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👋 Good morning! Welcome back. In today's edition: The World Cup knockouts are here, Mickelson's misconduct, Ryu wins at Hazeltine, the Miz strikes again, a Monday finish at the Travelers, Wimbledon begins, and more. Yahoo Sports AM is written by Kendall Baker and Jeff Tracy. Let's sports... 🚨 ICYMI HEADLINES ⚾️ MLB firings: The Mets fired manager Carlos Mendoza in the midst of New York's last-place campaign, replacing him with senior VP of player development Andy Green on an interim basis. The Angels fired GM Perry Minasian amid a six-year tenure of perennially sub-.500 play; former Cardinals president John Mozeliak will take over on an interim basis. ⚽️ Poch offered extension: The U.S. Soccer Federation has reportedly offered Mauricio Pochettino an extension that would keep him on as the USMNT's head coach for another World Cup cycle, through 2030. As it stands, his deal will expire at the end of this year's tournament. 🏀 Charlotte's fire sale continues: Just a few days after trading away franchise cornerstone LaMelo Ball, the Hornets dealt Miles Bridges (and a second-round pick) to the Suns for Grayson Allen, Royce O'Neale and a future first-rounder. That's now two of Charlotte's top four scorers from last season gone, months after completing a promising 44-win campaign. 🏀 Mystics win marathon: The Mystics beat the Fire on Sunday, 124-123 (4OT), in the second quadruple overtime game in WNBA history. Six players scored at least 20 points (three per team), led by Washington's Sonia Citron and Portland's Carla Leite, each with a game-high 32. 🥊 Boots bests Zayas: Jaron "Boots" Ennis (36-0, 32 KOs) defeated Xander Zayas (23-1, 13 KOs) on Saturday night at Barclays Center via seventh-round stoppage, capturing the WBA and WBO super welterweight titles to become a two-division unified champion. ⚽️ WORLD CUP BRING ON THE KNOCKOUTS (Hassan Ahmad/Yahoo Sports) The World Cup knockouts began on Sunday with a dramatic Canadian victory over South Africa, leaving 30 teams fighting for their spot in the Round of 16. No more math: The mental gymnastics of determining permutations and third-place cut lines ended on Saturday night, when Iran watched its dream get destroyed, revived, and then destroyed again during Algeria and Austria's thrilling 3-3 draw that resulted in Iran's elimination. Do or die: From here on out, it's win or go home, starting with three matches each of the next five days to narrow the field to 16. Today: Brazil vs. Japan, Germany vs. Paraguay, Netherlands vs. Morocco Tuesday: Ivory Coast vs. Norway, France vs. Sweden, Mexico vs. Ecuador Wednesday: England vs. DR Congo, Belgium vs. Senegal, USA vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina Thursday: Spain vs. Austria, Portugal vs. Croatia, Switzerland vs. Algeria Friday: Australia vs. Egypt, Argentina vs. Cape Verde, Colombia vs. Ghana To be the best… It certainly looks like the USMNT will have to beat the best, after the Americans landed a less-than-optimal road to the final. In the most difficult case, they'll have to face Belgium (Round of 16), Spain (Quarterfinal), France (Semifinal) and Argentina (Final). But first up is a date with Bosnia and Herzegovina — an opponent they can't afford to overlook. You'll never believe it, but Messi scored again. (Ryan Pierse/FIFA via Getty Images) Group stage notes: Individual scoring acclaim continues: Lionel Messi extended his World Cup scoring streak to a record seven games on Saturday, and extended his lead in the Golden Boot race with six goals so far. Harry Kane, meanwhile, scored his 70th goal of the season for club and country (a tally only bested by Messi's 82 in 2011-2012), in turn becoming England's all-time leading scorer at the World Cup with 11 goals. Straight chalk: 11 out of 12 pre-tournament favorites won their groups, with only Portugal falling short in that endeavor (they finished second to Colombia). In fact, the only team ranked in the world's top 20 who qualified for the World Cup but didn't reach the knockouts was No. 19 Uruguay, a stunning result whose consequences went beyond the field. Not midnight yet: Tournament darling Cape Verde secured a spot in the Round of 32 with three draws, becoming the smallest nation ever to emerge from the World Cup group stage. They're also one of seven teams making their knockout-round debut, alongside DR Congo, South Africa, Canada, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Ivory Coast and Egypt. Africa on top: Nine out of the 10 African teams in the field advanced to the knockouts, the highest percentage of any confederation. South America (5 of 6) and Europe (13 of 16) weren't far behind, while Asia (2 of 9) struggled mightily. ⛳️ DEEP DIVE REPORT: MICKELSON'S HISTORY OF MISCONDUCT (Justin Casterline/Getty Images) Phil Mickelson has withdrawn from next month's Open Championship in the wake of a detailed report by Skratch's Alan Shipnuck, which unearths numerous accusations of sexual misconduct and otherwise inappropriate behavior against the six-time major champion. Catch up quick: Earlier this month, Golf Digest reported that Mickelson was no longer a member of The Farms Golf Club outside San Diego following accusations of unwanted physical contact with a female employee. "In fact," writes Shipnuck, "Mickelson's unceremonious ending at The Farms seems to be part of a larger pattern." "In recent years, he has had abrupt departures from two other high-end golf clubs, the Madison Club and The Bridges in Rancho Santa Fe. Sources at both clubs say his personal conduct was a primary factor." "Seventeen years after Tiger Woods's serial infidelities exploded into a tabloid-fueled scandal, his onetime rival may now be facing his own reckoning." What they're saying: Ashley Perez, the ex-wife of Mickelson's friend and fellow LIV Golf player Pat Perez, shared her story — which included being propositioned by Phil with a nude photo of himself — to help fight the "culture of silence that keeps women from coming forward." "With Phil, I feel like the pattern has been there for many years but people have been afraid to go public because it's Phil Mickelson. We give these golfers so much adulation and money, they think they're gods. They think they're untouchable." A pattern of behavior: Mickelson allegedly paid golf club employees to drive his phone around the course to hide his location from his wife, Amy, so he could sneak away for secret rendezvous, according to the report. He also drunkenly propositioned a friend at a group dinner in graphic detail. "It was horrible," she said. "It felt like verbal rape." The last word, courtesy of one of Mickelson's former golf buddies… "It's a very sad story. He should have been Arnold Palmer. Phil had the same charisma, the same star power. People loved him everywhere he went. My take is that he came to believe his own bull****." "He thought he was bulletproof, because his whole life he had always skated on everything. But, in the end, he had too many demons. He got consumed by his own darkness." 📸 SNAPSHOTS THROUGH THE LENS (Chris Carlson/AP Photo) 🇺🇸 Chaska, Minnesota — South Korea's Haeran Ryu (-13) emerged from a crowded leaderboard on Sunday at Hazeltine to win the Women's PGA Championship by two strokes, capturing her fourth LPGA victory and first major title. Historic comeback: Ryu shot a 1-over 73 on Thursday, leaving her 10 shots off the lead. Then she changed her putter and made history, shooting 64-68-70 the rest of the way to become the first LPGA major champion since 1964 who trailed by 10+ shots after Round 1. (Mark Thompson/Getty Images) 🇦🇹 Spielberg, Austria — Mercedes' George Russell won Sunday's Austrian Grand Prix for his second victory of the season, continuing the Silver Arrows' dominant campaign as their duo of Russell and Kimi Antonelli have finished first in seven of eight F1 races so far. Leaderboard: Mercedes (302 points) holds a sizable lead over Ferrari (204) in the team standings, while Antonelli (171) — who came in third on Sunday — Russell (131) and Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton (125) are the only drivers with more than 80 points. The top three picks in the 2026 NHL Draft pose together. (Jeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images) 🇺🇸 Buffalo, New York — Penn State's Gavin McKenna (Maple Leafs), Sweden's Ivar Stenberg (Sharks) and the OHL's Caleb Malhotra (Canucks) were the top three picks in this weekend's NHL Draft, which was defined by a flurry of trades that saw 18 first-round picks ultimately used by teams other than their original owners. San Jose's historic selection: The Sharks' seventh-round pick was defenseman Alexander Karmanov out of Moldova, who at 7-foot-1 is the tallest drafted player in NHL history. If he plays a single game, he'll surpass the 6-foot-9 trio of Zdeno Chára, Matt Rempe and Viktor Svedberg as the tallest to actually appear in an NHL game. (Kirk Irwin/NWSL via Getty Images) 🇺🇸 Columbus, Ohio — Gotham FC defeated the Kansas City Current, 2-0, to win the NWSL Challenge Cup, coming out on top of Friday's rain-soaked contest that marked the first professional women's soccer match ever played in the state of Ohio. Where it stands: All 16 teams have played between 11 and 13 of their 30-game schedules as the league prepares to return from its monthlong pause during the World Cup's group stage. San Diego (25 points), Utah (24) and Portland (24) lead the way, followed by last year's champion (Gotham), runner-up (Washington) and Shield winner (KC), with 21 points each. 💯 STAT SHEET BIG NUMBERS (John Fisher/Getty Images) ⚾️ 105.5 mph Well folks, he did it again. Brewers ace Jacob Misiorowski threw a 105.5 mph fastball on Friday, yet again breaking his own record for the fastest pitch ever recorded by an MLB starting pitcher. He's also now just a few ticks away from the fastest pitch thrown by any pitcher, a record currently held by closer Aroldis Chapman, who hit 105.8 in 2010 and 105.7 in 2016. Could the Miz reach 106 and beyond? "I definitely think it's possible,” he said after the game, adding that he actually slipped while throwing the historic heater. "Science says you can hit 108. Someone eventually is going to hit it. ... Speed is cool, but if it doesn't win a ballgame it doesn't matter." Worth noting: He did, indeed, win the ballgame (9-3), and his ERA is an MLB-best 1.45 for first-place Milwaukee (50-31). 🏊♀️ 23.55 seconds Four-time Olympic medalist Gretchen Walsh broke the 50m freestyle world record on Sunday in Rome, clocking a time of 23.55 seconds to narrowly edge the mark (23.59) set just nine days earlier by Kate Douglass, her training partner and former University of Virginia teammate. Another record falls: While Walsh broke a nine-day old world record, Dutch Olympian Marrit Steenbergen broke a nine-year old world record, swimming a 51.68 in the 100m free on Saturday to eclipse Sarah Sjöström's mark of 51.71 from 2017. Handshakes at the last, with more to come today. (Andrew Redington/Getty Images) ⛳️ 72 holes (and counting) Scottie Scheffler and Viktor Hovland (-21) fought an incredible duel on Sunday at the Travelers Championship, but 72 holes ultimately wasn't enough to determine a winner, and neither was four days after a lengthy weather delay forced a Monday finish. They'll return this morning (9am ET, Golf) for a sudden-death playoff on the 18th hole at TPC River Highlands. How they got here: Hovland — fueled in part by a horde of Norwegian soccer fans who came to cheer on their native son after watching Norway's World Cup game in nearby Foxborough — entered the final round with a one-stroke lead over the world No. 1. They remained neck-and-neck all day and reached the 18th hole all tied up, with both missing long birdie putts. Hovland left himself a tap-in, while Scottie sank an 8-footer to save par and force the playoff. 🏀 13-for-13 The Sky rewrote the record books in Friday's blowout win over the Sparks, led by center Kamila Cardoso's perfect 13-for-13 shooting performance, the most field goals taken in a single game without a miss in WNBA history. Chicago also dished out a WNBA-record 38 assists and scored a franchise-record 124 points. Elsewhere: The first-place Lynx (15-4) continued their winning ways on Sunday with an 85-77 victory over the Wings (11-8), as No. 2 pick and ROY frontrunner Olivia Miles (21 points, 8 assists) improved to 3-0 this season against No. 1 pick Azzi Fudd (21 points, 4 steals). 📺 VIEWING GUIDE WATCHLIST: MONDAY, JUNE 29 Can Sinner beat the heat and repeat at Wimbledon? (Cameron Spencer/Getty Images) 🎾 Wimbledon, Day 1 Play begins today (6am ET, ESPN/ESPN+) at the All England Club, where some key storylines in the season's third Grand Slam include Serena Williams' return to singles (she plays tomorrow), Novak Djokovic's pursuit of a record-breaking 25th major (he plays today at 11:20am) and Jannik Sinner's cramping history vs. the heat of a London summer (he plays today at 8:30am). Pre-tournament reading: Tennis players want more money ... they're just not willing to fight for it (Dan Wolken, Yahoo Sports) ⚽️ World Cup, Round of 32 The knockouts continue today with Brazil vs. Japan in Houston (1pm, Fox), Germany vs. Paraguay in Foxborough (4:30pm, Fox) and Netherlands vs. Morocco in Guadalupe (9pm, Fox). Scorers galore: Five of the 15 players who have scored 3+ goals this tournament are in action today: Brazil's Vinícius Júnior (4 goals) and Matheus Cunha (3), Germany's Deniz Undav (3), Morocco's Ismael Saibari (3) and Netherlands' Brian Brobbey (3). More to watch: ⛳️ PGA: Travelers Championship (9am, Golf) … Scottie Scheffler and Viktor Hovland (-21) will compete in a sudden-death playoff at TPC River Highlands. ⚾️ MLB: Rangers at Guardians (7pm, ESPN) … Jacob deGrom (6-5, 3.55 ERA) vs. ROY contender Parker Messick (7-4, 2.67 ERA). Got plans tonight? Gametime is the best place to score last-minute tickets to the events in your city. ⚽️ 50 WINS WORLD CUP TRIVIA Man of the Match Lautaro Martínez celebrates his goal in Saturday's win. (Luke Hales/Getty Images) Argentina notched its 50th World Cup victory on Saturday, becoming just the third nation ever to reach that milestone. Question: Can you name the other two countries with at least 50 World Cup wins? Hint: South America, Europe Answer at the bottom. 📆 ON THIS DAY JUNE 29, 2007: NFL EUROPE FOLDS The 2004 NFL Europe World Bowl in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. (Lars Baron/Bongarts/Getty Images) 19 years ago today, NFL Europe officially folded, bringing an end to a failed marketing strategy that struggled to establish a foothold of attendance and media interest. Yes, but: That overaggressive idea was born of the same global ambition that has since led to the NFL's booming international slate, which this fall will feature a record nine games across four continents. The league wasn't wrong; it was just early. We'll dive deeper into NFL Europe's rise and fall in today's edition of Yahoo Sports Biz, which hits inboxes in a few hours. Subscribe here to start receiving our new newsletter. Trivia answer: Brazil (78 wins) and Germany (70)
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Florida Politics
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
At FL GOP summit, Republicans invoke fear of Democratic ‘socialists’ to inspire troops DAVIE — With members of the Democratic Socialists of America winning congressional seats in New York City last week, Florida Republicans have seized upon fresh material to motivate their base in what could be a tough political environment for the GOP in this fall’s midterm election. https://floridaphoenix.com/2026/06/28/at-fl-gop-summit-republicans-invoke-fear-of-democratic-socialists-to-inspire-troops/? E-bike speed limits are an ‘overreach,’ DeSantis says with veto Gov. Ron DeSantis has vetoed a speed limit for electric bicycles, a measure that passed the House and Senate unanimously, calling it an “overreach.” https://floridaphoenix.com/briefs/e-bike-speed-limits-are-an-overreach-desantis-says-with-veto/? SPLC reacts to DeSantis veto of measure allowing student volunteers at poll places Gov. Ron DeSantis has vetoed legislation that would have allowed high school students to earn scholarships by volunteering at polling locations — and he’s citing the support of a progressive civil rights organization loathed by conservatives as a reason for rejecting it. https://floridaphoenix.com/2026/06/26/splc-reacts-to-desantis-veto-of-measure-allowing-student-volunteers-at-poll-places/? -
Did King Ahab Worship Yahweh? How many temples existed in ancient Israel? Most people think the answer is simple: one. According to the Bible, Jerusalem (in the Southern Kingdom of Judah) housed Yahweh’s one legitimate temple, and rival shrines represented apostasy. King Ahab’s capital at Samaria (in the Northern kingdom of Israel), for example, is remembered as a center of Baal worship under Queen Jezebel, synonymous with idolatry. https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/ancient-cultures/ancient-israel/did-king-ahab-worship-yahweh/?
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Remarkable Finds From Two Eras at Biblical Nineveh Researchers at one of the most significant foreign cities in the Biblical account have uncovered dramatic evidence of strife from two violent clashes separated by more than 2,600 years. Nineveh was the ancient capital city of the dreaded Assyrian Empire, which dominated the Middle East in the days of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah. The first conflict was part of the downfall of Assyria, while the second conflict occurred in recent years, involving the defeat of another ruthless force, the terrorist group ISIS (the Islamic State). https://www.patternsofevidence.com/2026/06/26/remarkable-finds-from-two-eras-at-biblical-nineveh/?
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Adventist World, has ceased publication. ;-(
phkrause replied to Asia Joe's topic in Adventist World News
I really enjoyed reading the World Review. But the cancellation of the world edition was made before the new president was voted in I believe? The new editor wrote about it sometime ago?? Here's what the AI had to say about this: AI Summary To understand when the Adventist Review decided to end the World Edition, consider the following points: The decision was announced in the July 2021 issue. The World Edition was launched in 2003 to reach a global audience. The discontinuation aimed to focus resources on digital content and local editions. The Adventist Review emphasized the need for more relevant regional news. The change reflects a shift in media consumption trends among readers. The final World Edition was published in August 2021. -
Adventist view on the Nature of Christ
Hanseng replied to hobie's topic in Real Issues in Adventism today
Should be "sinful flesh" is that described in Romans 7. -
Adventist view on the Nature of Christ
Hanseng replied to hobie's topic in Real Issues in Adventism today
Very sensible way of looking at it. A.T. Jones introduced me to the fallen nature view through his book "The Consecrated Way to Christian Perfection."As I recall, he relied heavily upon this verse to justify his view: 14 ¶ Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same; that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil; 15 And deliver them who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage. Hebrews 2 Most SDA who hold to the view espoused in the Consecrated Way also believe in sinless perfectionism. They reason that since Jesus overcame sin with a nature like ours, we can do the same. Any true Christian hopes to overcome sin. The pragmatists, based on their own experience, recognize total victory over sin with a fallen nature is akin to moving a mountain by faith. Not necessarily impossible but no indication it has ever happened. Sinless perfectionists simply say that this experience is reserved for the final generation. In addition to the text from Hebrews 2, cited above, Romans 8 succors sinless perfectionists. Jesus was sent "in the likeness of sinful flesh." Context indicates that "sinless flesh" is that described in Romans 7. People with sinful flesh are, by nature, captive to the law of sin. We are unable to perform that which is good. We do evil that we don't ant to do. This is the law of sin and death. It works in the being of all born into this world, except Jesus. Paul and Barnabas (Acts 14: 11-15) and Elijah (James 5:17) all possessed passions like every other human. "Like passions" is the way the KJV puts it. Paul refused worship from the Lycaonians due to having a nature like theirs. Even though Elijah shared a nature with every other sinner, he was still translated. He certainly wasn't sinless, nor was he a part of the final generation. There we have an example of a man who was not sinless and was translated. The Greek word translated as "like passions" is not the same word used in Romans 8, which says Jesus was sent in the "likeness of sinful flesh" "Likeness" has a wide range of meaning, including "to resemble," as evinced by Judges 8:18 in the LXX. The Greek word comparing Paul, Barnabas and Elijah to other humans compared oranges and oranges. The word translated as likeness in Romans 8:3 does not. It is also used in Philippians 2:7 Jesus was made in the "likeness of men" [who all have sinful flesh]. Paul refused worship because his nature had passions like ours. Jesus did not refuse worship because he did not share the passions of fallen man, i.e., the law of sin and death was not at work in Him. -
phkrause reacted to a post in a topic:
Adventist view on the Nature of Christ
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phkrause reacted to a post in a topic:
Adventist view on the Nature of Christ
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Adventist view on the Nature of Christ
Kevin H replied to hobie's topic in Real Issues in Adventism today
The Christian church argued for centuries over the nature of Christ, and eventually (I believe through the leading of the Holy Spirit) came to the conclusion that Jesus had his own unique nature that is not like Adam's before the fall and us after the fall. That there are elements of both, but that he cannot be described as having either. Jesus needed rest, food, water, could catch cold etc. but he did not have any tendency to sin. He did not have the "sinful nature." That we are sinners because we have the sinful nature, and Jesus did not have this. For some specifics, all sin is selfishness, and even our best is still tainted with selfishness. Jesus did not have any taint of selfishness. I like the Ellen White quote "There is in man a disposition to esteem himself more highly than others, to serve self, to seek the highest place and often this results in evil surmisings and bitterness of spirit." I also like what the philosopher/poet Eli Sigel when he said "There is in every person a disposition to think they are for themselves by making less of the outside world." I understand these to be perfect definitions for the sinful nature. Jesus did not have this disposition in himself in the slightest. As a majority (no, not all of them) of our pioneers questioned the trinity, they ended up making Jesus something less than God himself. As they were seeing the importance of returning to the law of God, especially the neglected Sabbath, and also trying to understand Jesus from a non-trinitarian position, we made the error of seeing Jesus' role being more our example. We sadly gave up the traditional understanding as the church came to over the centuries. In our "new" view of Jesus, we saw him as sharing with us the nature of us after the fall, and showing us that we can indeed over come. When you don't have the trinity which gives a tension between the members of the Godhead, we end up picking one aspect of the trinity and make that aspect to be God in total. While they don't use our language, when we look at Eastern Religions, they are worshiping God the Holy Spirit as God in total. Here in the west, we tend to make God the Father, God as power and authority as God in total, and the natural result is to preach the law the law the law until we are as dry as the hills of Gilboa, and we end up making Jesus's role to be fully in submission to the Father and to the law the law the law just the way that we need to submit and to teach us that we can submit to this level. This lead to the 1888 crisis. Mrs. White took a lot of the blame of the 1888 crisis on herself, that she did not share the issues of the great controversy as she should have. In response she moved the trinity from an unpopular idea that only a minority of our members believed to the center of her developing the great controversy visions into a philosophy. Many of our members had trouble with this. Now, another debated issue in our church was how does inspiration work, whether the "Fundamentalists" were right or wrong. Leave this thought here for a moment. Many of our leaders were shocked as to how Mrs. White gave a fair amount of support to the message of Jones and Wagner. They wanted her to uphold the tradition that developed in Adventism that lead to 1888. Many of these, such as Elder Butler and his nephew Elder Washburn needed to take some time off to wrestle with this issue. While Butler and Washburn were in agreement in their dislike of the 1888 message, Elder Butler was an anti-Fundamentalist and had a more liberal view of how inspiration worked. His nephew, Elder Wagner, was a very strict Fundamentalist. I do not have the background or position to do this study, but both men struggled with their anti-1888 message views and how to become more accommodating to the 1888 message. I wonder what the similarities and differences between the conclusion of each man's struggle. Anyway, at least Elder Washburn came to a conclusion that was still very much the views that lead up to 1888, yet, somehow gives an acknowledgement and compromise with 1888. Elder Washburn never accepted the trinity, and from what I've seen does not appear to have any major changes from his views before to after 1888. He and others have come to this view and has through the years evolved this thought into what has taken the names of say "Historic Adventists" and "Last Generation Adventists." Elder Andresen came from this flavor of Adventism, although he wrote to and visited Mrs. White to ask if she had become a trinitarian and was convinced that she indeed did become a trinitarian, and he accepted a version of the trinity, but fit his "trinitarian" views to otherwise fit this version of Adventism, and he brought the trinity into this version of Adventism, and did understand Jesus, although God, to have had the sinful nature while on earth. On the other hand, Mrs. White took more of a traditional understanding of the trinity (although, it appears to look more like one of the theories of the trinity that we find within Eastern Orthodoxy rather than Roman Catholic.) She began writing about the nature of Jesus. She liked the views of one theologian (I don't really remember his name, but it always reminds me of the name of the author Herman Melville,) But whether she's quoting this author, or others, they all hold in common that they were strong supporters and describers of the orthodox view I tried to explain in the first paragraph. She picked some of what should have been the best quotes of this orthodox view. Sadly, there are those who nick-pick her words to try to make them more align with Washburn and Andresen's view, and they need to ignore the sources that she was copying. Despite those who want to align her words with Washburn/Andresen's view, the mainline Adventist church turned to the orthodox understanding of the nature of Christ. In the 1950s there was a discussion with some Evangelical leaders that lead to the book "Questions on Doctrine". One question they had was how do Seventh-day Adventists understand the nature of Jesus. I understand Questions on Doctrine to have some strong and weak points. I've sided with our scholars who suggest that our leaders should have admitted how many of our pioneers questioned the trinity, but as we studied and grew, we came to accept the trinity and as we accepted the trinity we came to accept the traditional orthodox view of the nature of Jesus, and give the Ellen White quotes that we find in the back of Questions on Doctrine, and simply leave it there. But sadly, the leaders, trying to impress the Evangelicals, tended to focus on the divinity of Jesus at the expense of the humanity of Jesus, and thus ended up giving a half truth. Andresen and others then pointed out this unbalanced view, but their followers (and somewhat Andresen, but from what I've seen and been taught, more so the followers) have latched on to the missing part of the truth at the expense of the part of the truth that our leaders over did in this discussion. Sadly, this has caused us to divide the truth into two halves that some of us latch totally on to one side or the other. (Also, I don't know if this had happened by the 1950s, but in recent years, I've been noticing among Evangelicals a gradual drifting away from the orthodox view and more to the unbalanced view we mistakenly fell into when giving the Questions on Doctrine discussion.) -
Kevin H reacted to a post in a topic:
Adventist view on the Nature of Christ
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Jerome Odenthal, 85 passed away this afternoon. He is survived by wife Bonnie,four sons and wives, numerous grandchildren and nieces and nephews.
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If Worship on Sunday is wrong, then why do SDA rent their churches to Traditional Christian?
Kevin H replied to hobie's topic in Real Issues in Adventism today
Seventh-day Adventists supports liberty of conscience for all. Ellen White was proud of our churches allowing others to worship in our buildings on Sunday. Mrs. White herself went from being a shut-door Adventist into becoming a very popular preacher in non-Adventist churches, often giving the Sunday sermons. By the way, her sermons were not on the Sabbath or the Mark of the Beast, but she preached on the beauty of Jesus, how much Jesus loves them, and the health message. Mrs. White wrote Steps to Christ for the general Christian world published at a popular non-Adventist publishing house. Another non-Adventist publishing house had requested her to write a series of books for them. As they came to work out the contract, Mrs. White said that she saw her angel indicating that she needed to wait and pointed to one clause. This clause would have given an unusual amount of rights to the book and exclusive printing of the book to the company. Mrs. White said that she could not sign with that clause. They tried to pressure her into signing anyway, but said that they could not back off that clause, and the contract was never signed. It turned out that the company was in a very bad financial condition. They were hoping that this series of books from her would place them back on solid financial ground. They soon went out of business and the way that clause was written would have caused it to be extremely difficult to reprint, if at all, as well as making it difficult if not impossible for her to say/write anything similar to what those books had. Even though that clause prevented Mrs. White from signing the contract and writing those books, it shows her willingness to work with the Christian world as a whole. Of course, as a business, many of our leaders are looking for winning as many tithe and offering paying members as possible. We have subgroups who want to present their version of Adventism as the only truth, and want to first of all make Adventists, but then make their version of Adventism. But that is them, and from what I understand from looking at Mrs. White herself and Adventist History, I don't see this spirit to be Seventh-day Adventism itself. In the 1800s as we were forming, many wanted our church name to be something like "The true church of God" or similar exalted titles. Mrs. White did not like this and said that Seventh-day Adventists tells the world who we are, a humble name, that we are Adventists who worship on the Seventh-day. Mrs. White tells us that the Sabbath-Sunday issue and the potential of Sunday laws will bring the final test to the Christian world. But I have not found where she makes the Sunday issue THE final test in an of itself and to the whole world. She points to a larger issue on liberty of conscience, and that the test itself, the mark of the beast itself is to come to the same conclusions as the beast when it comes to conversion [justification] and sanctification. And that all the details are not yet known and will not be known until the unrolling of the scroll and the sounding of the trumpets. Also, when it comes to how we relate to other religions, she pictures the Seventh-day Adventist Church, not as an exclusive church that everyone else needs to join to be saved, but as playing a pastoral role among the churches. We see this lived out in her life in her using her perspective as a Seventh-day Adventist to preach in other churches about the beauty of Jesus and how much Jesus loves them and to describe to people a Jesus who wants to be with them and present Jesus in a way that they want to with him (as opposed to a message of turn to Jesus to be saved from being burned forever in hell) and to encourage them to live healthier and longer lives. Mrs. White would take goodies and give them to migrant workers and encourage them that Jesus loves them, even though their response would most likely attend near by Catholic churches when they were able to attend services. -
Kevin H reacted to a post in a topic:
If Worship on Sunday is wrong, then why do SDA rent their churches to Traditional Christian?
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Kevin H reacted to a post in a topic:
If Worship on Sunday is wrong, then why do SDA rent their churches to Traditional Christian?
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Kevin H reacted to a post in a topic:
If Worship on Sunday is wrong, then why do SDA rent their churches to Traditional Christian?
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Thailand’s Princess Bajrakitiyabha Mahidol
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Dogs
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At least 117 dead dogs found in ‘horrific scene’ at California ‘no-kill’ shelter FORTUNA, Calif. (AP) — The remains of at least 117 dogs were found on the grounds of a California “no-kill“ animal shelter, many of them with gunshot wounds, authorities said. https://apnews.com/article/dog-remains-animal-rescue-california-92545f7942f1f8663d5665c3b5bafec8? ps:How sad is this??
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Polls and Survey's
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
Fewer Americans are proud of US achievements: AP-NORC poll Americans’ pride in the U.S. on several key attributes has dropped since 2017 — including the nation's military and its political influence around the globe — according to a new AP-NORC poll. Read more. What to know: The findings point to a broad decline in patriotic sentiment over a tumultuous decade. Much of the falling positivity comes from Democrats, who have become increasingly disenchanted with the country since President Donald Trump’s first term. A new Gallup poll also finds that only 53% of U.S. adults are “extremely” or “very” proud to be an American, the lowest reading in the trend dating back to 2001. -
Donald Trump has sweeping plans for a second administration. Here’s what he’s proposed
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
A look at the Trump administration’s challenge to birthright citizenship President Donald Trump has repeatedly, and falsely, said the U.S. is the only country that has birthright citizenship, calling the practice “a disgrace.” While it's true that the practice, which grants automatic citizenship to nearly everyone born on U.S. soil, isn’t the norm around the world, dozens of other countries have unrestricted birthright citizenship. Read more. What to know: Most of these countries are in the Americas, including Canada, Mexico and many nations in Central and South America. Dozens of other countries, from Germany to Australia, have a mixed approach, using a variety of principles, including parenthood, place of birth, residency and ethnicity, to decide a child’s citizenship. The Supreme Court is expected to address the issue in the coming days, ruling on a Trump executive order that would upend more than a century of constitutional and legal history. RELATED COVERAGE ➤ The Supreme Court nears the end of its term with momentous cases about Trump’s power to be decided Some paid the ultimate price to enact voting rights. Their survivors see America turning backward -
Iran’s president says $6B in frozen assets in Qatar to be released as US talks challenged Speaking on Monday, President Masoud Pezeshkian is the highest-ranking official within Iran to reference the release of Iranian funds held by Qatar, a key mediator along with Pakistan in the negotiations. Read more. Why this matters: Pezeshkian’s mention of the funds appear aimed at selling the Iranian public on the interim deal, which he called a “great victory for the Iranian people,” as Iran’s grip on the Strait of Hormuz has been challenged. So far, U.S. officials say no frozen Iranian assets have been released. Qatar as well has not acknowledged any such transfer. Pakistan has said talks will resume Tuesday between the U.S. and Iran on the terms of their interim deal. The Trump administration on Sunday said nothing has been canceled and technical talks are on track for the coming days. Iran has yet to say whether it will take part. RELATED COVERAGE ➤ WATCH: AP explains why preliminary agreement between Iran and US appears to be unravelling
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The New York Times
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
June 29, 2026 By Sam Sifton Good morning. Rescue efforts continue in Venezuela. And a U.S. official said the U.S. and Iran had agreed to stop attacks in the Strait of Hormuz. There’s plenty more below. But I want to start today in South Africa. Malawian nationals wait outside a migrant camp in Durban, South Africa. Joao Silva/The New York Times Migration woes Xenophobic violence has been mounting in South Africa recently, as mobs of anti-immigrant protesters march in Johannesburg and elsewhere, threatening African migrants and attacking foreign-owned businesses. (This link is free.) One anti-immigration group has set an arbitrary deadline for all undocumented migrants who are in the country to leave. That’s tomorrow, June 30. It’s unclear what will happen if the migrants don’t leave — the group hasn’t said — but many in South Africa are worried. I reached out to John Eligon, our bureau chief in Johannesburg, to ask what’s happening, and why. Sam: Let’s take this back to basics. Can you help us understand what things are like in South Africa these days? John: In a word, tense! Over the past several months we’ve had a lot of protests against immigrants, and they’ve just been growing and growing. And there’s been a few instances of violence in which mobs have chased and attacked immigrants out of their homes and businesses. Recently, an immigrant from Malawi was killed. Already this year, we’ve seen thousands of immigrants leave South Africa because of the threats and the attacks. Migration has long caused tensions in South Africa, because it has the continent’s largest economy. The fact is, most African migrants aren’t crossing the Mediterranean in search of greener pastures in Europe. Most go to other African countries. And South Africa is about as attractive a destination as any on the continent, because people think they can find work here. Officially, about three million immigrants live in South Africa, or about 5 percent of the population. But there are a lot more who are undocumented. Have you noticed a change recently? One thing I’ve found particularly startling in recent weeks is that we’ve essentially had migrant camps spring up on streets of major cities around South Africa. This is the wealthiest country on the continent and you don’t expect to see that here. But with so many immigrants scared to stay in their homes and rushing to leave the country, thousands have gone to these makeshift camps where the authorities are processing them and trying to get them out of the country. Where does this anger at migrants come from? Many South Africans blame foreigners for taking their jobs, committing crime and straining public resources. For all its economic might on the continent, South Africa is also one of the most unequal countries in the world. Poverty and unemployment are high. So is crime. Even though research and data suggest that immigrants are hardly drivers of these problems, they are often scapegoated. One survey found that seven out of 10 South Africans believe immigrants are bad for the economy. A fence separates a migrant from Malawi from his South African girlfriend and their son. Joao Silva/The New York Times What’s most fascinating to me is that it’s Black South Africans targeting other Black Africans. No one’s marching against or attacking the white Germans in Cape Town. In fact, there was a clip circulating on social media of one of the anti-immigrant leaders telling a white German who’s lived in the country for 20 years, “You are a part of us now.” These are the same activists telling Black Zimbabweans who have lived most of their lives in South Africa to go back to their country. And now this is all coming to a head. What is this Tuesday deadline? Who set it? The deadline is most closely tied to Nkosikhona Ndabandaba, one of the leading anti-immigrant activists, who is also a prominent Zulu leader. Ndabandaba has been leading groups of men dressed in traditional Zulu warrior regalia in demonstrations against immigrants. He has been most vocal about the June 30 deadline. But other anti-immigrant groups closely tied to him — most notably, a relatively new group called March and March — have also adopted that date. It goes without saying that they have no official authorization to force immigrants out of the country. But this deadline has taken on a life of its own, stirring panic among South Africans across the board. How is the South African government responding to the violence? President Cyril Ramaphosa has warned South Africans not to take the law into their own hands, saying that the country rejects xenophobia and Afrophobia. But the messages have been somewhat mixed. His government has also instituted a harsh crackdown on illegal immigration, with new workplace inspections, more stringent border controls and other measures that seemed meant to appease the anti-immigrant groups. It has also touted the fact that it’s been processing all the migrants who want to return to their native nations — and making a point to say that they’re issuing five-year bans to undocumented migrants on their way out. The issue of migration isn’t going anywhere anytime soon — not with the world’s population continuing to grow and climate change and economics driving people from their home countries. What does that mean for Africa? Africa is the youngest and fastest-growing continent. By 2050, it’s expected to have 2.5 billion people. Some analysts say internal migration can be good for the continent if government leaders manage it properly. Migrants can help balance labor needs across countries, increase productivity and grow the economy continentwide. But many African officials feel that supporting too many migrants will make it difficult to manage internal challenges like poverty, joblessness, and already-strained electricity and water supplies, which can fuel unrest and backlash. With all that Africa has to offer in terms of human capital and natural resources, the last thing the world wants to see is the continent growing unstable. THE LATEST NEWS Venezuela Earthquakes Fabiola Ferrero and Adriana Loureiro Fernandez for The New York Times Emergency crews in Venezuela are racing against the clock to find survivors, more than four days after twin earthquakes struck. More than 100 trained dogs from 21 countries are helping with the search. A Colombian team rescued an 11-year-old boy alive from under nearly 10 feet of rubble. Families and forensic specialists are working to identify victims at the state morgue in Caracas. Politics Graham Platner has a slight edge over Senator Susan Collins in the Maine Senate race, a new poll indicates. But any lead looks too small for polls to measure reliably. Divisions inside both parties over support for Israel and the war in Iran are making the midterms more unpredictable. War in the Middle East Iran seems willing to risk the cease-fire to maintain control over the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian officials have not confirmed agreeing to halt attacks there. China is emerging as a relative winner from the crisis in the strait. OPINIONS Kelly Nano-Miranda This photo essay by Kelly Nano-Miranda, with text by Binyamin Appelbaum, highlights the immigrant labor that makes Hamptons luxury possible. Pope Leo is taking on just war theory. It’s past time for an overhaul, James Grimaldi writes. (This link is free.) Self-destructive decisions, not Chinese competition, might be the biggest threat to America’s position in the A.I. race, Dan Wang and Julian Gewirtz write. Subscribers always win. Here’s why. You can now save 75% on your first year of a New York Times Games subscription. Discover all of our word and logic games (and play past puzzles), earn badges for your achievements, plus more. Time is running out though, so subscribe today. MORNING READS Zohran Mamdani during his campaign for mayor of New York. Amir Hamja for The New York Times In the club: The hottest venues in New York have drinks, dancing, D.J.s and the occasional democratic socialist campaign event. Hold the doilies: Traditional bed-and-breakfasts are revamping their décor and emphasizing personalized services to compete with Airbnb. Your pick: The most clicked link in The Morning yesterday was a video about attacks on volunteers helping with burials during an Ebola outbreak. Metropolitan Diary: A Robert Moses special. Lives lived proudly: Many transformative figures in L.G.B.T.Q. history worked under the radar to bring about change. Here are a few of their stories. (This link is free.) TODAY’S NUMBER $5.7 million — That is how much money was at stake in a Polymarket bet about whether a player’s nickname, “Donk,” would be said during an e-sports tournament in Romania. Wait, what? (This link is free.) WORLD CUP Canada is through to the round of 16 for the first time with a very late win over South Africa, 1-0. Before this tournament, the Canadian men hadn’t won (or drawn) a single World Cup match. A video showing three of Japan’s players taking on 100 schoolkids could provide clues to the team’s strategy against Brazil. South Korea’s president called for the sports ministry to investigate the national team’s group-stage exit. The team’s head coach is resigning. RECIPE OF THE DAY David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. Prop Stylist: Paige Hicks. Here’s an easy win for a weeknight dinner and you don’t even really need a recipe. It’s just fettuccine with ricotta and a fistful of mint. While the pasta cooks, fold a healthy stream of olive oil into the cheese, along with a little lemon juice, a minced shallot, some salt and pepper and an aggressive amount of chopped mint. That’s your sauce. Drain the pasta and put it into a warm bowl, add the cheese mixture, then swirl. Serve to applause. HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MEL BROOKS Martin Mills/Getty Images On the occasion of his 100th birthday, the Times critics Manohla Dargis and Jason Zinoman present 100 reasons to love Mel Brooks. (No. 11: “All definitions of comedy are terrible, but his is the least bad: ‘Tragedy is when I cut my finger. Comedy is when you fall into a sewer and die.’”) More on culture Bill Maher, a frequent Trump critic, received the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor at the Kennedy Center last night. Our report. Johnny Knoxville’s “Jackass” franchise turns 25 this year, with “Jackass: Best and Last” in theaters now. Our critic Alissa Wilkinson takes the measure of the series, “a documentary about an endangered species: enduring, weirdly healthy, bizarrely supportive male friendships in the 21st century.” Also, so much poop. THE MORNING RECOMMENDS Caroline Tompkins for The New York Times Listen to Gracie Adams’s new single, “Hit the Wall.” Then watch her in conversation with our Joe Coscarelli and Jon Caramanica on “Popcast.” Eat chickpeas to help keep your cholesterol in check. Also because they’re delicious. Upgrade your bath towels. It’s a relatively inexpensive way to feel luxurious. Take our news quiz. GAMES Here is today’s Spelling Bee. Yesterday’s pangrams were delving, deviling and inveigled. And here are today’s Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections, Crossplay and Strands. Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times and me. See you tomorrow. — Sam Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com. Host: Sam Sifton Editor: Adam B. Kushner News Editor: Tom Wright-Piersanti Associate Editor: Lauren Jackson News Staff: Evan Gorelick, Brent Lewis, Lara McCoy, Karl Russell Saturday Writer: Melissa Kirsch Editorial Director, Newsletters: Jodi Rudoren -
This Day in History
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THIS DAY IN HISTORY June 29 1995 U.S. space shuttle docks with Russian space station On June 29, 1995, the American space shuttle Atlantis docks with the Russian space station Mir to form the largest man-made satellite ever to orbit the Earth. read more Sponsored Content by REVCONTENT American Revolution 1776 South Carolina’s Edward Rutledge opposes independence Arts & Entertainment 1967 Actress Jayne Mansfield dies in car crash 2003 Academy Award-winning actress Katharine Hepburn dies at age 96 1967 The Rolling Stones fight the law, and the law wins 1613 The Globe Theatre burns down 1956 Marilyn Monroe weds playwright Arthur Miller 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival begins Cold War 1974 Soviet dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov defects from USSR Crime 2001 Boston doctor found guilty of killing wife Latin American & Caribbean History 1974 Isabel Perón takes office as Argentine president Sports 1950 U.S. World Cup team wins unlikely victory over England 1958 Pelé leads Brazil to first World Cup title U.S. Government and Politics 1972 Supreme Court strikes down death penalty World War I 1917 Greece breaks diplomatic ties with the Central Powers World War II 1941 Germans capture Lvov—and slaughter ensues -
Donald Trump has sweeping plans for a second administration. Here’s what he’s proposed
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
⛳ Trump's D.C. golf overhaul Wielding blueprints, President Trump toured a D.C. municipal golf course, East Potomac Golf Links, that he plans to renovate into a longer one capable of hosting major championships. Trump wrote on Truth Social that work on the Potomac River course will start Sept. 1: "When completed, this Course will have the ability to host Major Golf Tournaments, including The U.S. Open, The Ryder Cup, The PGA Championship, and other top PGA Tour events." Tom Fazio, who was hired to lead the renovation, has designed several of Trump's golf courses, including ones in Northern Virginia and Bedminster, N.J. The president's motorcade also drove along the roundabout outside Arlington National Cemetery, where Trump plans to build a massive triumphal arch. Go deeper: "Trump envisions a championship golf course. Locals are skeptical" (N.Y. Times gift link). -
Donald Trump has sweeping plans for a second administration. Here’s what he’s proposed
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
🗳️ Trump hits wall on voter fraud Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: Ron Sachs/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Images President Trump's voter fraud crusade is crashing into the limits of his power ahead of November's midterms, Axios' Brittany Gibson reports. 🏛️ His legislative fix is stuck in the Senate: Senate Republicans have defied Trump on the SAVE America Act, which would require proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote. ⚖️ He's also been stonewalled by the courts. Between the lines: Voter fraud is rare. But searching for cases has become an executive-branch priority. Keep reading. -
Donald Trump has sweeping plans for a second administration. Here’s what he’s proposed
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
🏛️ Washington becomes AI's gatekeeper AI proponents are splitting over a huge question: whether national security concerns outweigh the need to keep American AI companies ahead of Chinese rivals, Axios' Madison Mills writes. The fight is happening in public, in real time. Catch up quick: David Sacks, President Trump's former AI and crypto czar, warned yesterday that restricting access risks undercutting the AI strategy Trump laid out just a year ago for "Winning the Race." His post came after the White House asked OpenAI to delay its latest model, GPT-5.6, which will now be released in stages. That follows a directive that forced Anthropic to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5. Mythos went back online for a limited group of users on Friday. Fable could return soon. Between the lines: U.S. labs could face a government-imposed speed limit that Chinese rivals don't. Two security evaluations show Chinese AI systems have already caught up to the best U.S. models on cybersecurity, Axios' Sam Sabin reports. Open-source Chinese model usage has surged in recent weeks amid a focus on minimizing AI costs, as seen on OpenRouter. 💰 Follow the money: For investors, this is "hugely bearish," Paul Kedrosky, a venture capitalist, told Axios via text. "The AI party now has a hall monitor who is also diluting the punch. That causes, as the capital markets kids say, re-rating pressure," he said. Translation: Investors may value AI labs less if their most valuable products face government-controlled delays. Yes, but: AI labs and investors say they want rules instead of ad hoc decisions. Mark Pincus, Zynga founder and an investor in OpenAI and Anthropic, tells Axios he supports clear regulation but said it's "hard to build when there's a moving target." Read more. -
The U.S. Supreme Court
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
⚖️ Blockbuster SCOTUS week: Watch this case Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: Mark Wilson/Getty Images As the Supreme Court wraps up a term focused on executive power, here's a remaining case being hotly watched in Trumpworld: Republicans challenged limits on how much money political parties can spend in coordination with candidates. The justices upheld coordinated party expenditure limits in 2001. Why it matters: Top Republicans tell me the ruling could affect midterms if the Trump machine's bursting coffers could suddenly be deployed more freely. The RNC's massive cash advantage over the DNC would also matter more. 🔮 The next rulings are due today. Terms typically finish around the end of June, sometimes spilling into early July. Go deeper: Axios' Avery Lotz sketches the top remaining cases. -
Democratic National Committee/Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
New Dem rebellion Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Stock: Getty Images Democratic leaders are increasingly alarmed that they're facing their own brewing version of the GOP's Tea Party rebellion 17 years ago, Axios' Alex Thompson and Holly Otterbein write. Why it matters: The wave of primary victories by democratic socialists and party outsiders has shocked establishment Democrats. But the rage has been building in the party for a decade. It's not just progressives vs. moderates. It's also insiders vs. outsiders, with many Democratic voters angry at their own party. Some Dems now believe a Trump-esque figure could take over the party in 2028 as an outlet for grassroots rage. Dan Pfeiffer, a former top aide to President Obama and now "Pod Save America" co-host, writes: "It is very clear that the groups of the left — Justice Democrats, Democratic Socialists of America, Our Revolution — are out-organizing, out-fundraising, out-working, out-maneuvering the traditional party institutions." 🔎 Zoom in: Democrats' growing distrust of party leaders — and embrace of left-wing outsiders and populists — is rooted in Donald Trump's 2016 victory over Hillary Clinton. Trump's 2024 victory radicalized some Dems who'd previously seen his first term as a fluke. 🗳️ State of play: Left-wingers, outsiders and Democratic Socialists of America members have racked up victories coast to coast during Trump's second term. Democratic socialists and progressives followed last year's election of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani by beating two incumbent House Democrats and winning an open seat's primary in the city last week. Democratic socialist Janeese Lewis George won D.C.'s Democratic primary for mayor, making her mayor-in-waiting. She energized young voters by promising to tackle affordability and take on Trump. 🔮 What's next: Democrats are watching several upcoming primaries to see how deeply the anti-establishment feelings run. These races include: Colorado's governor's race, plus a Denver-based House primary where a democratic socialist is challenging a longtime incumbent. Wisconsin's gubernatorial primary, where democratic socialist Francesca Hong could win. Michigan's Senate primary, where Abdul El-Sayed could beat the establishment's pick, Rep. Haley Stevens. -
Here's your (not so) totally useless fact(s) of the day:
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Word of the Day (and other daily nuggets)
The drum patting sound you hear, is your heat beat, when you lay your head sideways on your pillow. (Thanks Jackie) James -
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3 word devotional
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The Intercept Investgations
phkrause replied to phkrause's topic in Politics (Mainly US) and other American interest items
The Democratic Party Gets Its Populist Takeover All three congressional candidates that New York City Mayor Zohran Mamadani endorsed won their primaries on Tuesday. The races were widely viewed as a test of just how much influence the left would have in charting the next chapter for the Democratic Party — and a referendum on Mamdani’s power. https://theintercept.com/2026/06/25/mamdani-new-york-primaries-analysis-dsa/? Cops Warn CEO Bodyguards That Luigi Mangione Fever Could Spark Class War A law enforcement intelligence hub in New Jersey fretted that the growing class divide in the U.S. could drive a wave of lone-wolf attacks on high-flying corporate executives, according to a report obtained by The Intercept. https://theintercept.com/2026/06/25/police-luigi-mangione-wealthy-ceos-threat/? Online Age Verification Law Could Kill Whistleblowing Democrats and Republicans in Congress have struck a deal on a bill they say will help keep children and teens safe online. The KIDS Act could pass on the House floor as soon as next week; if enacted, it would fundamentally change the way everyone — not just kids — accesses the internet. https://theintercept.com/2026/06/28/age-verification-privacy-surveillance-journalists-whistleblowers/? 30-Year Sentence for Transporting Zines Is a Five-Alarm Fire for Free Speech The Trump administration attacking the right to publish or report information is a given at this point. The president has threatened journalists for everything from questioning the wisdom of his failed war with Iran to touching the peeled lining of his renovated reflecting pool. https://theintercept.com/2026/06/26/daniel-sanchez-estrada-zines-prairieland-free-speech/? Trump Claimed to Run Venezuela. After Earthquakes, He’s Walking That Back. After abducting Venezuela President Nicolás Maduro, U.S. President Donald Trump declared that America would “run” Venezuela. When asked in January who was leading Venezuela, Trump said, “We’re in charge.” https://theintercept.com/2026/06/25/trump-venezuela-earthquakes-aid-sanctions/? ps:It's truly pathetic that anyone is surprised that this is happening! Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Wades Into Tennessee Primary, Endorsing Justin J. Pearson After rattling some observers by staying out of a slew of competitive congressional primaries in her home state this week, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., endorsed a candidate in Tennessee on Thursday. https://theintercept.com/2026/06/25/aoc-endorses-justin-pearson-tennessee-congress/? The Left Just Keeps Winning. It’s Time for Democrats to Bend the Knee. When Hakeem Jeffries, who’s positioning himself to be House speaker if the Democrats retake the chamber come November, was shown on the screen at an election party full of socialists in Brooklyn Tuesday night, the crowd chanted, “You’re next! You’re next!” Before polls closed on the night that would see the Jeffries-endorsed candidates fall and Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s candidates win, the New York congressman told reporters that he and the mayor have “agreed to strongly disagree” and that “a handful of primaries that go in one direction or the other in a given state or two aren’t going to reshape who we are as House Democrats.” https://theintercept.com/2026/06/25/democrats-socialist-left-midterms-centrists-new-york/? Keir Starmer’s Downfall Is the Only Reward for Simpering Centrism Keir Starmer, the U.K.’s sixth prime minister in a decade, has resigned. Even allowing for the weariness of repetition, this should theoretically be a big deal. https://theintercept.com/2026/06/27/britain-keir-starmer-resign-labour-left/?