOS AND PRICES - https://www.crownedvictory.art/closing the form at 11:59PM (PST) on Friday! 3 days!
#anthro #chibi #colored #comm #commission #commissionsopen #comms #commsopen #crowned #crownedvictory #cute #doop #feral #greyscale #open #opencomms #paid #ref #refsheet #refsheets #reference #shaded #stippling #uncolored #victory #ych #2022 #cv2022
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hey! cmere... we've got a secret... we're currently accepting off-stream comms for next month!
COMMISSION FORM - https://forms.gle/fX4jeu2fDrAKJfMC6
TOS AND PRICES - https://www.crownedvictory.art/closing the form at 11:59PM (PST) on Friday! 5 days!
#anthro #chibi #colored #comm #commission #commissionsopen #comms #commsopen #crowned #crownedvictory #cute #doop #feral #greyscale #open #opencomms #paid #ref #refsheet #refsheets #reference #shaded #stippling #uncolored #victory #ych #2022
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Karamello Typeface by SAMPLE
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The Karamello Typeface Is a Font That Brings Classic Diploma-Era Elegance Back to Modern Design
Script typefaces have a credibility problem. Too many of them lean saccharine—soft, overly casual, built for cupcake logos, and wellness brands. Karamello, designed and published by SAMPLE, is none of that. It arrives with the quiet authority of a hand-signed certificate from a century ago, carrying institutional weight without feeling stiff or unapproachable. This is a typeface with something to say.
The typeface is available on:
Creative Market YouWorkForThemRight now, designers are genuinely hungry for script fonts that feel earned. The current wave of maximalist editorial design, luxury branding revivals, and heritage aesthetics has created real demand for letterforms that communicate prestige without irony. Karamello lands exactly at that intersection.
Karamello typeface by SAMPLEThe typeface is available on:
Creative Market YouWorkForThemSo what makes it different? And why does it deserve a place in your type library?
What Is the Karamello Script Typeface and Where Does It Come From?
Karamello is an elegant script typeface with a refined, hand-drawn character. SAMPLE drew direct inspiration from vintage certificates and academic diplomas—those meticulously composed documents that used calligraphic letterforms to signal legitimacy, achievement, and permanence.
That lineage matters. Diploma scripts carry a specific visual grammar: consistent stroke rhythm, controlled flourish, and a formal axis that signals credibility. Karamello inherits all of that. But it also moves beyond mere revival. The alternate capitals introduce high-contrast moments and decorative flourishes that give the typeface a distinctive rhythm—something you don’t find in straight historical reconstructions.
Think of it this way: most script revivals feel like museum pieces. Karamello feels like something a contemporary art director would actually reach for.
The Prestige Script Framework: How Karamello Earns Its Authority
I want to introduce a concept here that helps articulate what separates Karamello from the crowded script market: the Prestige Script Framework. This framework describes typefaces that successfully balance three qualities simultaneously—calligraphic authenticity, decorative vitality, and typographic restraint.
Most script typefaces nail one of those three. Karamello hits all of them.
Calligraphic Authenticity
The letterforms read as genuinely hand-drawn. The stroke modulation—the transition between thick and thin—follows the logic of a real broad-nib pen. Nothing feels mechanically constructed or digitally over-smoothed. That authenticity is what makes Karamello feel trustworthy at a glance.
Decorative Vitality
The alternate capitals are where the typeface earns its character. These are not simple swash variations. They introduce moments of high contrast and pronounced flourish that create visual rhythm across a line of text. Set a headline using Karamello’s alternates, and the capitals pulse with personality—each one slightly theatrical but never chaotic.
Typographic Restraint
Here is where many decorative scripts fall apart: they overcommit. Every glyph becomes a performance. Karamello avoids that trap. The lowercase letterforms are elegant but measured. The overall texture of set text stays readable. You can use this typeface at large display sizes or—carefully—at smaller scales without it collapsing into visual noise.
Diploma Prestige Aesthetics: The Cultural Context Behind Karamello
Why does the diploma script aesthetic resonate so strongly right now? The answer connects to broader cultural shifts in how brands and designers signal value.
We’re living through a sustained backlash against sterile corporate minimalism. The clean, sans-serif uniformity that dominated brand design for the past decade now reads—fairly or not—as cold, interchangeable, and low-effort. Audiences increasingly respond to visual signals of craft, history, and intentionality.
Academic diploma scripts carry exactly those associations. Historically, diplomas used the best available calligraphers and the most expensive printing techniques. The letterforms communicated that something important had happened—something worth marking carefully. Karamello activates that entire cultural memory.
That makes it a genuinely strategic choice for brands in the luxury, heritage, artisan, hospitality, and education sectors. It also makes it compelling for editorial design, packaging, wedding stationery, and any context where the designer wants to telegraph quality without spelling it out.
How Does Karamello Perform Across Real Design Applications?
Let’s be specific. Where does this typeface actually work—and where does it struggle?
Packaging and Product Branding
Karamello excels here. Set against clean backgrounds or textured stock, the alternate capitals create a visual anchor that pulls the eye immediately. Think premium food and beverage packaging—chocolates, spirits, and confectionery—where the name of the product needs to feel handcrafted but also authoritative. The typeface carries that dual register without strain.
Wedding and Luxury Event Stationery
This is probably Karamello’s most natural home. The diploma heritage reads directly as a formal celebration. It sets beautifully for names, venue details, and headings on invitation suites. The flourished alternates give designers room to make typographic choices that feel personal and composed simultaneously.
Editorial Headlines and Magazine Display
Used as a display typeface in editorial contexts, Karamello commands attention. Pair it with a high-contrast serif for body text, and the combination creates a compelling visual hierarchy. The key is scale: Karamello wants to be seen as large. Small sizes reduce its impact.
Logotype and Wordmark Design
Here, the alternate capitals become a design tool. By selecting specific alternates for key letters, a designer can create a logotype with a genuinely unique silhouette. That kind of built-in customizability is rare in script typefaces and adds significant practical value.
Where It Requires Caution
Extended body text is not Karamello’s territory. No decorative script should be used for long-form reading. Additionally, contexts demanding sharp legibility at small sizes—fine print, captions, UI elements—will challenge the typeface. Use it where it can breathe and perform at scale.
The Alternate Capitals: Karamello’s Defining Typographic Feature
I keep returning to the alternate capitals because they genuinely set Karamello apart from comparable script typefaces. Most scripts offer alternates as secondary options—minor variations on the default forms. In Karamello, the alternates feel like the main event.
The high-contrast approach to these letters creates what I’d call Flourish Architecture—the deliberate use of contrast and decorative stroke extension to build structural rhythm across a word or line. When you set a headline with multiple alternate capitals, the letterforms don’t just sit next to each other. They create a visual cadence, a series of weighted moments that guide the eye through the text.
This is a sophisticated type design. It means the typeface rewards experimentation. Try different combinations of alternates in your layout software. The results change meaningfully depending on your choices—and that’s exactly the kind of engagement that distinguishes a premium typeface from a commodity one.
Karamello Versus Other Elegant Script Fonts: A Comparative Perspective
The elegant script typeface market is genuinely crowded. What does Karamello offer that similar options don’t?
Compare it to broadly popular options like Cormorant Script or Pinyon Script. Both are beautiful and widely used, which is also their limitation. They appear everywhere. Karamello, drawing more directly from the academic diploma tradition, has a distinctive source that gives it a different visual personality: more formal than Cormorant, more architecturally composed than Pinyon.
Against newer script releases, Karamello’s restraint is its advantage. Many contemporary script typefaces chase maximum expressiveness—every stroke stretched to its limit. Karamello understands that prestige communicates through control, not excess. The discipline in the lowercase creates space for the alternates to land with genuine impact.
Practical Tips for Using Karamello in Your Design Work
Here are specific, actionable recommendations for getting the most out of this typeface.
Experiment Aggressively with the Alternate Capitals
Don’t default to the standard capital forms. Open your glyph panel and explore the alternates systematically. Build several versions of your headline using different alternate combinations before settling on one. The right combination will feel noticeably more composed and intentional.
Pair With High-Contrast Serifs for Maximum Impact
Karamello works beautifully alongside typefaces that share its emphasis on stroke contrast. A classical Didone serif—think Bodoni or Didot optical sizes—creates a coherent visual language. Both typefaces speak the same historical grammar. The combination reads as considered and sophisticated.
Use Color and Background Strategically
The sample image uses Karamello in black on a deep red ground—and the effect is striking. The high contrast makes the fine hairstrokes visible while giving the bolder strokes full weight. Dark grounds with light text, or cream stock with dark ink, both serve the typeface better than mid-tone backgrounds that flatten its tonal range.
Give It Scale
If Karamello is in your layout, make it the largest element on the page. Let it own the visual hierarchy. Using it as a secondary accent element at small sizes wastes its expressive range. This typeface is built for headlines.
Consider Tracking Carefully
Script typefaces are sensitive to tracking adjustments. Karamello’s connected letterforms mean that aggressive positive tracking will break the visual flow. Minor negative tracking can actually tighten the texture and improve cohesion at display sizes. Test carefully—the difference between well-tracked and poorly tracked Karamello is significant.
The Timeless Appeal of Hand-Drawn Script Typefaces in Contemporary Branding
There’s a genuine paradox at the heart of script typography: the more digital our design tools become, the more we crave letterforms that look handmade. Karamello sits squarely in that cultural dynamic.
The hand-drawn character isn’t nostalgia for its own sake. It signals something designers and brands increasingly need to communicate: that a human being made considered choices, applied real skill, and cared about the outcome. Algorithmic design has made competence cheap. Visible craft has become expensive. Karamello belongs to the expensive category.
For independent designers, boutique studios, and brands with authenticity at the center of their identity, that positioning matters. The typeface becomes evidence. When a brand uses Karamello, it’s making a claim about its own values—care, tradition, quality—that the letterforms themselves support.
Forward Predictions: Where Karamello Fits in the Next Wave of Type Design
Script typefaces with genuine historical grounding will continue to grow in relevance as the pendulum swings away from generic geometric sans-serifs. The current appetite for heritage aesthetics in packaging, branding, and editorial design shows no sign of reversing. If anything, it’s intensifying.
Karamello is well-positioned for this shift. Its combination of diploma-era authority and contemporary alternate character design gives it a double lifespan: it works now in the heritage revival moment, and it will continue working when the pendulum swings toward maximalist expressiveness—because its flourish architecture already anticipates that territory.
My prediction: within the next few years, script typefaces with structured alternate capital systems—what I’m calling the Prestige Script category—will become a distinct and recognized subcategory in type directories. Karamello is an early example of what that category looks like when it’s executed well.
Invest in it now. The design community hasn’t fully discovered it yet, and that window closes.
The typeface is available on:
Creative Market YouWorkForThemFrequently Asked Questions About the Karamello Typeface
What is the Karamello typeface?
Karamello is an elegant script typeface designed and published by SAMPLE. It draws inspiration from vintage academic diplomas and formal certificates, combining hand-drawn calligraphic characters with alternate capitals that introduce high-contrast flourish and distinctive typographic rhythm.
Who designed Karamello?
Karamello was designed and published by SAMPLE, a type foundry offering premium typefaces through platforms including Creative Market.
What is Karamello best used for?
Karamello works best as a display typeface in contexts demanding elegance and prestige—luxury packaging, wedding stationery, editorial headlines, logotype design, and high-end brand identity work. It is not suited for extended body text or small-size applications.
Does Karamello include alternate characters?
Yes. Karamello includes alternate capital letters that introduce moments of high contrast and pronounced decorative flourish. These alternates are a core feature of the typeface, allowing designers to customize the visual rhythm of headlines and wordmarks.
What typefaces pair well with Karamello?
Karamello pairs effectively with high-contrast serif typefaces such as Didone-style fonts (Bodoni, Didot, and their optical variants). The shared emphasis on stroke contrast creates visual coherence between the script and the body typeface.
Is Karamello suitable for logo design?
Yes—Karamello’s alternate capitals make it especially well-suited for logotype and wordmark design. By selecting specific alternate forms, designers can create letter combinations with distinctive silhouettes that feel custom-crafted.
Where can I purchase or download the Karamello typeface?
Karamello is available through Creative Market. Search for “Karamello typeface SAMPLE” to find the current listing and licensing options.
What design styles does Karamello suit?
Karamello suits heritage, luxury, vintage, academic, and editorial design aesthetics. It is particularly effective in contexts where the designer wants to communicate prestige, craft, and tradition through typography alone.
Is Karamello a serif or sans-serif typeface?
Karamello is a script typeface—a category distinct from both serif and sans-serif. Script typefaces simulate handwriting or calligraphy and are typically used for display and decorative purposes rather than body text.
How does Karamello compare to other premium script fonts?
Karamello distinguishes itself through its diploma-heritage source material and its structured alternate capital system. Compared to broadly popular scripts, it offers a more formally composed, architecturally controlled character that communicates authority rather than softness or casualness.
Browse WE AND THE COLOR’s Fonts category for more.
#font #fonts #Karamello #SAMPLE #scriptFont #typeface #Typefaces -
Wednesday Reads: Trump Considers Attacks on Iran and Other News
Good Day!!
Trump is reportedly considering joining Israel in bombing Iran’s nuclear sites. He’s once again ignoring the findings of the U.S. intelligence community, which has assessed that Iran is not actively developing a nuclear weapon. In fact he’s angry at his DNI Tulsi Gabbard for reporting that finding.
Shouldn’t Congress be involved in a decision to go to war? Back in 2002, George W. Bush went to Congress for authorization to attack Iraq, and obtained two AUMF’s (Authorization for Military Force against Iraq) before beginning the bombing in Afghanistan and Iraq. After Trump’s bizarre behavior at the G7 meeting in Canada this week, I for one do not feel comfortable having this insane person making a decision that could start World War III.
War on Iran?
W.J. Hennigan at The New York Times: Trump Might Get Us Into Another War. Where’s Congress?
As President Trump considers pulling American forces into a risky and unpredictable new war in the Middle East, it’s time for the legislative branch to step up. U.S. lawmakers should insist the president obtain a new war authorization from Congress before U.S. forces take any military action against Iran.
While Mr. Trump has so far refrained from committing U.S. military support to Israel’s air campaign, he also hasn’t ruled it out. On Tuesday he called for Iran’s “unconditional surrender,” and mentioned the open possibility of killing Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a statement posted to his social media site.
Smoke plumes billow following an overnight Israeli strike on Tehran on June 17. Atta KenareAFP via Getty Images
The Pentagon has already been moving military hardware, including ships and aircraft, toward the Middle East to give Mr. Trump a wider range of options should he decide to join the war. The United States is supporting Israel through other means as well, including defending against Iran’s drone and missile attacks.
But it is Congress’ constitutional right to declare war — not the president’s — despite the wide latitude given to the White House in recent decades to use military force during the war on terror. As Mr. Trump seriously considers joining Israel in this war, it is essential for elected lawmakers to reclaim their responsibility and put their names on record with a vote as to whether they’re willing to send American troops in harm’s way in yet another war in the Middle East.
Since Sept. 11, 2001, presidents have depended on open-ended legal authorizations from Congress to use military force against a wide array of militant groups in at least 22 countries. Days after the attacks on the World Trade Center towers, the Pentagon and elsewhere, Congress passed a law known as an Authorization for Use of Military Force, or A.U.M.F., that President George W. Bush used to invade Afghanistan; a second A.U.M.F. was passed by Congress in 2002 to invade Iraq. President Barack Obama used those authorizations to expand the drone wars to places like Syria, Yemen and Somalia. President Joe Biden later used them to attack Iranian-backed groups in Iraq and Syria nearly a quarter-century later.
Hennigan argues that it is past time for Congress to take back it’s power to declare war.
“The founders expected the United States to comply with international law and for Congress to check a president’s lawless rush to war,” said Mary Ellen O’Connell, a University of Notre Dame law professor and an expert on international law. “Without a discussion and vote in Congress, this restraining mechanism is lost.”
Mr. Trump has already spent days publicly contemplating whether or not to join Israel in the conflict. Dr. O’Connell compared the situation to the past decisions to go to war in Afghanistan in 2001 and against Iraq in 2003. In both cases, Congress passed a war authorization law.
Those laws granted the commander in chief sweeping powers to send troops into combat and launch military operations with few restrictions, putting the United States on an open-ended war footing ever since. It’s unclear what legal rationale the Trump White House would use if it does decide to take military action against Iran, but legal scholars are skeptical that current legislation is sufficient.
“He absolutely needs congressional authorization if he intends to use military force against Iran,” said Oona Hathaway, a former Pentagon lawyer and professor at Yale Law School. “That clearly would not fall within either of the existing A.U.M.F.s.”
I’m not holding my breath waiting for Trump to respect the limits of his power under the Constitution.
The New York Times: Iran Is Preparing Missiles for Possible Retaliatory Strikes on U.S. Bases, Officials Say.
Iran has prepared missiles and other military equipment for strikes on U.S. bases in the Middle East should the United States join Israel’s war against the country, according to American officials who have reviewed intelligence reports.
The United States has sent about three dozen refueling aircraft to Europe that could be used to assist fighter jets protecting American bases or that would be used to extend the range of bombers involved in any possible strike on Iranian nuclear facilities.
Black smoke billows from the headquarters of Iranian state television in Tehran following an Israeli attack on June 16, 2025. Kyodo AP
Fears of a wider war are growing among American officials as Israel presses the White House to intervene in its conflict with Iran. If the United States joins the Israeli campaign and strikes Fordo, a key Iranian nuclear facility, the Iranian-backed Houthi militia will almost certainly resume striking ships in the Red Sea, the officials said. They added that pro-Iranian militias in Iraq and Syria would probably try to attack U.S. bases there.
Other officials said that in the event of an attack, Iran could begin to mine the Strait of Hormuz, a tactic meant to pin American warships in the Persian Gulf.
Commanders put American troops on high alert at military bases throughout the region, including in the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. The United States has more than 40,000 troops deployed in the Middle East.
Two Iranian officials have acknowledged that the country would attack U.S. bases in the Middle East, starting with those in Iraq, if the United States joined Israel’s war.
Iran would also target any American bases that are in Arab countries and take part in an attack, the two officials said.
CNN live updates: Iran says it won’t surrender in Israel conflict as Trump weighs US involvement.
What you need to know
• Trump considers his options: US President Donald Trump said his patience with Iran has “already run out,” but he declined to say whether he has made a decision on US military intervention as the Israel-Iran conflict escalates. CNN previously reported that Trump is growing increasingly warm to using US military assets to strike Iranian nuclear facilities.
• Iran issues warning: Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a national address that Iran will not surrender and warned that any US military intervention would result in “irreparable damage.” He also criticized Israel for launching its military campaign while Iran was engaged in nuclear talks with the United States.
• On the ground: Israel said its air force is striking military targets in Tehran. One strike occurred near a Red Crescent facility in the capital, according to Iranian state media. Meanwhile, Iran is experiencing a near-complete internet blackout, according to a watchdog organization.
Politico: Hegseth defers to general on Pentagon’s plans for Iran.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has given an unusual level of authority to a single general in the latest Middle East crisis — an Iran hawk who is pushing for a strong military response against the country.
U.S. Central Command chief Gen. Erik Kurilla has played an outsized role in the escalating clashes between Tehran and Israel, with officials noting nearly all his requests have been approved, from more aircraft carriers to fighter planes in the region.
General Erik Kurilla
The pugnacious general, who is known as “The Gorilla,” is overruling other top Pentagon officials and playing a quiet but decisive role in the country’s next steps on Iran, according to a former and current defense official, a diplomat, and a person familiar with the dynamic.
Hegseth’s apparent deference to Kurilla undermines the image the Pentagon chief has sought to project of a tough-talking leader who has vowed to reduce the influence of four-star generals and reassert civilian control.
“If the senior military guys come across as tough and warfighters, Hegseth is easily persuaded to their point of view,” said the former official. Kurilla “has been very good at getting what he wants.” [….]
Kurilla’s arguments to send more U.S. weapons to the region, including air defenses, have gone against Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine and Pentagon policy chief Elbridge Colby, who have urged caution in overcommitting to the Middle East, according to the four people.
Read more at Politico.
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has the temerity to disagree with Trump on whether Iran is actively developing a nuclear weapon, and Trump not happy with her.
AP: US spies said Iran wasn’t building a nuclear weapon. Trump dismisses that assessment.
Tulsi Gabbard left no doubt when she testified to Congress about Iran’s nuclear program earlier this year.
The country was not building a nuclear weapon, the national intelligence director told lawmakers, and its supreme leader had not reauthorized the dormant program even though it had enriched uranium to higher levels.
But President Donald Trump dismissed the assessment of U.S. spy agencies during an overnight flight back to Washington as he cut short his trip to the Group of Seven summit to focus on the escalating conflict between Israel and Iran.
“I don’t care what she said,” Trump told reporters. In his view, Iran was “very close” to having a nuclear bomb.
Trump’s statement aligned him more closely with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has described a nuclear-armed Iran as an imminent threat, than with his own top intelligence adviser. Trump met with national security officials, including Gabbard, in the Situation Room on Tuesday as he plans next steps.
The Independent: Trump is ‘losing confidence’ in Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard as he mulls removing her entire office, senior official says.
As he weighs joining Israel’s war against Iran, President Donald Trump reportedly finds himself at odds with his Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, with one White House official saying that he has “just been kind of down on her in general” of late.
Tulsi Gabbard
The president was recently incensed, according to Politico, by Gabbard’s decision to post a three-minute video on X in the early hours of June 10 in which she warned that “political elite and warmongers” are “carelessly fomenting fear and tensions between nuclear powers,” placing the world “on the brink of nuclear annihilation.”
Trump is said to have been angered by the video, accusing Gabbard of going “off-message” and rebuking her for it in person.
One of the senior administration officials, quoted anonymously by Politico, said there is a growing perception within the West Wing that the former Hawaii Democratic congresswoman, who once ran for that party’s presidential nomination, “doesn’t add anything to any conversation.”
“I don’t think [Trump] dislikes Tulsi as a person,” said another. “But certainly the video made him not super hot on her… and he doesn’t like it when people are off message.” They added that “many took that video as trying to correct the administration’s position.”
More News and Opinion:
You undoubtedly heard that Kristi Noem has been hospitalized for an “allergic reaction.” People on social media have suggested this had something today with Botox or fillers, but that’s just mean.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was transported by ambulance on Tuesday to a hospital in Washington, DC, after an allergic reaction, the Department of Homeland Security said.
“Secretary Noem had an allergic reaction today. She was transported to the hospital out of an abundance of caution. She is alert and recovering,” said DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin.
CNN observed several Secret Service agents posted at several entrances outside the emergency room at the hospital where the secretary was admitted.
Noem, 53, who previously served as the governor of South Dakota and represented the state in Congress, was tapped to serve as President Donald Trump’s Homeland Security secretary just days after he was elected for a second term, positioning her as a critical member of his cabinet after he made immigration a major part of his campaign. She was confirmed for the role by the Senate in late January.
Since returning to office, Trump has pushed for an aggressive crackdown on immigration — ranging from deploying troops to the border to evoking wartime authority to deport undocumented migrants — and Noem has carried out the president’s agenda.
Josephine Harvey at The Daily Beast: ICE Barbie Visited Biohazard Lab With RFK Jr. Before Hospitalization.
Kristi Noem was hospitalized for an allergic reaction one day after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. shared a photo of them both visiting a biosafety lab that was temporarily shut down due to safety concerns.
Kristy Noem at the Biohazard lab at Ft. Detrick
“With @Sec_Noem and @SenRandPaul inspecting the biological hazard labs at Fort Detrick,” the Health and Human Services Secretary posted, sharing an image of himself with Noem and GOP Sen. Rand Paul at the Integrated Research Facility in Frederick, Maryland.
On Tuesday, Noem was taken to the hospital by ambulance for an “allergic reaction,” DHS’ Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin told the Daily Beast in a statement.
“She was transported to the hospital out of an abundance of caution. She is alert and recovering,” McLaughlin said.
It’s not clear what prompted the allergic reaction, and there’s nothing to suggest the incident was anything more than a bizarre coincidence.
More destruction from RFK Jr:
Apoorva Mandavilli at The New York Times: Why a Vaccine Expert Left the C.D.C.: ‘Americans Are Going to Die.’
In 13 years at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Fiona Havers crafted guidance for contending with Zika virus, helped China respond to outbreaks of bird flu and guided safe burial practices for Ebola deaths in Liberia.
More recently, she was a senior adviser on vaccine policy, leading a team that produced data on hospitalizations related to Covid-19 and respiratory syncytial virus. To the select group of scientists, federal officials and advocates who study who should get immunizations and when, Dr. Havers is well known, an embodiment of the C.D.C.’s intensive data-gathering operations.
On Monday, Dr. Havers resigned, saying she could no longer continue while the health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., dismantled the careful processes that help formulate vaccination standards in the United States.
“If it isn’t stopped, and some of this isn’t reversed, like, immediately, a lot of Americans are going to die as a result of vaccine-preventable diseases,” she said in an interview with The New York Times, the first since her resignation.
Dr. Havers, 49, cited an escalating series of attacks on federal vaccine policy by Mr. Kennedy. Three weeks ago, the health secretary announced in a minute-long video on X that the agency would no longer recommend Covid-19 vaccines for healthy children or pregnant women.
Last week, he fired all 17 members of the agency’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, saying without evidence that the group was beset with conflicts of interest and that a clean sweep was needed to restore public trust.
Mr. Kennedy went on to name eight new members, at least half of whom appear to share his antipathy to vaccines. Two have testified against vaccine makers in trials.
Trump appears to be winning his case against California over the National Guard.
The New York Times: Appeals Court Seems Inclined to Let Trump Control National Guard in L.A. for Now.
A federal appeals court appeared inclined on Tuesday to allow President Trump, against the wishes of Gov. Gavin Newsom, to keep using California’s National Guard for now to protect immigration enforcement agents and quell protesters in Los Angeles.
Throughout a 65-minute hearing, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit signaled skepticism of the idea that the judiciary should second-guess Mr. Trump’s determination that deploying the state militia to Los Angeles is necessary to protect federal agents and buildings.
The hearing came at a time when local organizers have vowed to continue protesting against immigration raids, though demonstrations in downtown Los Angeles have quieted since the weekend.
A district court judge, Charles Breyer, determined last week that Mr. Trump’s use of the National Guard was illegal and temporarily ordered the president to return control of the forces to Mr. Newsom.
But the Trump administration immediately appealed the ruling, and the Ninth Circuit panel stayed the lower court decision while it considered the matter. It seemed likely on Tuesday that the panel, which consists of two appointees of Mr. Trump and one of former President Joseph R. Biden Jr., would keep that stay in place.
The two Trump appointees, Judges Mark J. Bennett and Eric D. Miller, did the bulk of the talking. Both appeared skeptical of the Justice Department’s argument that courts have no ability to review Mr. Trump’s decision to invoke a statute allowing him to call up the Guard. But they also seemed inclined to find that the sometimes violent protests in Los Angeles were enough to defer to Mr. Trump’s decision.
Another Democratic politician was violently arrested by ICE yesterday.
Andrew Egger at The Bulwark: Trump’s Goon Squad Strikes Again.
Last Thursday, California Sen. Alex Padilla was forcibly removed from a Department of Homeland Security news conference, pushed to the ground, and handcuffed by authorities. If you thought the ensuing backlash might make federal agents more cautious about manhandling opposition politicians, you thought wrong.
Brad Lander being arrested by ICE goons
Yesterday, federal agents in New York City handcuffed another Democratic official: Brad Lander, the city comptroller and a current candidate for mayor. Video taken inside a New York immigration court showed Lander standing next to someone who ICE agents—some in plainclothes, some masked—were trying to take into custody. Lander repeatedly demanded to see a warrant, and kept an arm locked with the man as agents tried to take him away, walking in a scrum with them down the hallway. Moments later, agents placed Lander under arrest as well.
In a statement released after the encounter, the Department of Homeland Security preposterously claimed that Lander had been arrested “for assaulting law enforcement and impeding a federal officer.” The latter claim was true; the former laughably false.
“No one is above the law,” the DHS statement went on, “and if you lay a hand on a law enforcement officer, you will face consequences.” The U.S. attorney’s office in New York seemingly disagreed. Lander—like Padilla last week—was released without being charged.
…the White House’s immigration enforcement mooks1plainly haven’t been instructed to avoid further high-profile clashes with Democratic officials. Lander—who, as we noted, is currently running for mayor—might well have been angling for a photo-op. But ICE agents were also all too happy to give him one, and DHS leadership was all too happy to lean into the story….on a similar note, the story continues the pattern of Trump’s federal law enforcement agencies publicly accusing people of criminal conduct that goes beyond what they’re willing to actually charge in court….
…put yourself in Lander’s shoes. Masked agents show up to whisk a migrant away. Maybe he’ll get to tell his family where he is, maybe he won’t. Maybe he’ll have the opportunity to speak to a lawyer or plead his case to a judge, maybe he won’t. And you think to yourself: Will there be a legal process? Or am I the very last person who has a chance to intervene on this person’s behalf?
That’s it for me today. What’s on your mind?
#BiohazardLabAtFrDetrick #CaliforniaNationalGuard #CongressionalAuthorizationForMilitaryForce #GeneralErikKurilla #KristiNoem #PeteHegseth #RobertFKennedyJr_ #TulsiGabbard #vaccines
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Wednesday Reads: Trump Considers Attacks on Iran and Other News
Good Day!!
Trump is reportedly considering joining Israel in bombing Iran’s nuclear sites. He’s once again ignoring the findings of the U.S. intelligence community, which has assessed that Iran is not actively developing a nuclear weapon. In fact he’s angry at his DNI Tulsi Gabbard for reporting that finding.
Shouldn’t Congress be involved in a decision to go to war? Back in 2002, George W. Bush went to Congress for authorization to attack Iraq, and obtained two AUMF’s (Authorization for Military Force against Iraq) before beginning the bombing in Afghanistan and Iraq. After Trump’s bizarre behavior at the G7 meeting in Canada this week, I for one do not feel comfortable having this insane person making a decision that could start World War III.
War on Iran?
W.J. Hennigan at The New York Times: Trump Might Get Us Into Another War. Where’s Congress?
As President Trump considers pulling American forces into a risky and unpredictable new war in the Middle East, it’s time for the legislative branch to step up. U.S. lawmakers should insist the president obtain a new war authorization from Congress before U.S. forces take any military action against Iran.
While Mr. Trump has so far refrained from committing U.S. military support to Israel’s air campaign, he also hasn’t ruled it out. On Tuesday he called for Iran’s “unconditional surrender,” and mentioned the open possibility of killing Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a statement posted to his social media site.
Smoke plumes billow following an overnight Israeli strike on Tehran on June 17. Atta KenareAFP via Getty Images
The Pentagon has already been moving military hardware, including ships and aircraft, toward the Middle East to give Mr. Trump a wider range of options should he decide to join the war. The United States is supporting Israel through other means as well, including defending against Iran’s drone and missile attacks.
But it is Congress’ constitutional right to declare war — not the president’s — despite the wide latitude given to the White House in recent decades to use military force during the war on terror. As Mr. Trump seriously considers joining Israel in this war, it is essential for elected lawmakers to reclaim their responsibility and put their names on record with a vote as to whether they’re willing to send American troops in harm’s way in yet another war in the Middle East.
Since Sept. 11, 2001, presidents have depended on open-ended legal authorizations from Congress to use military force against a wide array of militant groups in at least 22 countries. Days after the attacks on the World Trade Center towers, the Pentagon and elsewhere, Congress passed a law known as an Authorization for Use of Military Force, or A.U.M.F., that President George W. Bush used to invade Afghanistan; a second A.U.M.F. was passed by Congress in 2002 to invade Iraq. President Barack Obama used those authorizations to expand the drone wars to places like Syria, Yemen and Somalia. President Joe Biden later used them to attack Iranian-backed groups in Iraq and Syria nearly a quarter-century later.
Hennigan argues that it is past time for Congress to take back it’s power to declare war.
“The founders expected the United States to comply with international law and for Congress to check a president’s lawless rush to war,” said Mary Ellen O’Connell, a University of Notre Dame law professor and an expert on international law. “Without a discussion and vote in Congress, this restraining mechanism is lost.”
Mr. Trump has already spent days publicly contemplating whether or not to join Israel in the conflict. Dr. O’Connell compared the situation to the past decisions to go to war in Afghanistan in 2001 and against Iraq in 2003. In both cases, Congress passed a war authorization law.
Those laws granted the commander in chief sweeping powers to send troops into combat and launch military operations with few restrictions, putting the United States on an open-ended war footing ever since. It’s unclear what legal rationale the Trump White House would use if it does decide to take military action against Iran, but legal scholars are skeptical that current legislation is sufficient.
“He absolutely needs congressional authorization if he intends to use military force against Iran,” said Oona Hathaway, a former Pentagon lawyer and professor at Yale Law School. “That clearly would not fall within either of the existing A.U.M.F.s.”
I’m not holding my breath waiting for Trump to respect the limits of his power under the Constitution.
The New York Times: Iran Is Preparing Missiles for Possible Retaliatory Strikes on U.S. Bases, Officials Say.
Iran has prepared missiles and other military equipment for strikes on U.S. bases in the Middle East should the United States join Israel’s war against the country, according to American officials who have reviewed intelligence reports.
The United States has sent about three dozen refueling aircraft to Europe that could be used to assist fighter jets protecting American bases or that would be used to extend the range of bombers involved in any possible strike on Iranian nuclear facilities.
Black smoke billows from the headquarters of Iranian state television in Tehran following an Israeli attack on June 16, 2025. Kyodo AP
Fears of a wider war are growing among American officials as Israel presses the White House to intervene in its conflict with Iran. If the United States joins the Israeli campaign and strikes Fordo, a key Iranian nuclear facility, the Iranian-backed Houthi militia will almost certainly resume striking ships in the Red Sea, the officials said. They added that pro-Iranian militias in Iraq and Syria would probably try to attack U.S. bases there.
Other officials said that in the event of an attack, Iran could begin to mine the Strait of Hormuz, a tactic meant to pin American warships in the Persian Gulf.
Commanders put American troops on high alert at military bases throughout the region, including in the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. The United States has more than 40,000 troops deployed in the Middle East.
Two Iranian officials have acknowledged that the country would attack U.S. bases in the Middle East, starting with those in Iraq, if the United States joined Israel’s war.
Iran would also target any American bases that are in Arab countries and take part in an attack, the two officials said.
CNN live updates: Iran says it won’t surrender in Israel conflict as Trump weighs US involvement.
What you need to know
• Trump considers his options: US President Donald Trump said his patience with Iran has “already run out,” but he declined to say whether he has made a decision on US military intervention as the Israel-Iran conflict escalates. CNN previously reported that Trump is growing increasingly warm to using US military assets to strike Iranian nuclear facilities.
• Iran issues warning: Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a national address that Iran will not surrender and warned that any US military intervention would result in “irreparable damage.” He also criticized Israel for launching its military campaign while Iran was engaged in nuclear talks with the United States.
• On the ground: Israel said its air force is striking military targets in Tehran. One strike occurred near a Red Crescent facility in the capital, according to Iranian state media. Meanwhile, Iran is experiencing a near-complete internet blackout, according to a watchdog organization.
Politico: Hegseth defers to general on Pentagon’s plans for Iran.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has given an unusual level of authority to a single general in the latest Middle East crisis — an Iran hawk who is pushing for a strong military response against the country.
U.S. Central Command chief Gen. Erik Kurilla has played an outsized role in the escalating clashes between Tehran and Israel, with officials noting nearly all his requests have been approved, from more aircraft carriers to fighter planes in the region.
General Erik Kurilla
The pugnacious general, who is known as “The Gorilla,” is overruling other top Pentagon officials and playing a quiet but decisive role in the country’s next steps on Iran, according to a former and current defense official, a diplomat, and a person familiar with the dynamic.
Hegseth’s apparent deference to Kurilla undermines the image the Pentagon chief has sought to project of a tough-talking leader who has vowed to reduce the influence of four-star generals and reassert civilian control.
“If the senior military guys come across as tough and warfighters, Hegseth is easily persuaded to their point of view,” said the former official. Kurilla “has been very good at getting what he wants.” [….]
Kurilla’s arguments to send more U.S. weapons to the region, including air defenses, have gone against Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine and Pentagon policy chief Elbridge Colby, who have urged caution in overcommitting to the Middle East, according to the four people.
Read more at Politico.
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has the temerity to disagree with Trump on whether Iran is actively developing a nuclear weapon, and Trump not happy with her.
AP: US spies said Iran wasn’t building a nuclear weapon. Trump dismisses that assessment.
Tulsi Gabbard left no doubt when she testified to Congress about Iran’s nuclear program earlier this year.
The country was not building a nuclear weapon, the national intelligence director told lawmakers, and its supreme leader had not reauthorized the dormant program even though it had enriched uranium to higher levels.
But President Donald Trump dismissed the assessment of U.S. spy agencies during an overnight flight back to Washington as he cut short his trip to the Group of Seven summit to focus on the escalating conflict between Israel and Iran.
“I don’t care what she said,” Trump told reporters. In his view, Iran was “very close” to having a nuclear bomb.
Trump’s statement aligned him more closely with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has described a nuclear-armed Iran as an imminent threat, than with his own top intelligence adviser. Trump met with national security officials, including Gabbard, in the Situation Room on Tuesday as he plans next steps.
The Independent: Trump is ‘losing confidence’ in Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard as he mulls removing her entire office, senior official says.
As he weighs joining Israel’s war against Iran, President Donald Trump reportedly finds himself at odds with his Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, with one White House official saying that he has “just been kind of down on her in general” of late.
Tulsi Gabbard
The president was recently incensed, according to Politico, by Gabbard’s decision to post a three-minute video on X in the early hours of June 10 in which she warned that “political elite and warmongers” are “carelessly fomenting fear and tensions between nuclear powers,” placing the world “on the brink of nuclear annihilation.”
Trump is said to have been angered by the video, accusing Gabbard of going “off-message” and rebuking her for it in person.
One of the senior administration officials, quoted anonymously by Politico, said there is a growing perception within the West Wing that the former Hawaii Democratic congresswoman, who once ran for that party’s presidential nomination, “doesn’t add anything to any conversation.”
“I don’t think [Trump] dislikes Tulsi as a person,” said another. “But certainly the video made him not super hot on her… and he doesn’t like it when people are off message.” They added that “many took that video as trying to correct the administration’s position.”
More News and Opinion:
You undoubtedly heard that Kristi Noem has been hospitalized for an “allergic reaction.” People on social media have suggested this had something today with Botox or fillers, but that’s just mean.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was transported by ambulance on Tuesday to a hospital in Washington, DC, after an allergic reaction, the Department of Homeland Security said.
“Secretary Noem had an allergic reaction today. She was transported to the hospital out of an abundance of caution. She is alert and recovering,” said DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin.
CNN observed several Secret Service agents posted at several entrances outside the emergency room at the hospital where the secretary was admitted.
Noem, 53, who previously served as the governor of South Dakota and represented the state in Congress, was tapped to serve as President Donald Trump’s Homeland Security secretary just days after he was elected for a second term, positioning her as a critical member of his cabinet after he made immigration a major part of his campaign. She was confirmed for the role by the Senate in late January.
Since returning to office, Trump has pushed for an aggressive crackdown on immigration — ranging from deploying troops to the border to evoking wartime authority to deport undocumented migrants — and Noem has carried out the president’s agenda.
Josephine Harvey at The Daily Beast: ICE Barbie Visited Biohazard Lab With RFK Jr. Before Hospitalization.
Kristi Noem was hospitalized for an allergic reaction one day after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. shared a photo of them both visiting a biosafety lab that was temporarily shut down due to safety concerns.
Kristy Noem at the Biohazard lab at Ft. Detrick
“With @Sec_Noem and @SenRandPaul inspecting the biological hazard labs at Fort Detrick,” the Health and Human Services Secretary posted, sharing an image of himself with Noem and GOP Sen. Rand Paul at the Integrated Research Facility in Frederick, Maryland.
On Tuesday, Noem was taken to the hospital by ambulance for an “allergic reaction,” DHS’ Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin told the Daily Beast in a statement.
“She was transported to the hospital out of an abundance of caution. She is alert and recovering,” McLaughlin said.
It’s not clear what prompted the allergic reaction, and there’s nothing to suggest the incident was anything more than a bizarre coincidence.
More destruction from RFK Jr:
Apoorva Mandavilli at The New York Times: Why a Vaccine Expert Left the C.D.C.: ‘Americans Are Going to Die.’
In 13 years at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Fiona Havers crafted guidance for contending with Zika virus, helped China respond to outbreaks of bird flu and guided safe burial practices for Ebola deaths in Liberia.
More recently, she was a senior adviser on vaccine policy, leading a team that produced data on hospitalizations related to Covid-19 and respiratory syncytial virus. To the select group of scientists, federal officials and advocates who study who should get immunizations and when, Dr. Havers is well known, an embodiment of the C.D.C.’s intensive data-gathering operations.
On Monday, Dr. Havers resigned, saying she could no longer continue while the health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., dismantled the careful processes that help formulate vaccination standards in the United States.
“If it isn’t stopped, and some of this isn’t reversed, like, immediately, a lot of Americans are going to die as a result of vaccine-preventable diseases,” she said in an interview with The New York Times, the first since her resignation.
Dr. Havers, 49, cited an escalating series of attacks on federal vaccine policy by Mr. Kennedy. Three weeks ago, the health secretary announced in a minute-long video on X that the agency would no longer recommend Covid-19 vaccines for healthy children or pregnant women.
Last week, he fired all 17 members of the agency’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, saying without evidence that the group was beset with conflicts of interest and that a clean sweep was needed to restore public trust.
Mr. Kennedy went on to name eight new members, at least half of whom appear to share his antipathy to vaccines. Two have testified against vaccine makers in trials.
Trump appears to be winning his case against California over the National Guard.
The New York Times: Appeals Court Seems Inclined to Let Trump Control National Guard in L.A. for Now.
A federal appeals court appeared inclined on Tuesday to allow President Trump, against the wishes of Gov. Gavin Newsom, to keep using California’s National Guard for now to protect immigration enforcement agents and quell protesters in Los Angeles.
Throughout a 65-minute hearing, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit signaled skepticism of the idea that the judiciary should second-guess Mr. Trump’s determination that deploying the state militia to Los Angeles is necessary to protect federal agents and buildings.
The hearing came at a time when local organizers have vowed to continue protesting against immigration raids, though demonstrations in downtown Los Angeles have quieted since the weekend.
A district court judge, Charles Breyer, determined last week that Mr. Trump’s use of the National Guard was illegal and temporarily ordered the president to return control of the forces to Mr. Newsom.
But the Trump administration immediately appealed the ruling, and the Ninth Circuit panel stayed the lower court decision while it considered the matter. It seemed likely on Tuesday that the panel, which consists of two appointees of Mr. Trump and one of former President Joseph R. Biden Jr., would keep that stay in place.
The two Trump appointees, Judges Mark J. Bennett and Eric D. Miller, did the bulk of the talking. Both appeared skeptical of the Justice Department’s argument that courts have no ability to review Mr. Trump’s decision to invoke a statute allowing him to call up the Guard. But they also seemed inclined to find that the sometimes violent protests in Los Angeles were enough to defer to Mr. Trump’s decision.
Another Democratic politician was violently arrested by ICE yesterday.
Andrew Egger at The Bulwark: Trump’s Goon Squad Strikes Again.
Last Thursday, California Sen. Alex Padilla was forcibly removed from a Department of Homeland Security news conference, pushed to the ground, and handcuffed by authorities. If you thought the ensuing backlash might make federal agents more cautious about manhandling opposition politicians, you thought wrong.
Brad Lander being arrested by ICE goons
Yesterday, federal agents in New York City handcuffed another Democratic official: Brad Lander, the city comptroller and a current candidate for mayor. Video taken inside a New York immigration court showed Lander standing next to someone who ICE agents—some in plainclothes, some masked—were trying to take into custody. Lander repeatedly demanded to see a warrant, and kept an arm locked with the man as agents tried to take him away, walking in a scrum with them down the hallway. Moments later, agents placed Lander under arrest as well.
In a statement released after the encounter, the Department of Homeland Security preposterously claimed that Lander had been arrested “for assaulting law enforcement and impeding a federal officer.” The latter claim was true; the former laughably false.
“No one is above the law,” the DHS statement went on, “and if you lay a hand on a law enforcement officer, you will face consequences.” The U.S. attorney’s office in New York seemingly disagreed. Lander—like Padilla last week—was released without being charged.
…the White House’s immigration enforcement mooks1plainly haven’t been instructed to avoid further high-profile clashes with Democratic officials. Lander—who, as we noted, is currently running for mayor—might well have been angling for a photo-op. But ICE agents were also all too happy to give him one, and DHS leadership was all too happy to lean into the story….on a similar note, the story continues the pattern of Trump’s federal law enforcement agencies publicly accusing people of criminal conduct that goes beyond what they’re willing to actually charge in court….
…put yourself in Lander’s shoes. Masked agents show up to whisk a migrant away. Maybe he’ll get to tell his family where he is, maybe he won’t. Maybe he’ll have the opportunity to speak to a lawyer or plead his case to a judge, maybe he won’t. And you think to yourself: Will there be a legal process? Or am I the very last person who has a chance to intervene on this person’s behalf?
That’s it for me today. What’s on your mind?
#BiohazardLabAtFrDetrick #CaliforniaNationalGuard #CongressionalAuthorizationForMilitaryForce #GeneralErikKurilla #KristiNoem #PeteHegseth #RobertFKennedyJr_ #TulsiGabbard #vaccines
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SK hynix and Sandisk want HBF to become the missing memory layer for AI inference
https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://nerds.xyz/2026/02/sk-hynix-sandisk-hbf-ai-inference-memory/
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I don't know if anyone else here is a 21 pilots fan. But uhm, _wow_
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@Linux_in_a_Bit I love that I can disappear, and when I come back, things are basically just like when I left.
I also love that this place rarely raises my blood pressure, unlike much of the rest of the internet, or IRL.