Archive

2024

Browsing

MILWAUKEE — The New York Mets’ storybook 2024 season has not reached its final chapter.

It seemed only fitting that Pete Alonso helped keep an unforgettable plot going.

After a season full of triumphs, excitement and resilience, the tank appeared to read ’empty’ for the Mets in a must-win Game 3 in the National League wild-card series. Alonso, an unrestricted free agent after 2024, made sure that his potential final game in a Mets uniform would not be in Milwaukee.

After a lifeless eight innings, Alonso rose up and kept the Mets’ season alive with a go-ahead three-run home run off Brewers closer Devin Williams in the ninth inning, to snatch an improbable 4-2 victory and take the National League Wild Card Series on Thursday night at American Family Field.

Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.

‘It’s just something that you practice in the backyard as a kid,’ Alonso said. ‘You go through those scenarios as a little kid. It’s like, ‘All right, you’re in the playoffs down by a few runs.’ I don’t know. Words can’t explain. It’s just unreal.’

Another historic Mets home run

Alonso’s long ball, which narrowly sailed over the right field wall, was the Mets’ first home run since Francisco Lindor, who’s riding adrenaline and champagne as the best painkiller for his injured back, hoisted the Mets into the playoffs with a ninth-inning two-run shot against the Braves’ Raisel Iglesias last Monday.

It was the most iconic highlight of Alonso’s career and one that will live on in Mets lore for a long, long time.

‘At the end of the day, if Pete does this in the postseason, he’s going to get paid,’ Lindor said with a laugh. ‘Let Pete do his thing. Like Mendy said, he’s one swing away from taking off and he’s one of the best power hitters in the game. I’m just proud of him. He came in early and hit early outside and was just ready. He was ready for the moment.’

After a brilliant six innings for starter Jose Quintana, the Mets’ season nearly came unglued on two pitches.

In a full-count to lead off the seventh inning, reliever Jose Butto could not bury a changeup against Jake Bauers. The Brewers’ pinch-hitter made him pay by tagging a go-ahead solo home run to right field. On the very next pitch, Sal Frelick turned on a first-pitch fastball and hoisted it into the second deck in right field.

‘We continue to believe,’ Carlos Mendoza said. ‘As a team, we’ve been punched and knocked down, and we continue to find ways to get back up. We got punched yesterday (in Game 2). We got punched again today in the seventh inning, and we found a way.’

With a frenetic ninth-inning comeback, jump-started by a walk by Lindor and single from Brandon Nimmo, the Mets extended their season for at least one more week. They tacked on one more run on a Starling Marte RBI single to right field in the ninth.

Mets still believe after eight rough innings

Through the opening seven innings, the Mets could only muster two hits against the Brewers. Both were supplied by Lindor off Brewers starter Tobias Myers.

Lindor legged out a double on a sharp line drive to center field in the opening inning but was left stranded there after back-to-back strikeouts and a fly ball by Alonso.

Then, in the fourth, Lindor knocked a two-out single and advanced on a wild pitch, but Mark Vientos’ deep fly ball to right was tracked down by Frelick.

Across the fifth and seventh innings after Jesse Winker was hit by a pitch, the Mets recorded 12 straight outs against Myers, Trevor Megill, Nick Mears and Freddy Peralta. But these Mets have had a way all season long about coming up in the clutch moments.

‘The way that we got here is by not putting pressure on ourself and going and playing our game, coming with a game plan and then going and taking our shots,’ Nimmo said. ‘When we do that, we’ve been one of the best teams in baseball for those four months. The thought process was still, ‘Let’s just keep going.”

The Mets’ struggles sent the top of the order to the plate in the ninth against Williams who had thrown 12 pitches against the top of the Mets’ lineup in the Brewers’ 4-3 win on Wednesday. Alonso’s second hit in nine at-bats in the wild-card series advanced them one round further.

‘Especially in these big games, you’ve got to move on to the next pitch and make a positive impact, do the best you can, stay within yourself and execute,’ Alonso said.

Jose Quintana provides quality start

Jose Quintana provided the Mets with everything they could have hoped for in an elimination game.

The 35-year-old lefty, who was making his sixth postseason appearance in his 13th year in the league, kept the Brewers offense in check and buckled down when the pressure mounted.

Quintana allowed a baserunner in each of the first five innings but left each baserunner stranded. He finished with six scoreless innings, working around four hits and a walk while striking out five to keep a scoreless game going with three innings to go.

‘It’s huge,’ Mendoza said. ‘This is who Quintana is. He is a guy that has been in this game for a long time. There is a reason why he’s poised. He’s calm. He knows the situation. He knew what we were facing.’

The biggest stretch might have come in the fourth when Willy Adames reached on a soft chopper to third and moved to third on a stolen base and ground ball to Francisco Lindor. But Quintana induced soft contact in front of the mound and converted the final out.

After Butto gave up the lead, Edwin Diaz had a pair of runners in scoring position in the seventh but struck out William Contreras to get out of trouble. For the second time this week, Diaz completed two innings, only this time he did not allow a run and struck out three.

It led to an unlikely save situation for David Peterson, who watched Alonso’s home run sail by while preparing to enter the game in the bullpen. The left-hander gave up a leadoff single but struck out Joey Ortiz and got Brice Turang to ground into a double play on the first pitch of his at-bat. It was the first save of Peterson’s career.

‘It’s unbelievable. We’re moving on, so that’s the biggest thing,’ Peterson said. ‘I’m happy we got the job done and looking forward to the next stage.’

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Kirk Cousins made Atlanta Falcons history on a night where the franchise honored one of its best-ever quarterbacks, Matt Ryan.

Cousins broke the team record for passing yards in a single game, previously owned by Ryan, in the Falcons’ 36-30 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on ‘Thursday Night Football.’ The 13-year veteran was razor-sharp throughout the game, connection early and often with Drake London, Darnell Mooney and Kyle Pitts in a dominant showing for Atlanta’s offense.

Here’s a breakdown of Cousins’ career-best outing and where it ranks among the top passing performances in NFL history.

Kirk Cousins stats today

Cousins completed 42-of-58 passes (72.4 percent) for 509 yards, four touchdowns and one interception in Atlanta’s come-from-behind win over Tampa Bay. His 500-yard passing game was just the 25th in NFL history, and he became just the 22nd different quarterback to achieve the feat.

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

Ryan was among that exclusive group of 22 quarterbacks to log a 500-yard game. He posted 503 passing yards in the Falcons’ 48-33 win over the Carolina Panthers during the 2016 NFL season. Ryan went on to win MVP during that campaign and took the Falcons all the way to the Super Bowl.

It’s premature to say that Cousins’ outing will have that same type of impact on Atlanta’s franchise. Still, Falcons fans have to feel good after seeing how sharp he was throughout the evening.

Cousins fit the ball into tight windows early and often, as he showcased on Mooney’s first touchdown of the game.

The veteran quarterback also used his play-action prowess to manipulate Tampa Bay’s undermanned secondary to create pockets of space in the middle of the field for London and Pitts.

Cousins wasn’t afraid to spread the ball around, either. Seven different players caught at least two passes during the game and five different players recorded at least 66 yards.

So, while London (154 yards) and Darnell Mooney (105 yards) played the largest roles in Cousins’ record-breaking day, it really was a group effort for the quarterback and his receiving corps.

Kirk Cousins game-winning drives

The Falcons’ come-from-behind win also marked the third time Cousins had logged a game-winning drive in the fourth quarter or overtime this season. That’s the most in the NFL, though it’s worth noting that Cousins is one of just two quarterbacks to have played a Week 5 game to date.

Cousins now has a whopping 31 game-winning drives in his career. That puts him in a tie for the 20th-most in NFL history with Drew Bledsoe.

And among active quarterbacks, only four have more than Cousins. They are as follows:

Matthew Stafford (45)
Russell Wilson (39)
Derek Carr (34)
Aaron Rodgers (32)

NFL’s 500 yard passing games

While Cousins’ 509-yard performance broke a Falcons record, it wasn’t quite good enough to break the NFL record. That belongs to Norm Van Brocklin, who recorded 554 yards during a 1951 game between the Los Angeles Rams and the New York Yanks.

Below is the full list of the NFL’s 500-yard passers:

Norm Van Brocklin, Los Angeles Rams: 554 yards (1951)
Matt Schaub, Houston Texans: 527 yards (2012)
Warren Moon, Houston Oilers: 527 yards (1990)
Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals: 525 yards (2021)
Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers: 522 yards (2014)
Boomer Esiason, Arizona Cardinals: 522 yards (1996)
Dan Marino, Miami Dolphins: 521 yards (1988)
Matthew Stafford, Detroit Lions: 520 yards (2012)
Jared Goff, Los Angeles Rams: 517 yards (2019)
Tom Brady, New England Patriots: 517 yards (2011)
Derek Carr, Oakland Raiders: 513 yards (2016)
Phil Simms, New York Giants: 513 yards (1985)
Eli Manning, New York Giants: 510 yards (2012)
Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints: 510 yards (2006)
Kirk Cousins, Atlanta Falcons: 509 yards (2024)
Vince Ferragamo, Los Angeles Rams: 509 yards (1982)
Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers: 506 yards (2017)
Tony Romo, Dallas Cowboys: 506 yards (2013)
Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints: 505 yards (2015)
Y.A. Tittle, New York Giants: 505 yards (1962)
Elvis Grbac, Kansas City Chiefs: 504 yards (2000)
Matt Ryan, Atlanta Falcons: 503 yards (2016)
Philip Rivers, San Diego Chargers: 503 yards (2015)
Ben Roethlsiberger, Pittsburgh Steelers: 503 yards (2009)
Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys: 502 yards (2020)

All the NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th and Monday newsletter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Coach Tata Martino had quite the celebration after Lionel Messi and Inter Miami won the MLS Supporters’ Shield title earlier this week.

“I drank two beers,” Martino said Friday, following the club’s 3-2 win over Columbus Crew on Wednesday night to clinch the regular-season title.

Now, it’s back to business.

Messi and Inter Miami return to action at Toronto FC on Saturday at 4 p.m. ET in the second-to-last match of the regular season. If Inter Miami wins its remaining matches, the team will accumulate 74 points to set a new MLS regular-season record.

Saturday’s game will be the last of the season for Toronto, clinging onto the ninth and final spot in the MLS Eastern Conference playoff race. The No. 8 and No. 9 teams in the conference will play in a Wild Card match Oct. 22 to decide which club will open the playoffs in a best-of-three series against Inter Miami on Oct. 25.

So, there’s something on the line for both clubs in the MLS standalone afternoon match Saturday.

“We like to win every game, so we’re going to aim to win these next two games,” defender Ian Fray said. “If that’s what gets us to 74 points, that’s amazing. We’re going for that because we want to win every game.”

How to watch Inter Miami vs. Toronto live stream?

The Inter Miami match against Toronto FC begins at 4 p.m. ET and available for live stream on MLS Season Pass via Apple TV.

Will Messi play against Toronto?

Messi’s availability for the Toronto match has not yet been decided as of Friday. He could start and played limited minutes, come off the bench, or potentially not play.

Messi has played in five games since his Copa America right ankle injury, most recently scoring two goals in a five-minute span against Columbus to clinch the club’s second title since he arrived in July 2023.

While Martino noted Messi continues to get stronger with the minutes he logs, and his rhythm has regained its form, the club wants to be conscious of the minutes Messi plays Saturday.

After the Toronto match, Messi will join the Argentine national team for two World Cup qualifying matches – Oct. 10 at Venezuela and Oct. 15 vs. Bolivia.

The MLS season ends on Oct. 19 where Inter Miami will host New England Revolution, who set the points record with 73 in 2021.

“I understand people’s expectations and the fact of coming to see him,” Martino said of Messi playing in Toronto. “Even so, we will try to decide the best for his health fundamentally.”

Inter Miami’s first playoff game announced

MLS announced Inter Miami will begin the MLS Cup Playoffs with a Friday night match on Oct. 25. The game will be available to live stream for free via MLS Season Pass on Apple TV, and broadcast live in New York City’s Time Square.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Newly revealed emails show senior military officials raised concerns with the White House within days of Israel commencing its operation in Gaza. 

Reuters obtained and examined emails between senior State Department and Pentagon officials between Oct. 11-14 that showed concern and alarm as Israel started hitting the Gaza Strip with missile strikes. 

The emails specifically focused on the mass evacuation of Palestinians as a potential legal issue. Dana Stroul, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East at the time, wrote to senior Biden aides Oct. 13 and warned that Israel could face war crime charges for its actions. 

The emails also include pressure to include messages of sympathy for the Palestinian people and to allow more aid into Gaza while seeking to remain in solidarity with Israel. 

Israel’s invasion of Gaza has proven polarizing and painful for the Democrats. The progressive wing and younger voters are trying to hold the Biden administration to account for its support of Israel as tens of thousands of Palestinians die. 

The invasion also made it difficult — if not impossible — for aid groups to help the displaced residents of Gaza who fled their homes to avoid getting caught up in Israel’s operations. 

Stroul outright alleged that Israel could be ‘close to committing war crimes’ after the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) dropped leaflets over northern Gaza urging residents to flee their homes ahead of the military rolling into the territory as part of the early ‘targeted incursions.’ 

‘Their main line is that it is impossible for one million civilians to move this fast,’ Stroul wrote. One official said that such an operation was not possible without creating a ‘humanitarian catastrophe.’ 

Three senior U.S. officials argued the White House was slow to address these problems, with Biden’s team at one point arguing that the U.S. was ‘leading international efforts to get humanitarian aid into Gaza,’ which would remain a ‘top priority.’ 

Bill Russo, at the time an assistant secretary of state in the Bureau of Global Public Affairs, attempted to drive home the long-term impact of the U.S.’s ‘lack of response on the humanitarian conditions’ in Gaza, calling it ‘ineffective and counterproductive’ while also harming relations with Arab nations. 

‘If this course is not quickly reversed by not only messaging, but action, it risks damaging our stance in the region for years to come,’ Russo wrote in one email, according to Reuters. A colleague forwarded his emails to White House officials and warned that ‘otherwise would-be stalwart’ Arab partners might think twice about relations with the U.S. 

Russo eventually resigned from his post in March 2024, citing personal reasons for his decision.

Far-left voters have placed the fate of Gaza front and center of their concerns approaching November’s election. The voters of Michigan started an ‘uncommitted’ protest vote during the Democratic primary as a means of venting frustration at the Biden administration’s handling of the crisis. 

Those same voters shredded Harris for her DNC speech in August, calling it ‘horrible’ and accusing Harris of ‘downplaying’ U.S. complicity in the Gaza invasion by providing Israel funding and weapons. 

Neither the White House, the State Department nor the Pentagon responded to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment. 

Reuters contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Former National Institutes of Health employee Margaret Moore, accused by Republicans of helping others shield emails from the public, invoked her Fifth Amendment right to avoid self-incrimination at a deposition before the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic Friday.

Moore, a former FOIA public liaison for the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), also declined to answer questions from Fox News in the hallway before the committee meeting. 

The committee on Monday issued a subpoena for Moore to appear.

‘Instead of using NIH’s FOIA office to provide the transparency and accountability that the American people deserve, it appears that ‘FOIA Lady’ Margaret Moore assisted efforts to evade federal recordkeeping laws,’ said Rep. Brad Wenstrup from Ohio, chairman of the subcommittee. 

He added, ‘Her alleged scheme to help NIH officials delete COVID-19 records and use their personal emails to avoid FOIA is appalling and deserves a thorough investigation.’

Moore’s legal team has defended her right to abstain from testifying, claiming that the former NIH employee has been willing to aid the investigation via alternative means.

‘Ms. Moore has cooperated with the Select Subcommittee through counsel to find an alternative to her sitting for an interview, including expediting her own FOIA request for her own documents, which she provided to the Select Subcommittee voluntarily,’ her legal team wrote.

Moore worked for NIAID for over three decades and at one point served as a special assistant to Dr. Anthony Fauci. 

She is accused of teaching ‘tricks’ to other members of NIAID to hide records and evade FOIA requests. 

‘I learned from our foia lady here how to make emails disappear after I am foia’d but before the search starts,’ Fauci senior advisor Dr. David Morens wrote in an email sent from his personal Gmail account in Feb. 2021. ‘Plus I deleted most of those earlier emails after sending them to gmail.’

The materials sought by the COVID subcommittee would provide insight into the NIH’s relationship with the Wuhan Institute of Virology, commonly believed to have been the origin of the coronavirus in 2019.

Other emails obtained from May 2021 show the NIH general counsel warning the FOIA office ‘not release anything having to do with EcoHealth Alliance/WIV,’ with ‘WIV’ referring to the Wuhan Institute.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

A ‘painful’Israeli response weighs over the heads of the Iranian regime after their ballistic missile attacks on Tel Aviv on Tuesday. 

President Joe Biden has insisted that an angry Israel should not strike Iran’s nuclear sites – and should make sure its response is measured – proportional. 

‘Iran launched a war into Israel,’ said former deputy director of national intelligence Kash Patel. 

‘So to say that the Israelis who are defending themselves and our hostages shouldn’t attack sites in Iran that could kill them – especially when you’re the one who gave Iran $7 billion as a commander in chief and then allowed them to acquire nuclear materials – is wildly political.’ 

On Thursday, he revealed that he was ‘discussing’ recommending Israel target Iran’s energy facilities. 

‘That put the oil markets into a tailspin, even if we are talking to them about it. It’s not something you muse about publicly,’ said former Trump deputy national security advisor Victoria Coates. 

‘If you’ve made a decision, and you have something to announce, fine. You want to level with the American people as much as you can. These random comments are really damaging and confusing to the Iranians, because . . . they don’t have any guidelines or guardrails about what might be coming and so they might do something weird.’ 

Israel’s counterattack could come at any moment. ‘We will act. Iran will soon feel the consequences of their actions. The response will be painful,’ Israel’s U.N. Ambassador Danny Danon told reporters.

Rather than its longtime goal of helping to negotiate a ceasefire, the Biden administration has now shifted its priority to containment – helping the region avoid all-out war between its two hegemonic superpowers. 

‘This is the 1930s all over again. G7 leaders – led by President Biden – are urging Israel to have a proportional and limited response against the Iranian regime,’ Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told Fox News Digital. 

‘The idea of telling Israel what targets to strike ignores reality,’ he went on. ‘Would a proportional response be launching 200 ballistic missiles from Israel into Iran, mimicking what the Iranians did to Israel?’

Former President Donald Trump has not said how Israel should respond to the attacks – which he insists never would have happened under his watch. 

Striking Iran’s nuclear facilities risks provoking all-out war on yet another front for Israel in the eyes of the Biden administration. The Trump team is caught between an anti-war mindset and a penchant for supporting Israel without conditions. It’s unclear whether they still believe the two can exist in harmony.  

Proportionality is ‘clearly not what Israel is doing,’ according to Coates. 

‘It really seems to me that after the Prime Minister [Benjamin Netanyahu] left Washington in July, after that visit, some factor, or combination of factors, really changed his calculus,’ she said. 

‘He appears to have gotten home with the attitude of, ‘I want to get everything I can get done before the election.’ He’s not really listening to the White House at all, which is unfortunate.’ 

After Iranian plots to assassinate him and the hacking of his campaign, Trump did say that if he were president, he would tell Iran, ‘I’m going to blow you to smithereens’ if they harm any U.S. political figures. 

On Tuesday, Trump was asked whether he wished he had responded more forcefully after Iran fired dozens of missiles at U.S. forces stationed in Iraq in 2020, leaving many with traumatic brain injuries. 

‘So, first of all, ‘injured.’ What does ‘injured’ mean? ‘Injured’ means — you mean, because they had a headache? Because the bombs never hit the fort,’ Trump said.

‘So just so you understand, there was nobody ever tougher on Iraq,’ Trump continued, saying ‘Iraq’ instead of ‘Iran.’ ‘When you say not tough, they had no money. They had no money for Hamas. They had no money for Hezbollah. And when we hit them, they hit us. And they called us, and they said, ‘We’re going to shoot at your fort, but we’re not going to hit it.”

Defense officials have said more than 100 suffered traumatic brain injuries after the January 2020 attack.

That attack came after Trump ordered the killing of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani due to an uncovered Iranian plot to kill American diplomats and service members. 

Trump vowed to hit 52 Iranian sites ‘very hard’ if Iran were to carry out the plot, representing the 52 Americans held hostage in Iran for 444 days after being seized at the U.S. embassy in Tehran in November 1979.

Still, in January, Iran lobbed attacks on two Iraqi bases housing U.S. troops, including the Ain al-Assad military base, and a second facility near Erbil airport.

In March, three U.S.-led coalition forces were killed when multiple rockets hit Taji military base. 

Trump, who withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal and reimposed sanctions on Tehran, has insisted to reporters this week that ‘nobody [was] ever tougher on Iran’ than he was.

‘Look at the World today — Look at the missiles flying right now in the Middle East, look at what’s happening with Russia/Ukraine, look at Inflation destroying the World. NONE OF THIS HAPPENED WHILE I WAS PRESIDENT!’ he wrote on Truth Social. 

Alexander Vindman, the former Trump National Security Council Director for European Affairs for the United States, claimed that the former president was ‘fearful’ of escalation with Iran.  

‘Iran struck first and early, during Trump’s presidency, attacking US troops. Trump consistently recoiled in fear inviting further attacks,’ he wrote on X. 

‘Fact check: In 2020, Iran fired ballistic missiles at U.S. forces in retaliation for the Soleimani assassination. 110 U.S. service members sustained traumatic brain injuries. Many administration officials remain on an Iranian hit list today,’ former White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham said. 

But Patel argued the Biden administration’s lifting of sanctions on Iran — and the Obama administration’s 2015 nuclear deal — is what led to the attacks in the first place. 

‘The JCPOA, which was called the ‘Iran nuclear deal’ for a reason. It was never intended to prevent Iran from having a nuclear weapon. It literally gave them one on a timeline,’ he said. 

‘Now I believe they have one, because for four years they haven’t stopped them or slowed them down. They’ve only been successful in politicizing national security.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Taiwan’s top official in the U.S. is warning that China has ramped up its aggression toward the island, and that its people are ready to fight.

‘Yes, of course,’ Alexander Yui, the Taiwanese representative to the U.S., told Fox News’ Aishah Hasnie when asked whether the island’s residents were willing to meet the moment, if China were to invade. ‘We’ve seen Ukraine.’

Taiwan has been intensely watching the conflict in Eastern Europe as Kyiv’s forces have battled a Russian invasion for more than two years. 

Yui said he hoped to not need help from U.S. troops, which Ukraine also does not have, but suggested they would be eagerly accepted if offered.

‘If your house is under fire, and they respond to help you with a bucket of water, would you say no?’ Yui posed.

The diplomat said Chinese President Xi Jinping has escalated regional tensions since former President Donald Trump left office, but he stopped short of blaming the Biden administration for emboldening China.

‘XI Jinping has been emboldened because he wants to realize what he calls his China dream,’ Yui said. ‘It’s not about which administration is in the United States . . . but rather, what are the thoughts of Xi Jinping?’

Taiwan’s ministry of defense tracked eight Chinese military aircraft and two naval ships near the island earlier this week. The defense ministry said four of the eight planes crossed the median line dividing China and Taiwan’s territory in the Taiwan Strait – though Beijing, which claims ownership of Taiwan, does not recognize the geographic delineation. 

A week prior, on Sept. 25, Taiwan’s defense ministry said it had detected 43 Chinese military aircraft in a 24-hour period, with 34 having crossed the median line. The next day saw 41 Chinese military planes detected near Taiwan.

Xi is believed to be preparing his country for an invasion of Taiwan by 2027 – meaning the U.S. response would fall to whoever wins the presidency in November.

Asked if he had a message for Americans about Taiwan ahead of Election Day, Yui said it was a ‘peace-loving nation.’

‘We believe in democracy and freedom. We have to share the same values. And we want to be incorporated in the world, because we’ve been isolated for many decades due to the conflict that we have . . . with mainland China,’ he said.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

After two decades of friendship, and as someone who had the honor to serve on Mrs. Trump’s White House team for a time, I am excited that the former first lady is finally telling her story in her forthcoming book, ‘Melania.’ For this reason, I can no longer remain silent as many self-proclaimed ‘experts’ continue to opine on her thoughts, her statements and her actions — especially when many of them have obvious malice in their hearts and money on their minds.

The hate-Trump media industrial complex is largely a money-making endeavor attracting many longing to remain relevant, become famous, advance personal agendas, or cash in while they can.  

Mrs. Trump’s response to all of this — she ignores all but the most egregious attacks — is not surprising to those who truly know her as a woman of tremendous strength, grace and resilience, a loving and devoted mother, wife, daughter and friend.

Their vitriol is only likely to reach a more fevered pitch in coming days, ahead of the Oct. 8 release of Mrs. Trump’s memoir, ‘Melania.’ Yet I remain hopeful that, with the book’s publication, the public will finally have a chance to learn her story, firsthand, and come to understand the remarkable woman I am so fortunate to call my friend. 

In my role as one of Mrs. Trump’s advisers in the White House, I was in many of the rooms and witnessed many of the moments that have since been drastically recast in books, tweets and interviews by former staffers— and I am aghast at the disparity between the truth I witnessed and the skewed narrative that is widely promoted.

Consider the ongoing rants of one of her former staffers, and self-proclaimed close friend, who has since worked indefatigably to promote herself while bashing Melania. After her contract with the White House was terminated, (full disclosure: my contract with the White House was also terminated at the same time) she wrote a one-sided book about her former boss. She admitted to secretly taping personal phone calls with Mrs. Trump, who was first lady at the time. An unprecedented breach of trust and civility if not ethics. 

Further, after leaving the White House, she began her campaign to criticize Mrs. Trump at every turn, apparently not only to sell her book but also to settle imagined personal scores. Like other former Trumpians, she apparently was positioning herself to be the go-to expert about a woman to whom she has not spoken now in more than seven years.

Examine her ongoing hateful tweets, such as opining about why Melania was not on the campaign trail with her husband last fall. When Mrs. Trump told reporters to ‘Stay tuned’ about her plans to campaign, this former staffer predictably chimed in with a supposedly all-knowing tweet: ‘Let me interpret this for you: DON’T HOLD YOUR BREATHE! [sic]’

How, exactly, would she know that — or anything else about the former first lady? She was clearly so far out of the loop that she was unaware that Mrs. Trump was caring for her dying mother at the time. So much for expertise. 

 

Then there is Mrs. Trump’s onetime White House press secretary, who also appears to be competing to become the Left’s Melania expert. This, after writing a self-aggrandizing book that attacked her former boss while auditioning for the never-Trump ‘conservative’ seat on ABC’s ‘The View.’  

This former ‘insider’ is the same person who, embarrassingly, could not correctly explain to reporters in 2018 why the first lady wore a now-famous Zara designer jacket with its bold logo — ‘I Really Don’t Care, Do U?’ — on a flight to visit migrant children detained at the Texas border.  This press secretary told reporters: ‘It’s just a jacket. There was no hidden message.’

How did she not know that the first lady was intentionally signaling to her critics with that jacket and not referring to the children? And if she had no understanding of Mrs. Trump then, while working for her, how can she possibly be considered an expert on her now when she has had no access to Mrs. Trump in years?

It took the former first lady herself to clear up the confusion and repair the damage. Melania told an ABC News interviewer that the jacket was ‘kind of a message, yes,’ but one directed at her critics: ‘I want to show them that I don’t care. You could criticize whatever you want to say, but it will not stop me to do what I feel is right.’

Sadly, we have rarely seen any positive reporting on Melania’s achievements because Mrs. Trump has seldom been recognized or credited for the important initiatives she undertook and supported during her four years as First Lady and in the years since. 

As first lady, she worked to focus attention on the opioid crisis and its toll on families when visiting Lily’s Place, a treatment center in Huntington, W.Va. She championed ‘Be Best,’ her campaign which aimed at building children’s wellness and emotional intelligence in education which included her work against cyber-bullying in schools. 

Since leaving the White House, she has created ‘Fostering the Future,’ to raise college scholarship funding for former foster children. Since its inception, ‘Fostering the Future’ has given out scholarships to many students. You have probably heard little about it. 

When consuming news, as with any other commodity, the old adage of ‘let the buyer beware’ has perhaps never been more relevant. It is essential for media consumers to approach information about politics with a critical eye, to seek out reliable sources, and to question the credibility of self-proclaimed experts. Otherwise, we may learn that it was our freedoms and our very way of life that were actually for sale all along.

As a wise man once said, ‘Consider the source.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

This story was updated to add new information

The Cincinnati Reds on Friday officially announced the hiring of Terry Francona, 65, as their new manager, one year and one day after Francona stepped away from the Cleveland Guardians for health reasons after a franchise-record run.

The three-time Manager of the Year, who guided two Boston Red Sox teams to world championships and the 2016 Indians to Game 7 of the World Series, joins the Reds on a three-year contract that includes a club option for 2028 after a whirlwind hiring process that was concluded just 11 days after his predecessor, David Bell, was fired.

‘Terry is a future Hall of Fame manager that has experience winning with young talent,’ Reds team president Nick Krall said in a statement. ‘I’m extremely excited that he wanted to be a Red, and he is the right person to take us towards our goal of winning a championship.’

rancona ranks 13th on the all-time list for wins as a manager with 1,950 in 23 seasons with the Philadelphia Phillies, Red Sox and Indians/Guardians, including a Cleveland-record 921 in eight seasons.

All things Reds: Latest Cincinnati Reds news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

‘Terry’s proven track record speaks for itself,’ Reds owner Bob Castellini said in a statement.

Francona has won 90 games as a manager 12 times and taken his teams to the postseason 11 times, compiling a .538 regular-season winning percentage and .564 in the postseason (44-34).

‘I am so excited and honored to join an organization with the tradition and history of the Cincinnati Reds,’ Francona said in a statement released by the team. ‘I only played one season for the Reds in 1987, but in that season I learned that Cincinnati is a great baseball city.’

He takes over a young and talented team that regressed to a mistake-prone, losing season in 2024 after a surprising run into contention in 2023. The core includes first-time, 2024 All-Stars Hunter Greene at the top of the pitching staff and dynamic shortstop Elly De La Cruz.

‘I can’t wait to start meeting and interacting with these good young players of ours,’ Francona said.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Taiwan’s de facto U.S. ambassador is warning that China, Iran and Russia are forming an ‘alliance’ that the rest of the world should be ready for.

It comes days after Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the three autocratic countries were working together but not an ‘axis,’ as they have so often recently been called.

‘They’re working together, that’s for sure, whether that’s an axis or an alliance’ Alexander Yui, Taiwan’s representative to the U.S., told Fox News this week.

‘And as you know, it’s up to anyone to define it. But there were certainly there are symptoms, signs that they’re working together.’

During the interview, Yui also suggested that Taiwan’s government was in touch with both Vice President Harris and former President Trump’s circles to be prepared for whatever comes next in U.S. relations.

‘The whole world is watching, and I’m sure the diplomatic community here in Washington, D.C., is also watching closely and [trying] to reach out to both candidates or to the people around the candidates,’ Yui said.

Blinken penned an op-ed in Foreign Affairs Magazine on Oct. 1 that said world powers were in competition to set the stage for a ‘new age’ of international relations.

‘A small number of countries — principally Russia, with the partnership of Iran and North Korea, as well as China — are determined to alter the foundational principles of the international system. While their forms of governance, ideologies, interests, and capabilities differ, these revisionist powers all want to entrench autocratic rule at home and assert spheres of influence abroad,’ the Biden administration official wrote.

‘While these countries are not an axis, and the administration has been clear that it does not seek bloc confrontation, choices these revisionist powers are making mean we need to act decisively to prevent that outcome.’

Meanwhile, national security hawks on the right and left have warned that those four regimes were forging an unholy alliance not seen since WWII.

Both House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., called them a new ‘axis of evil.’

Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., House Democrats’ former majority leader, said after President Biden’s address on Israel and Ukraine in October 2023, ‘We face a new axis of evil today. The dictators, despots, and dealers of destruction leading Russia, North Korea, Iran, and Iranian proxies like Hamas and Hezbollah stand together in their assault on democracy.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS