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Allies of Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., are urging President-elect Trump to publicly reaffirm support for the House GOP leader to avoid a messy, protracted battle that could delay the certification of his own victory.

‘If we have some kind of protracted fight where we can’t elect a speaker — the speaker’s not elected; we’re not sworn in. And if we’re not sworn in, we can’t certify the election,’ Rep. Carlos Gimenez, R-Fla., told Fox News Digital.

‘I would hope that President Trump would chime in and talk to those who are maybe a little hesitant, and say, ‘We’ve got to get going. We don’t have time.’’

Meanwhile, Rep. Pat Fallon, R-Texas, told Fox News Digital ‘it would be immensely helpful’ if Trump chimed in.

‘Any time would be great, but right after Christmas if President Trump said, ‘You know, listen’ — it would even be really cool if somehow Mike Johnson ended up at Mar-a-Lago for Christmas… wherever the president is,’ Fallon said. ‘I think it would be incredibly powerful.’

House lawmakers are returning to Washington, D.C., for a chamber-wide vote to elect the speaker on Friday, Jan. 3. Just days later, on Monday, Jan. 6, the House will meet to certify the results of the 2024 election.

Johnson is facing a potentially bruising battle to win the speaker’s gavel for a full Congressional term, with several House Republicans vocally critical of the Louisiana Republican and his handling of government funding.

His predecessor went through 14 public defeats in his quest to win the gavel, finally securing it after days of negotiations with holdouts on the 15th House-wide vote.

When he was ousted, Johnson won after a three-week inter-GOP battle that saw Congress paralyzed for its duration.

But some House Republicans are now warning that they can afford few delays in what Trump himself said he hopes will be a very active first 100 days of his second term.

‘To ensure President Trump can take office and hit the ground running on Jan. 20, we must be able to certify the 2024 election on Jan. 6. However, without a speaker, we cannot complete this process,’ Rep. Claudia Tenney, R-N.Y., told Fox News Digital. 

Tenney warned it could delay ‘the launch of his agenda.’

Congress narrowly avoided a partial government shutdown hours after the Dec. 20 federal funding deadline, passing a bill to extend that deadline to March 14 while also extending several other key programs and replenishing the FEMA Disaster Relief Fund.

It angered GOP hardliners who opposed the addition of unrelated policy riders to what they believed would be a more straightforward government funding extension.

Johnson also tried and failed to heed Trump’s demand to pair action on the debt limit — which was suspended until January 2025 — with his government funding bill, after 38 House Republicans and all but two Democrats voted against it.

Fallon told Fox News Digital that it did not necessarily mean they would defy Trump if he backed Johnson again ahead of Jan. 3.

‘Some of the people in the 38 — that was more of a principle thing — they really want to attack the debt,’ Fallon said. ‘They felt like just letting the debt ceiling latch for two years — they like to use that as a negotiating tool to say, ‘Let’s reduce the debt to GDP ratio.”

But one of Johnson’s biggest critics, Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., has already told reporters he is not voting for Johnson next year.

Two more, House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris, R-Md., and Rep. Michael Cloud, R-Texas, suggested they were no longer committed to backing Johnson over the weekend.

Meanwhile, there have been media reports that Trump is unhappy with how Johnson handled government funding and that his demand for the debt limit was not heeded. 

Trump himself has not mentioned Johnson publicly since the Friday vote. But top Trump allies, like Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, have come to Johnson’s defense.

‘He’s undoubtedly the most conservative Speaker of the House we’ve had in our lifetime,’ Cruz said on his podcast ‘The Verdict.’ ‘If Mike Johnson is toppled as Speaker of the House, we will end up with a speaker of the House who is much, much more liberal than Mike Johnson.’

Others have also signaled that Trump’s influence will weigh heavily on what ultimately happens.

One House Republican granted anonymity to speak freely told Fox News Digital early last week that they considered opposing Johnson but said Trump would be the final deciding factor.

‘I think, ultimately, it’s going to be decided who President Trump likes, because I believe that will weigh in heavily on the decision-making of that, because, currently, President Trump works very well with Mike Johnson. They have a great relationship,’ Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., told CNN’s ‘State of the Union.’

When asked if he would support Johnson if Trump did, despite opposing his government funding plans, Burchett said ‘Possibly.’

Johnson will head into the Jan. 3 speaker vote with just a slim GOP margin of three votes — and is virtually unlikely to get Democratic support.

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Iran has recruited young children to commit attacks against Israeli and Jewish targets across Europe, a new trend amid several blows to Iranian proxies in recent months and dwindling influence in the Middle East.

The troubling pattern includes incidents in Sweden, Belgium and Norway as Tehran has expanded its proxy war against Israel into Europe.

In Stockholm, a 15-year-old boy with a loaded gun took a taxi in May and asked to be taken to the Israeli Embassy. However, he had to call an associate for directions when he was unable to locate the building. Swedish police stopped the cab before it reached the destination. 

Authorities had been monitoring him for several months. 

A 13-year-old in Gothenburg was caught firing shots at Israeli defense firm Elbit Systems. At the same facility, a 16-year-old helped plant homemade explosives outside the main entrance, Bloomberg reported.

In Brussels, security services found children as young as 14 orchestrating an attack on the Israeli Embassy. 

Fox News Digital has reached out to the Iranian Mission to the United States for comment. 

Recruiters acting on behalf of the Iranian regime have reached out to minors on platforms like Telegram, TikTok or WhatsApp, according to Peter Nesser, a terrorism researcher at a Norwegian defense research institute. 

The new tactic comes as Iran’s influence has severely weakened in the Middle East amid Israel’s deadly response to devastating attacks from Hamas and Hezbollah, both Iranian proxies.

In addition, the recent ouster of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has compounded Iran’s woes in the region. 

While some young people recruited by Iran are acting out of frustration at Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza, some are motivated by money. In Sweden and Norway, they can’t be prosecuted if they are under 15, the report said. 

‘There are cases where the proxies aren’t aware or don’t realize that they are acting on behalf of a foreign power,’ the Swedish Security Service said in a statement this year.

The 16-year-old who attacked Elbit Systems used two thermos flasks packed with explosives in an attack on the Israeli defense company and was charged alongside a 23-year-old accomplice, according to Bloomberg. 

Sweden has seen an increasing presence of organized criminal gangs recruiting minors from immigrant communities. 

More than 1.5 million people have moved to the country since 1980 and now around 20% of the population has been born outside the country, but many struggle to assimilate, the report said.

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A group of four NATO leaders and a representative from the European Union on Sunday said they agreed it was time to invest more in defense spending as Russia remains a chief security threat in Europe amid the war in Ukraine, and as Western leaders brace for the incoming Trump administration. 

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis argued the era of spending 2% of a nation’s GDP on defense was ‘probably history’ but he, along with the other four leaders in attendance at the North-South Summit in Lapland, Finland fell short of saying what that figure should look like. 

‘We know that we need to spend more than 2%,’ Mitsotakis said. ‘But it will become very clear… once we interact with the new president, what is the figure that we will agree on within NATO.’

The summit was convened by Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo, and was also attended by Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas.

The leaders were questioned about a recent report by the Financial Times that said President-elect Donald Trump intends to push NATO to increase its defense spending requirement from 2% to 5% — a requirement that would demand all nations, including the U.S. which spends just over 3% of its GDP, to drastically increase spending on defense.

The Trump transition team did not answer Fox News Digital’s questions on whether Trump is going to be pushing all NATO nations, including the U.S., to drastically ramp up defense spending.

Instead, a spokesperson for the Trump transition team said, ‘President Trump believes European nations should meet their NATO defense spending obligations and step up their share of the burden for this conflict, as the U.S. has paid significantly more, which is not fair to our taxpayers. He will do what is necessary to restore peace and rebuild American strength and deterrence on the world stage.’

Fox News Digital also could not get clarity over whether an increase in defense spending would be supported by GOP lawmakers given the large number of conservatives in Congress, as well as his Vice President-elect, who have called for cutting U.S. aid to Ukraine, as well as last week’s internal fighting in the House among Republican lawmakers over spending disagreements. 

Even as NATO leaders at the North-South Summit agreed Russia is Europe’s ‘greatest threat,’ they urged caution when it came to dealing with ‘rumors’ surrounding the incoming Trump administration. 

‘I would wait to understand exactly what is the real will of the new president of the US,’ Meloni said, according to a Bloomberg report. ‘On NATO, we all know and understand that we have to do more. A lot of what we can do is up to the tools that we are able to put on the table.’

The Finnish prime minster echoed a similar sentiment and said, ‘Europe has to take greater responsibility for its own security. This means that European countries have to be strong leaders, both in the EU and in NATO.

‘[Russia] is trying to consolidate power and sow discord in Europe. The geopolitical situation is also very challenging in the Middle East and North Africa, for example,’ Orpo added, according to Euro News. 

Kristersson said spending more on defense was important, in part, so that European nations were less dependent on the U.S. being ‘the main sponsor’ of the alliance’s defense, but also to show Washington that European nations do take defense ‘seriously.’

‘European countries — individually, most of us, and collectively — need to strengthen our defense. And let’s do that,’ he said. 

Trump during his first administration pushed NATO leaders to meet their 2% defense spending pledge, which several did — increasing the number of allies to meet the terms of the NATO agreement from five in 2016 to nine in 2020.

But that number dropped to just six once Trump left in 2021.

By 2022, however, NATO leaders have once again began re-evaluating their defense budgets following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and by 2024, a historic number of NATO allies had met their spending agreements, with 23 out of 32 nations spending at least 2% of their GDP on defense. 

Only Poland spends over 4% of its GDP on defense, while four nations spend over 3%, including Estonia, the U.S., Latvia and Greece. 

Croatia, Portugal, Italy, Canada, Belgium, Luxembourg, Slovenia and Spain have yet to meet their defense spending commitments.

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The White House is concerned that Iran’s weakened position will prompt the regime to pursue a nuclear weapon, and national security adviser Jake Sullivan is coordinating with the Trump team on this concern. 

Iran has suffered a year of setbacks amid Israeli assaults on its proxy forces and a pull-out from Syria amid the takeover by Sunni Muslim forces, hostile to Iran’s Shiite government. 

Israeli strikes on Iranian facilities, including missile factories and air defenses, have reduced Iran’s conventional military capabilities, Sullivan told CNN on Sunday. 

‘What I found over the last four years is that when good things happen, like Iran being weaker than it was before, there are frequently bad things lurking around the corner,’ Sullivan said.

‘If you’re Iran right now and you’re looking around at the fact that your conventional capability has been reduced, your proxies have been reduced, your main client state has been eliminated, Assad has fallen, it’s no wonder there are voices saying: ‘Hey, maybe we need to go for a nuclear weapon right now,” the outgoing national security official said. 

‘They’re saying it publicly, in fact. They’re saying: Maybe we have to revisit our nuclear doctrine. A doctrine that has said: We’ll have a civilian nuclear program and certain capabilities, but we’re not going for a nuke,’ he added. ‘It’s a risk we’re trying to be vigilant about now.’

While Iran insists its nuclear program is peaceful, but it has expanded uranium enrichment since the last Trump administration to 60% purity, a short step away from the 90% needed for a nuclear weapon. 

Last week the United Kingdom, Germany and France publicly called on Iran to ‘reverse its nuclear escalation,’ arguing there is no ‘credible civilian justification’ to stockpile 60% uranium.

Sullivan said there was a risk Iran would abandon its promise not to build nuclear weapons.

‘It’s a risk we are trying to be vigilant about now. It’s a risk that I’m personally briefing the incoming team on,’ Sullivan said, adding that he was consulting with Israel too. 

Trump, who takes office on Jan. 20, could bring back his ‘maximum pressure’ policy to cripple Iran’s oil financing.

Sullivan held out hope Trump could come in and use Iran’s weakened position to get them to agree to a new nuclear deal. 

‘Maybe he can come around this time, with the situation Iran finds itself in, and actually deliver a nuclear deal that curbs Iran’s nuclear ambitions for the long term,’ he said.

Trump’s team is currently weighing its options to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, including preventive airstrikes. 

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When quickly glancing at the StockCharts Technical Rank (SCTR) Reports Dashboard panel, one stock that popped up on Monday, albiet briefly, was Meta Platforms, Inc. (META). The stock has a year-to-date performance of over 70% according to the StockCharts Symbol Summary page and, after its recent pullback, the stock could be one to consider adding to your portfolio. You can gain exposure to META either with the underlying or via options.

Analyzing META’s Stock Chart

The weekly chart below shows the uptrend in META stock is at a crossroads — it could go up or down. The stock is trading above its 21-day exponential moving average (EMA), the SCTR score is at 79 — it has crossed above my 76 threshold level — and the relative strength index (RSI) has been moving sideways between the 50 and 70 levels since April 2024.

FIGURE 1. WEEKLY CHART OF META STOCK PRICE. The stock is in an uptrend with a rising SCTR score. The RSI needs to move higher to indicate rising momentum.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

Turning to the daily chart, META pulled back from its all-time high and could be ready for a reversal to the upside. Last Friday, the stock closed at its 50-day SMA and bounced higher from there on Monday. It closed shy of $600 per share, at the top of its daily range. These are early signs of an upside move, but the SMA appears to be flattening.

FIGURE 2. DAILY CHART OF META STOCK. The uptrend isn’t obvious on the daily chart; META’s stock price could go in either direction. The PPO in the lower panel needs to show bullish momentum and there needs to be upside follow-through in price to confirm a reversal to the upside.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

The trading volume is relatively low, but, given it’s a short holiday week, it’s probably not a good representation of momentum. The percentage price oscillator (PPO) is still negative. There should be upside follow-through in META’s stock price, which could result in the shorter moving average crossing above the longer moving average in the PPO. This would confirm a bullish reversal.

META is in a spot where the price could move in either direction. The stock is trading between its 50-day SMA and a resistance level it hit twice in October. A break below the 50-day SMA would mean watching the $575 level, its next support level. This coincides with its December 2 breakout and previous support and resistance levels. Two lower support levels are its 100-day SMA and the $550 level.

If META’s stock price were to reverse and move higher, its price point of around $600 a share would be steep. Buying 50 shares will cost you about $30,000. An alternative would be to consider options on META.

Options Trade Ideas for META

Looking at the OptionsPlay Explorer (click Options under Tools & Resources in the menu to the left of the chart, then the OptionsPlay button), buying a Feb 21 595/695 call vertical spread would cost $3,335 and have a potential return of almost 200%. But this can change, so you want to monitor any open position carefully.

FIGURE 3. A CALL VERTICAL SPREAD FOR META. The return of 199.85% is respectable, but remember, things change especially as the option approaches expiration so you still need to monitor your trade carefully.Image source: OptionsPlay Strategy Center from StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

The biggest risk with this trade is META will report earnings before expiration. With a stock like META, volatility tends to be high ahead of earnings, which could drastically impact your trading results. In such a scenario, you have several choices. You could close the position before expiration, especially if you’ve made a decent profit; you could roll the trade to a further expiration; or you could modify the trade and select an expiration date before the earnings report. Click the Modify button and change the expiration dates and/or strike prices of the legs.

If META’s stock price moves lower, consider applying bearish options strategies. Click the bearish button above the risk graphs to see the three optimal strategies to apply. Buying a Feb 21 600/505 put vertical would generate a return of over 200%, with the trade costing you $2,875.

Options are very flexible instruments, and your cash outlay is much lower than buying shares of META. Regardless of which way META’s price moves, there’s an options strategy you can apply.  So add META to your ChartLists and, if you have an options-enabled trading account, it’s worth exploring the OptionsPlay Strategy Center on StockCharts.com.

Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.

Time is running out for NFL teams.

Either for the ones looking to improve their seeding in the postseason, or the ones just trying to claw their way into the playoffs, Week 16 was the antepenultimate chance to bolster their resumes.

And the most significant result came in Washington, where the Commanders upset the Eagles in a comeback victory that still keeps Dan Quinn’s team alive in the race for the NFC East crown. It also makes Philadelphia’s potential path to the No. 1 seed in the conference that much more challenging.

That’s because the No. 1 seed has two imposing contenders in the Detroit Lions and Minnesota Vikings, both of whom are 13-2.

Here are the winners and losers from Sunday of Week 16.

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WINNERS

Fifth-seeded Vikings still have shot at the one-seed in NFC

In many ways, the biggest misfortune the Vikings have had this season is that they play in the NFC North, where the Lions also reside. And Minnesota’s two-point loss against Detroit in Week 7 is looming large as seeding is determined.

Still, a 27-24 road win against a Seattle Seahawks team fighting for its playoff life is yet another test the Vikings have answered this year. The Sam Darnold revival is showing no signs of slowing down, and his connection with Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison has been superb. The defense forced two more turnovers against the Seahawks and now has forced 30, which ranks behind only the Pittsburgh Steelers’ 31. The toughest challenges, however, remain. The Vikings close their season with games against the Green Bay Packers (10-4) and – in what likely will be the marquee game of Week 18 – against Detroit. That matchup may end up being for the top seed in the NFC.

Rams scrap their way closer to division title

It often doesn’t look pretty with the Los Angeles Rams (9-6), but they have found different ways to win this season. And, with the Seahawks’ loss, Los Angeles is now a full game up in the NFC West after a 19-9 victory over the New York Jets.

Ahead on the schedule are the Arizona Cardinals, losers of four of their last five, and those Seahawks in the season finale, which could be a winner-take-all game for the division. The constant over the last month has been the return to form of running back Kyren Williams, who has rushed for 421 yards and four touchdowns in four games in December. It’s no surprise, then, that L.A. is on a four-game winning streak.

Penix gives Falcons boost; Cowboys also do them a solid

Making his first career start, Falcons rookie quarterback Michael Penix Jr. ran Atlanta’s offense effectively, giving the team a boost in a 34-7 rout of the New York Giants while confirming coach Raheem Morris’ decision to bench Kirk Cousins.

Penix shined in the pocket, keeping calm feet and avoiding pressure. He was decisive with the ball and excelled out of play-action. Penix completed 18 of 27 throws for 202 yards with one interception that was not his fault. It came on a perfectly thrown pass to tight end Kyle Pitts, who bobbled it into the hands of a Giants defender. There will be growing pains, and it came against a rebuilding Giants team with little to play for, but Penix showed he can manage a game and put his teammates in position to succeed. And, with the Dallas Cowboys beating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Sunday night, the Falcons slid into first in the NFC South, for the time being.

If he hadn’t already, Jayden Daniels all but locked up OROY

Commanders rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels’ magical rookie season continued Sunday with a wild come-from-behind victory over the Eagles. Daniels overcame a pair of interceptions to throw for 258 yards and five touchdowns while adding 81 rushing yards.

Most impressive about Daniels this season has been his calm, efficient approach late in games, even when Washington (10-5) has faced a deficit. On the game-winning drive, after getting the ball with 1:52 left in the game, Daniels threw for 33 yards, ran for 14 more, and his only incompletion was a spike.

LOSERS

Eagles implode, complicating path to No. 1 seed

Yes, Philadelphia played most of this game without starting quarterback Jalen Hurts (concussion). And yes, even with their loss, the Eagles (12-3) are still very comfortably the No. 2 seed in the NFC. But with only two games left, it’s looking increasingly improbable that Philadelphia will catch the Lions for the top seed in the conference, home-field advantage and a first-round bye.

This was a game in which the Eagles forced five turnovers and still lost, and one in which Philadelphia held two separate 14-point leads and a 13-point advantage heading into the fourth quarter. The normally-reliable DeVonta Smith dropped a third-down pass that almost certainly would’ve sealed the game. The Eagles went three-of-16 (19%) on third downs and just two-of-four in red zone conversions. The defense got shredded late. And now, Philly will need massive help to catch Detroit.

Buccaneers cede first place in the NFC South

While Tampa Bay needed to beat the Cowboys on the road in a tough environment to preserve its first-place position in the NFC South – not an easy proposition, by any means – the 26-24 loss was unquestionably a letdown for the Buccaneers (8-7).

What complicates Tampa’s position further is that the Falcons swept the Bucs this season and hold the tiebreaker. Yet, all is not lost for the Buccaneers. Atlanta will face the tough Commanders next week, so the Bucs will have a window to sneak back in; Tampa Bay finishes its season against the Carolina Panthers (4-11) and New Orleans Saints (5-9). First things first, the Buccaneers need to do a much better job of protecting Baker Mayfield, and the defense needs to stop yielding explosive plays.

Cardinals suffer another late-season collapse, show they’re still not ready

A month-and-a-half ago, the Cardinals were two games over .500, in first place in the NFC West and looked like an up-and-coming squad that could make some noise down the stretch. Since then, Arizona (7-8) has won just one of its last five games – the latest loss coming Sunday against the Panthers in a 36-30 overtime defeat that eliminated the Cardinals from playoff contention.

The Cardinals’ tackling effort against Carolina was abysmal. Kyler Murray (20-of-32, 202 yards, two total touchdowns, two turnovers), despite his play-making dynamism, often struggles with his accuracy. Murray’s rapport with his receivers is not where it should be; the wide receiver with the most receiving yards against the Panthers was Michael Wilson, who caught only two passes for 44 yards. Arizona is a young team with talent in some spots. That alone is not good enough to be a serious contender.

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Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., is calling out the Biden administration for spending over a trillion taxpayer dollars on ‘government waste’ this year, including on a bearded lady cabaret show, Arabic Sesame Street, and ‘girl-centered climate action.’

The Kentucky senator released his annual ‘Festivus’ report that details different ways in which the current administration spent taxpayer dollars throughout the year. 

The 2024 Festivus Waste Report found that the Biden-Harris administration spent over $1 trillion this year, including giving a $10,000 grant to ‘Beards on Ice’ — an ice skating drag show on climate change put on by the Bearded Ladies Cabaret, a self-described ‘queer cabaret arts organization.’

Additionally, the Agency for International Development (USAID) spent $20 million on a Sesame Street spin-off show in Iraq, titled ‘Ahlan Simsim,’ in an effort to promote ‘inclusion’ and ‘mutual respect.’

About $1.5 was spent experimenting how different species, such as young female kittens, respond to motion sickness. 

According to the report, researchers would strap kittens to a table, where they are spun around in several directions and have holes drilled into their skulls to keep them in place — ‘and it’s all being done with your money,’ Paul writes in the report. ‘More than one and a half million dollars of it.’

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) reportedly gave New York University (NYU) over $400,000 to study whether lonely rats seek cocaine more than rats who are in positive environments, while the Department of the Interior (DOI) allocated $12 million to fund a pickleball complex in Las Vegas, according to the report.

‘Now, did the government really need to spend nearly half a million dollars to verify that social isolation and starvation may lead to increased drug usage? One thing is for sure, we must end this rat-wheel of waste!’ Paul wrote in the report.

The State Department spent $3 million on ‘Girl-Centered Climate Action’ in Brazil, a program reportedly designed to ’empower young women to become climate leaders by integrating equity and inclusivity into environmental activism,’ the report writes, citing the grant details.

‘As the average American taxpayers struggle to pay rent, their hard-earned dollars are ironically funneled into more real estate,’ the report read, referring to the Biden struggles spending $10B on maintaining and furnishing buildings that were almost entirely empty.

The Department of Energy (DOE) gave automakers $15.5 billion to push the industry into the electric vehicle (EV) sector, while another $388,000 was given to ‘Magic in the United States,’ a podcast discussing how magical beliefs and practices have evolved in the U.S.

The senator also mentioned the Biden administration giving $2.1 million to fund Paraguay’s border: ‘Nothing says ‘America First’ like securing someone else’s border,’ Paul wrote.

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The 32 things we learned from Week 16 of the 2024 NFL season:

1. It’s a tale as old as time (or, at least, 105 years): Just when you think you’ve got the NFL figured out, a day like Sunday comes along and forces a mass recalibration of the landscape … and ‘expert’ thinking. Example: Who’s the best team? A week after beating the Detroit Lions, the AFC East champion Buffalo Bills nearly lost – at home – to the New England Patriots.

2. Meanwhile, the Kansas City Chiefs – still very much alive to become the first team to achieve a Super Bowl three-peat – are the league’s only 14-win team … even though QB Patrick Mahomes is battered and rarely able to engineer a convincing win.

3. As for the Lions? Just when you thought they might have suffered one key injury too many, they literally toy with their food while steamrolling the Chicago Bears. Detroit very much remains in the driver’s seat for the No. 1 seed and certainly benefited from the Philadelphia Eagles’ loss Sunday.

4. As for Philly? The Eagles would have to lose their final two games – and the Washington Commanders would have to win out – for the NFC East crown to change hands going into the playoffs.

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5. However the Eagles face the prospect of having to play QB3 Tanner McKee if starter Jalen Hurts doesn’t clear concussion protocol and backup Kenny Pickett’s tender ribs prove overly problematic.

6. Hurts’ absence for most of Sunday’s loss to Washington is also another data point as to why the MVP award has become synonymous with quarterbacks. Even with RB Saquon Barkley rushing for 150 yards and a pair of TDs, he couldn’t carry Philadelphia past the Commanders.

7. However with a league-best 1,838 rushing yards, Barkley now needs 268 over the final two weeks to eclipse Hall of Famer Eric Dickerson’s single-season record (2,105 yards during a 16-game season in 1984).

8. Barkley also became the first player ever with four rushing TDs covering at least 65 yards in a single season. Yet he really missed an opportunity to cut the Dickerson deficit Sunday, managing only 41 yards over the final three quarters after posting 109 in the first.

9. However, speaking of individual awards, Commanders QB Jayden Daniels probably locked up the Offensive Rookie of the Year hardware after passing for 258 yards and five TDs, including the game-winner with 6 seconds left to play in Washington’s 36-33 triumph. Daniels also rushed for a team-high 81 yards.

10. The last Washington player to pass for five TDs? Try QB Mark Rypien … for the 1991 team, the last to bring this franchise a Lombardi Trophy.

11. Daniels’ heroics kept the Commanders alive in the pursuit of the NFC East crown and have certainly helped him outshine Denver Broncos rookie QB Bo Nix, who’s in the midst of a middling December after playing so well in November.

12. The presumed 2024 MVP, Buffalo’s Josh Allen, notched his 75th career win Sunday (barely) and needs one more to set the record for the most in a quarterback’s first seven seasons. (It’s important to note that Mahomes and Tom Brady both basically redshirted their rookie seasons.)

13. Back to the MVP award and the underappreciated Minnesota Vikings … but how about a little love for QB Sam Darnold? Only Mahomes has led his team to more wins this season. If Darnold can notch two more, the Vikes get home-field advantage. The Vikings!

14. Regardless, league awards – and even much-deserved respect amid his career revival – will doubtless continue to elude Darnold. But you can bet the money won’t for a man who might pull down more than any other pending free agent in 2025.

15. Some real NFL blue bloods won’t be vying for the Lombardi Trophy this season, the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers eliminated from the playoff picture Sunday in the aftermath of Washington’s comeback.

16. A few non-blue bloods will also be left by the wayside, the New Orleans Saints and Arizona Cardinals also getting their walking papers Sunday.

17. The Cincinnati Bengals beat the Cleveland Browns 24-6 and are probably the team no one else in the AFC field wants to sneak into the bracket. QB Joe Burrow extended his franchise record with this 39th TD pass Sunday, while WR Ja’Marr Chase became the Bengals’ first-ever 1,500-yard receiver.

18. Burrow is also the first player in league history to post seven straight games with at least 250 yards and three TDs through the air.

19. Browns DE Myles Garrett became the 45th NFL player since 1982 (when sacks became an official statistic) with 100 in his career after bagging Burrow on Sunday.

20. Garrett also joined legendary Hall of Famer Lawrence Taylor as the only players with at least 12 sacks in five consecutive seasons and became the first player to reach the century mark before turning 29.

21. However, New York Jets QB Aaron Rodgers needed more than his lone TD pass Sunday to get to 500 for his career … and the NYJ certainly needed it (and more) in a 19-9 loss to the NFC West-leading Los Angeles Rams.

22. But one’s misfortune is another man’s – well, how about a salute to Rams TE Tyler Higbee, who caught what proved to be the game-winning TD against the Jets in his 2024 debut. It’s been nearly a year since Higbee, who also had offseason shoulder surgery, was waylaid by a knee injury in a playoff game that resulted in tears to his ACL, MCL and meniscus.

23. Somehow, the Jets never punted despite scoring only nine points. (How you ask? How about a pair of turnovers, a missed field goal and three failed fourth-down conversions.)

24. The Miami Dolphins’ Tua Tagovailoa became the fourth quarterback in franchise history to throw 100 regular-season TD passes.

25. Doesn’t much matter who’s playing quarterback when your defense generates three sacks and three turnovers (including a pair of pick-sixes) in a 34-7 drubbing.

26. But congratulations nevertheless to Atlanta Falcons rookie QB Michael Penix Jr., who, despite modest individual numbers (202 yards passing, INT, 3 yards rushing), ‘won’ his starting debut against the hapless New York Giants on Sunday after replacing veteran Kirk Cousins earlier in the week.

27. And congratulations, too, to the Giants, who had avoided a 10-game losing streak … until their 100th NFL season. They also now have the inside track to the No. 1 overall pick of the 2025 draft.

28. But shoutout to Big Blue’s Malik Nabers, who has 97 receptions in his rookie season … and, don’t forget, he missed two games.

29. Chicago rookie QB Caleb Williams needs 729 passing yards over the final two weeks to become the first Bears player to reach 4,000 in a season.

30. And then there’s the Las Vegas Raiders’ Brock Bowers, who’s basically having the best statistical season ever for a rookie tight end (101 catches for 1,067 yards). He needs 10 more yards in the next two games for the most ever by a rookie at his position.

31. Happy Holidays to CBS’ No. 1 broadcast team of Jim Nantz and Tony Romo. Some broadcast quirks this week relegated you gents to covering 49ers-Dolphins, while FOX featured Steelers-Ravens (normally a CBS game) on Saturday afternoon. But trust me, fellas, you got to enjoy much better weather than Burkhardt and Brady had in Charm City.

32. Also, Happy Holidays to the Chiefs, Ravens, Steelers and Texans. You’ve got to feel for the players and staffs of these teams, which are all playing three games over an 11-day span, simply so the league can stage a Christmas doubleheader on Wednesday. All were back at practice Sunday after playing on Saturday afternoon. Very tough ask of these clubs during the Holiday season – especially so given Baltimore and Kansas City both played on Christmas last year as well … but apparently that Netflix streaming money going into the revenue pie makes the inconvenience sufficiently worth it for the greater good.

***

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter, @ByNateDavis.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Win, and they’re in.

It’s as simple as that for the Green Bay Packers entering their ‘Monday Night Football’ duel with the New Orleans Saints. Green Bay had a chance to clinch a playoff spot even before the game, but the Atlanta Falcons’ win over the New York Giants eliminated that possibility.

Still, all the Packers need to do now is take care of business against the five-win Saints on Monday. From there, they’ll be into the postseason.

Green Bay can play for a higher seed in the final two weeks of the year, but it can’t win the division title and potentially earn the first seed and a bye. Since the Packers lost both games to the Detroit Lions this year, they don’t hold a head-to-head tiebreaker. They’re also unable to earn a better record than Detroit after the Lions’ Week 16 win over the Chicago Bears.

Here’s everything to know about the Packers’ playoff chances entering Monday night’s game:

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Packers playoff odds

Green Bay can clinch its second straight playoff berth – and fifth in six years – with a win on ‘Monday Night Football.’

With that being the case, the Packers already had excellent odds to make the postseason. Prior to any games kicking off in Week 16, BetMGM had the team at -10000 (99% implied) odds to be a playoff team.

Packers remaining schedule

The Packers have three more games in the regular season, including their Week 16 ‘Monday Night Football’ clash. Two of them, including Monday night’s game, are at home.

In Week 17, Green Bay will play the Vikings in Minnesota, a game with potential seeding implications in the NFC side of the bracket. The Packers lost their first matchup in late September but still have a chance to leapfrog the Vikings in the standings if more goes their way.

For their regular-season finale, the Packers host the Bears. Depending on how things turn out around the league in Week 17, it’s possible that the only thing to play for in this matchup is the number of Chicago’s first-round draft pick.

Below is a full look at Green Bays’ schedule:

Week 16: vs. New Orleans Saints (5-9)
Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings (13-2)
Week 18: vs. Chicago Bears (4-11)

NFC North standings

Both the Lions and Vikings have already clinched playoff spots of their own and are still battling for the division title over the final two weeks.

The Packers can’t win the division since they already lost both games to the Lions and therefore don’t own the head-to-head tiebreaker. However, Green Bay could leap Minnesota in the NFC’s seeding. The Packers would need to win out – including against the Vikings in Week 17 – and the Vikings would have to lose out.

Detroit Lions (13-2)
Minnesota Vikings (13-2)
Green Bay Packers (10-4)
Chicago Bears (4-11)

The Bears have lost nine straight games – starting with their Week 8 loss to the Commanders on a last-second Hail Mary – and can only hope to play spoiler in their final two games.

NFL playoff picture Week 17

AFC

Kansas City Chiefs (14-1, AFC West winners)*
Buffalo Bills (12-3, AFC East winners)*
Pittsburgh Steelers (10-5, AFC North leaders)*
Houston Texans (9-6, AFC South winners)*
Baltimore Ravens (10-5, wild card No. 1)*
Los Angeles Chargers (9-6, wild card No. 2)
Denver Broncos (9-6, wild card No. 3)

In the hunt: Indianapolis Colts (7-8), Miami Dolphins (7-8), Cincinnati Bengals (7-8).

NFC

Detroit Lions (13-2, NFC North leaders)*
Philadelphia Eagles (12-3, NFC East leaders)*
Los Angeles Rams (9-6, NFC West leaders)
Atlanta Falcons (8-7, NFC South leaders)
Minnesota Vikings (13-2, wild card No. 1)*
Green Bay Packers (10-4, wild card No. 2)
Washington Commanders (10-5, wild card No. 3)

In the hunt: Tampa Bay Buccaneers (8-7), Seattle Seahawks (8-7)

An asterisk (*) denotes teams that have clinched a playoff spot. Teams that have clinched division titles are noted accordingly.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Concerns over a resurgence of the Islamic State in Syria remain heightened following the fall of the Bashar al-Assad regime and an increase in attacks targeting U.S.-aligned Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

President-elect Donald Trump may well face another round against the extremist group as the SDF faces a reality in which it may have to divide its focus between ISIS and threats levied at it by Turkey.

The SDF said five of its soldiers were killed Saturday in attacks by Turkish-backed forces in northern Syria, reported Reuters. 

The attacks came following an apparent collapse in a cease-fire agreement brokered by the Biden administration as the U.S. and the SDF ramp up efforts to counter ISIS. 

National security advisor Jake Sullivan on Sunday told CNN that his ‘single biggest concern’ is the return of ISIS, which was deemed ‘defeated’ in 2019. 

‘ISIS loves vacuums,’ he said in reference to the extremist group’s use of power struggles in places like North Africa to gain footholds. ‘What we see in Syria right now are areas that are basically ungoverned because of the fall of the Assad regime. 

‘Our goal is to ensure that we support the SDF — the Kurds — and that we keep ISIS in check,’ he added.

The U.S. has long had to balance its campaign against ISIS in Syria — which it is fighting with the help of the Kurdish coalition forces, despite Turkey deeming the SDF as akin to the terrorist network the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) — with Washington’s partnership alongside Ankara as a NATO ally. 

‘The SDF and the Assad regime were the primary opponents of ISIS,’ Bill Roggio, senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and founding editor of ‘The Long War Journal,’ told Fox News Digital. ‘With the former gone and the latter under pressure from Turkish proxies, concerns about the expansion of ISIS are warranted.’

‘Turkey wants to destroy the SDF,’ Roggio confirmed. ‘Turkey has the ideal opportunity to destroy the SDF, and it will take advantage of this unique situation. I expect attack[s] against the SDF to increase.’

The Biden administration has already taken steps to ramp up its campaign against ISIS, hitting more than 75 sites in a significant strike earlier this month on known ‘ISIS leaders, operatives and camps,’ U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) confirmed.

The operation coincided with the fall of Damascus on Dec. 8 following a sweeping takeover of Aleppo, Hama and Homs by Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which was aided by the Turkey-backed Syrian National Army (SNA).

In addition, CENTCOM on Thursday killed ISIS leader Abu Yusif aka Mahmud using a precision airstrike in eastern Syria — an area where, according to Syrian news outlets, ISIS has been able to seize weapons depots belonging to the former Syrian military under the Assad regime amid the ‘chaos.’

SDF forces in an attempt to clamp down on ISIS uprisings captured 18 ISIS terrorists and suspected collaborators on Sunday near the city of Raqqa, which was once an ISIS stronghold, according to ANF News.

The campaign was reportedly done ‘in cooperation with the international coalition forces,’ but CENTCOM has not yet confirmed whether the U.S. was involved. 

But concern remains high that the SDF could see its operational abilities divided as attacks from the Turkey-backed SNA coalition forces increase — which could spell trouble for the upcoming Trump administration as it looks to prevent another resurgence of ISIS, while balancing U.S. relations with Turkey, which is further expected to exercise outsized influence over the new Syrian government.

‘We continue to monitor the situation in Syria,’ Brian Hughes, Trump-Vance Transition spokesperson said in response to questions from Fox News Digital. ‘President Trump is committed to diminishing threats to peace and stability in the Middle East and to protecting Americans here at home.’

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