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INDIANAPOLIS — I sat at a rickety card table in the walk-in closet of my bedroom every night for nine straight months where a single, blaring, uncovered light bulb hung from the ceiling illuminating the 1980s-era cream and country blue wallpaper plastered behind makeshift shelves. The closet was stuffed with totes, suitcases and junk that should have been thrown out years ago.

This was no glamorous workspace to write my first book, some might call it distractingly chaotic, but to me it was calm, quiet and cozy with a tiny space heater at my feet, a candle lit by the computer and my mind taking me to places I had never been but needed to go.

I had to transform myself into Jeanette Lee, better known as The Black Widow of pool. I had to understand her, everything about her. I needed to be able to speak in her voice, with her words, her phrasing and her sincerity.

From that closet, I was writing her memoir.

From that closet, I went inside seedy pool dives and to glitzy billiards halls for championship matches. I went to the desolate fields of South Korea to meet a father who had abandoned me. I stood on the podium of the World Games wearing a gold medal around my neck and was forced into a bedroom as a child to be kissed by a guy who was supposed to be an old family friend.

I sat ashamed in middle school, taunted and teased as I wore a full-body, monstrous clunky brace for the severe scoliosis that had attacked my spine. To numb the pain, I stole cigarettes from my grandfather and hung out the window of my shoddy New York City apartment to hide the smell from my parents.

I cut my arms as a teen and ran away from home too many times to count, crashing on the couches of whatever friend’s parents would take me in. I got my first glorious taste of cocaine and then fell in love with pool, became addicted to green felt tables and cue sticks and became the No. 1 women’s pool player in the world.

Then at the age of 49 the world around me crashing in, I sat terrified in a hospital room listening to a doctor saying the scariest two words I had ever heard, terminal cancer. I sat even more terrified inside my living room as I told my three daughters that mommy had Stage IV ovarian cancer.

My closet is where I turned from sports journalist to book author, where I took to heart every minute, every hour, every day, week, month and year that Lee had lived. It is where Lee and I had countless hours upon hours of Zoom interviews.

It is where I sat typing, deleting and typing some more, trying to understand, to feel, to empathize, to grasp what it was like to be a beautiful Korean American woman who fought and battled and struggled and persevered to become the greatest women’s pool player of the modern era.

The weight of the task took its toll inside that closet, where I sometimes cried, wondering how I could do justice to a person like Lee in one book? How could I tell the entire story of a woman who is one of the most incredible female athletes of the past 50 years and not miss something?

But this was my task. I was the co-author of Lee’s memoir, helping her to finally tell the raw and painful story of a misunderstood woman who hid behind red lipstick, high heels and see-through, revealing black clothing with confidence that could have won her an Academy Award.

No one knew that after annihilating the women on the pool circuit, Lee would go back to her hotel room and cry at the way they treated her. She was this beautiful sports icon who ESPN latched onto, airing her matches on Saturdays so the men would swoon. She was a woman with the world at her feet and with hands that had the golden touch.

But in reality, Lee was nothing more than an insecure woman who wanted to be accepted. She still fights to be accepted. She is one of those humble, insanely talented, human beings.

‘The Black Widow: A Memoir,’ hits bookshelves today. Here are five of my favorite passages from Lee’s memoir.

Becoming a monster

The wicked curve of my spine was discovered on a hot, summer afternoon at Long Beach Island, where the sun was glistening, the sand was white, and a perfect breeze blew on our faces. My mom had taken the day off work to spend a glorious day at the beach with us, which was wonderful, and a bit shocking at the same time.

My mom never missed work unless it was for a very good, logical reason, like an important appointment or a funeral. Frivolities weren’t really part of our lives but, on occasion, my mom would make time for them. And on this day, she had taken Doris and me to the ocean.

As I took off my shirt that day at the beach, revealing my skinny, 13-year-old body in a swimsuit, that’s when my mom saw it. She saw the curve in my back. I had just started running toward the water when I heard her scream. “Come back here, Jeanette. Come back here.” The ocean would have to wait for a new insecurity to wash over my body.

My mom stood in the sand, and she pulled me close to her. She put her fingers on my back, and she ran them up and down my spine. I stood there and watched Doris splashing in the waves, as my mom told me to bend over and stand up. Bend over again. Stand up again.

“Walk in front of me,” she said sternly. “Now, stand still.” As my mom looked at my thin body from behind with bones protruding, she knew. She was a nurse, after all. My mom didn’t say the word “scoliosis” to me that day. Thatawful word would come later from doctors, who were stunned that I was even able to function with a spine as crooked as mine.

Always an outcast

I would go home after school to a towering co-op apartment building in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn where I grew up, where almost all the families were Black. I was so jealous of those girls with their bodies that curved. I would sometimes wear two or three leggings under my jeans to make my thighs look thicker, and put socks in my bra to look bustier.

I was so skinny, so concave. When I put my feet together, you could see a gap between my thighs. I would walk into my homeroom in seventh grade and hear the chants, “Fall into the Gap,” like the Gap commercialjingle at the time. There were rumors that I was a slut, and that I had the gap between my thighs because I was having sex with all the boys.

At home, I hated my parents’ rules and the strict regimen. After I took a bath or shower, I was required to get down on my knees and scrub the tub. There was a time set to get homework done, brush my teeth, and go to bed. Sleeping in wasn’t allowed, even on Saturdays when there was no school, and I loved sleeping in.

I remember as a teenager being so angry and frustrated, and screaming, “Mom, why won’t you just leave me alone?” She told me I was wasting my life away in my bed, that I needed to be awake when the world was awake. I ran away too many times to count, crashing on couches of whatever friend or teacher would take me in. I smoked cigarettes and marijuana, and I tried cocaine and acid.

I took needles and jabbed them into my lobes making homemade pierced ears. I took a razor blade once and cut my forearm repeatedly so that a friend and I could be blood sisters. It took 28 slashes before my forearm started bleeding. I thought maybe my close friendship with her would make life better.

But nothing made life better. Nothing, it seemed, would ever take away the loneliness of feeling like an outcast

Hated by the women: ‘Pretty doesn’t make the ball fall in’

One day, I went to my mailbox and found a package from one of the top women players on the tour. I couldn’t believe it. Maybe I was wrong about the way they felt about me. I tore into that padded envelope, only to find the gift was a copy of the Dr. Seuss book ‘Yertle the Turtle.’

Inside, on the cover page, was a handwritten note from a player I won’t name: ‘I think you will connect with this book. I think you will connect with Yertle.’

In the book, Yertle is a self-absorbed creature, obsessed with being the loftiest turtle in the kingdom. He eventually demands that other turtles stack themselves beneath him, so he can sit atop the highest throne. As he revels in glory, the turtles beneath him, holding him up, are in pain.

That book was about how you step on people, without any compassion, to get what you want. When I got that package, I realized that’s what the women thought of me, that I was only out for myself.

“The difference between Jeanette and me,” Allison Fisher would say, “is Jeanette always wanted to be known as the most well-known player in the world, and I wanted to be known as the best player in the world.”

Allison was wrong. It was never about being well-known or famous. Those women misunderstood me. I didn’t care about Jeanette Lee getting notoriety. I wanted to be the best in the world just like they did. It had nothing to do with fame. I just had this deep love, this raging passion to play pool.

‘The men: They sexualized me, mentored me, gave me humility’

On Comedy Central’s ‘The Man Show’ in 2003, as I trounced Jimmy Kimmel and Adam Carolla on the table, they took breaks drinking beer, watching me as they pretended to read books on how to pick up hot Asian chicks. I didn’t back away. I kept up with the act. And I showed them just how good I was.

‘You bitch,” they said as I hit a winning shot.

“You told me not to touch your balls,” I said, knowing exactly what I was saying. “So, I didn’t.”

Kimmel and Carolla poured talc powder down their pants, saying they needed to “chalk” their cues, and ate pretzels. They called me “honey” and told me to get them beers. Then, when my skills at the table had done all the talking, they finally acknowledged they could never beat me at pool.

“You know what?” Kimmel said to me. “This is ridiculous. You really want to play some pool? You want to play pool my way?’

“I’ll play pool any way,” I told him. The show ended with me lounging in a swimming pool, wearing a black bikini, as Kimmel told me the entire gig was a diabolical scheme to get me into fewer clothes.

‘Was it time for The Black Widow to die?’

The odds were dire. I was 49 years old, and it was almost certain I wouldn’t make it to my 50th birthday. But for some reason, I didn’t listen to the prognosis or the odds, not even when I was told that my cancer meant a less than 15 percent chance of surviving more than two years.

What did odds really mean anyway? I had beaten the odds so many times before. I was, after all, an outcast, a high school dropout and runaway teen who had conquered the world of pool. I had overcome racism, scoliosis, feelings of abandonment since my parents’ divorce, and shame — and, more than that, a lifetime of surgeries and chronicpain from ankylosing spondylitis and fibromyalgia.

As that unwelcome opponent named cancer came demanding a match in January 2021, I was bound and determined to overcome again.

“Jeanette is the fiercest, most competitive player I’ve ever seen. She doesn’t back down and she doesn’t give up. And she took that fighting spirit from the pool table into her battle with cancer.” — Don Wardell, Lee’s longtime physician and friend

‘The Black Widow: A Memoir’ is $30 and available for purchase at Amazon, Walmart and Barnes & Noble.

Follow IndyStar sports reporter Dana Benbow on X: @DanaBenbow. Reach her via e-mail:dbenbow@indystar.com 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In a move critics say is designed to shield the Biden-Harris administration from election fallout, the administration has leveraged taxpayer funds to mask upcoming increases in Medicare premiums.

Under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which was intended to cap out-of-pocket drug costs for Medicare beneficiaries, insurers are poised to significantly hike monthly premiums, with average bids for Part D plans expected to triple by 2025.

In response to potential voter backlash, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) rolled out a three-year ‘demonstration project’ to subsidize these premiums, aiming to keep them artificially low. However, despite the appearance of relief, some critics are saying that taxpayers will fund a dramatic increase in subsidies — from $30 per recipient per month in 2024 to $142.70 in 2025 — raising concerns about the long-term impact on government spending and debt. 

Former President Trump advisor Joe Grogan has criticized the maneuver, arguing that it merely shifts costs rather than providing real relief.

‘They’ve destroyed part D premiums,’ Grogan told Fox News Digital in an interview. ‘I’m not sure it’ll survive legal scrutiny if someone were to sue. Objectively, it shouldn’t be done. It’s just interjecting $5-10 billion of taxpayer dollars, while the taxpayers are paying the price 85 days before an election. It’s sickening.’

‘This is only going to get worse in 2025, 2026,’ Grogan continued. ‘The program is in a death spiral. They announced a three-year demo. It’s already broken. The demo is going to fail. Premiums are still going to go up.’

Paragon Health Institute, a health care research group, called the CMS demo plan a ‘fake, costly demonstration,’ in a recent analysis. 

‘Fearing the premium increases that the IRA redesign will impose on Part D plans, CMS has now launched a new voluntary, nationwide demonstration program that is neither a demonstration nor voluntary. Unlike this massive subsidization scheme, demonstrations are supposed to be limited in nature and test alternative features of program design,’ the institute wrote. ‘As a result of the IRA changes, insurers that don’t participate are expected to either be uncompetitive from a price perspective or face significant losses – hardly a choice for insurers.’

Research published by Fidelity, an investment research group, shows that a 65-year-old retiring today can expect to spend $165,000 on health care in retirement, a 5% increase from last year and more than double the estimate from 2002.

Yet, there appears to be a disconnect for many Americans between the actual projected cost of health care in retirement and how much they expect to spend on those expenses. The average American thinks they will spend about $75,000 on health care and other medical expenses, less than half of Fidelity’s calculation, according to the research.

The estimate assumes that an individual is enrolled in Medicare – including Part A and Part B, which cover most hospital care and doctor’s visits – and Part D, which covers prescription drugs. Other expenses such as Medicare premiums, over-the-counter medications, dental and vision care and other costs typically not covered by Medicare are ‘left to retirees to manage on their own,’ the report said.

As of April 2024, about 67.3 million Americans were enrolled in Medicare, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Of those, about half were enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan, while about 80% were covered by Medicare Part D.

‘They just want to get through the election,’ Grogan said. ‘They’re hoping after the election they can face it, but its gonna need to be dealt with in the next 12–18 months. They did not believe it would be this bad and its only gonna get worse.’ 

Americans are also dealing with a spike in the cost of prescription drugs, which has surged nearly 40% over the past decade, easily outstripping the pace of inflation. 

Fox News Digital has reached out to CMS for comment. 

Fox Business’ Megan Henney contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

For all the hoopla around the transfer portal, traditional recruiting remains the biggest key to winning national championships.

And while it can often take two or more years for teams to see the full benefit of a single recruiting class, several Bowl Subdivision programs are set for an immediate boost from prospects signed last winter. That includes some of the strongest contenders for the College Football Playoff, including preseason Big Ten co-favorite Ohio State and SEC favorite Georgia.

There are also teams planning for newcomers to take on major roles on the heels of losing seasons, including Nebraska, Colorado and South Carolina. These true freshmen are set to make the biggest impacts on the 2024 season:

WR Jeremiah Smith, Ohio State

The top skill player in this year’s cycle, Smith has already solidified a role in the Buckeyes’ receiver rotation. Through several months, the big question around the five-star rookie is: Just how good can he be? Down the line, Smith could develop into the next great Ohio State receiver. For 2024, look for him to play a complementary role to Emeka Egbuka and help a new starting quarterback adjust to the job. But there should be some notable highlights.

QB Dylan Raiola, Nebraska

Matt Rhule has yet to officially name Raiola as the Cornhuskers’ starter, though it’s just a matter of time. Arriving on campus in the spring has helped the Nebraska legacy learn the system and establish himself as one of the most intriguing young players in college football. The longtime Georgia verbal commitment chose the Cornhuskers in part for the chance to be in the lineup from the very start; every expectation is that he’ll do just that. It’s possible the wins will follow and a bowl berth will be in their future.

CB Ellis Robinson IV, Georgia

It’s not easy to break into Georgia’s defensive back rotation as a freshman but Robinson has a shot at earning major snaps for the preseason title favorites. The Bulldogs bring back Daylen Everette as one starting cornerback as younger contributors Daniel Harris and Julian Humphrey contend for the second starting job, giving the five-star out of IMG Academy an opportunity to at least crack the two-deep early in his career.

WR Cam Coleman, Auburn

Coleman is one of two five-star freshmen receivers joining this year’s Iron Bowl, along with Alabama’s Ryan Williams. But Williams is a wild card because of the fact he was not an early enrollee, making it harder to predict whether he’ll be ready to contribute for new coach Kalen DeBoer. Coleman could change the complexion of Auburn’s receiver room as a freshman and will definitely bring a big spark to a passing game that was putrid a year ago.

P Rhys Dakin, Iowa

With punting maestro Tory Taylor off to the NFL, Iowa will turn this all-important position over to another Australian important in Dakin, who arrives in the Big Ten via Melbourne. The track record of imported punters is very strong: Taylor was the second Australian in a row to win the Ray Guy Award as the nation’s best at the position when he did so last year, following Rutgers’ Adam Korsak, and Australians took home the award for five years in a row from 2013-17.

DE Williams Nwaneri, Missouri

Missouri seems locked in with starting ends Johnny Walker Jr., the defensive MVP of the Cotton Bowl win against Ohio State, and Michigan State transfer Zion Young. There’s also some depth in holdover Joe Moore III and Georgia transfer Darris Smith. That there are veteran bodies atop the depth chart should limit the role for Nwaneri, a five-star prospect and one of the top signees in program history. But his athleticism should carve out some part in the Tigers’ rotation for the top defensive prospect in last year’s recruiting cycle.

LB Kyngstonn Viliamu-Asa, Notre Dame

After Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman said on signing day that Viliamu-Asa was ready to contribute from the start. A very impressive spring ensured that would be the case. With fall camp around the corner, the four-star signee from powerhouse St. John’s Bosco in Bellflower, California, is in position to claim one of the top backup roles at linebacker, likely behind Drayk Bowen in the middle.

OT Jordan Seaton, Colorado

As expected, Seaton is on track to man Shedeur Sanders’ blind side as a true freshman. While it’s typically not a good thing to toss a rookie into the fire at left tackle, Seaton will almost certainly be an improvement: Colorado gave up 56 sacks last year, second-most in the FBS. Keeping Sanders clean will be one of the deciding factors in whether or not the Buffaloes take a step forward in 2024 and contend in the new-look Big 12.

EDGE Dylan Stewart, South Carolina

Even the most athletically gifted edge players need time to develop, especially in the SEC. But Stewart seems ready to capitalize on the opportunity for early playing time at South Carolina as a situational rusher, something the Gamecocks desperately need after tying Vanderbilt for last in the conference in 2023 with just 21 sacks.

WR Micah Hudson, Texas Tech

That Hudson was slowed in the spring as he recovered from knee surgery makes it hard to say exactly what role he’ll play for Texas Tech as a freshman — whether he’ll see more spans as an inside receiver or on the outside, for example. But to be clear: Hudson is going to play a ton for the Red Raiders after choosing Tech over offers from every major program in the FBS. He has a chance to be a “generational player,’ as coach Joey McGuire said at Big 12 media days.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Columbus Crew, with a three-goal barrage in 14 minutes, reaffirmed its place as the best team in Major League Soccer.

The Crew responded after a dreadful start – lifeless, down 2-0 to an Inter Miami team without Lionel Messi after the first 67 minutes – to win 3-2 in a thrilling comeback on Tuesday night during their Leagues Cup Round-of-16 match.

It was a battle of defending champions, fighting for MLS bragging rights and a chance to advance to this year’s Leagues Cup quarterfinals. It ended in a slugfest at Lower.com Field in Columbus, Ohio.

Diego Rossi followed Christian Ramirez’s goal (67’) with two of his own (69’ and 80’) to help the reigning MLS champion Crew eliminate Inter Miami, which won the Leagues Cup last year.

“It’s been a long moment that we haven’t had a situation like this. And this is a good reminder that we don’t quit,” Crew coach Wilfried Nancy said. “After that, if the team is better than us or they score more goals, no problem. But the spirit, we don’t quit. I’m happy that we did it.”

The Crew will play New York City FC, which defeated Tigres UANL 2-1 Tuesday, in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals later this week. Columbus finished second in the CONCACAF Champions Cup earlier this year.

Matias Rojas (10’) and Diego Gomez (62’) scored for Inter Miami, which nearly won its second match against Columbus this summer after a 2-1 home win on June 19. Along with the best record in MLS, it would have been tough to dispute Inter Miami’s status as the league’s best if they pulled it off without Messi again.

“I think we played a brilliant 65 minutes, where we could have scored the third goal. And in the 10 minutes we had some confusion,” Inter Miami coach Tata Martino said. “I am very sad about the result because I think it is too little for the match we played and the opponent we played against.”

Inter Miami is eliminated from the Leagues Cup and will return to regular-season action later this month, still awaiting Messi’s return from a right ankle injury that’s sidelined him since the Copa America final on June 14.

It was only Inter Miami’s third loss in 11 games without Messi, dating back to his Copa America departure on June 1.

Still, Inter Miami is in excellent shape for Messi’s eventual return.

Inter Miami leads the MLS Eastern Conference with 53 points, 10 points ahead of the third-place Crew. Leagues Cup games don’t affect the MLS standings.

“The reality is that one cannot help but be very, very satisfied with the way we were able to play at the home of the last champion, and a team that was also a Conca-champion finalist,” Martino said of his team’s performance against the Crew.

Here are highlights from the Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami Leagues Cup match:

Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami highlights

Diego Rossi goal: Columbus Crew 3, Inter Miami 2

Down 2-0, the Columbus Crew has taken the lead in a matter of 15 minutes.

Diego Rossi has a brace, scoring his second goal in the 80th minute to give the Crew a 3-2 lead against Inter Miami.

The game has turned upside down for both clubs.

Diego Rossi goal: Columbus Crew 2, Inter Miami 2

Well, that was quick.

The Columbus Crew’s Diego Rossi scored a right boot on a stellar set piece from Cucho Hernandez, and this Leagues Cup match is tied in the 69th minute.

Christian Ramirez goal: Inter Miami 2, Columbus Crew 1

How about that response by the Columbus Crew?

Just minutes after falling behind 2-0, Crew substitute Christian Ramirez scored in the 67th minute to cut the deficit.

Diego Gomez goal: Inter Miami 2, Columbus Crew 0

Inter Miami has doubled its lead against the defending MLS champs.

Diego Gomez scored a right strike in the 62nd minute, after a stellar series of passes from Luis Suarez, to give Inter Miami a 2-0 lead against the Crew.

If Inter Miami hangs on, it’ll win its second match against the defending champion Crew this season and advance in Leagues Cup.

Inter Miami leads 1-0 vs. Columbus at halftime in Leagues Cup

Inter Miami has kept Columbus at bay with steady defense, while capitalizing on a big mistake in the opening minutes.

Matias Rojas scored a header in the 10th minute for Miami, whose pressure led to a Columbus miscue near the net for an early lead.

Columbus has not been able to generate many long runs or attacks toward the net thanks to Inter Miami’s defensive line of five players. MLS All-Star Diego Rossi missed a prime shot over the net in the 43rd minute.

Matias Rojas goal: Inter Miami 1, Columbus 0

Inter Miami took advantage of a Columbus miscue near the net, and Matias Rojas scored a header in the 10th minute to take a 1-0 lead on the road in this Leagues Cup Round-of-16 affair.

Rojas scored after an assist and takeaway from Diego Gomez, with Luis Suarez also swarming defensively before the goal.

How to watch Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami live stream?

The Inter Miami match against Columbus Crew will be available via MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami starting lineups

Here are the starting lineups for both clubs for tonight’s match:

Is Messi playing tonight?

No, Messi will be out again, Inter Miami coach Tata Martino confirmed Monday.

Although Messi is no longer wearing a walking boot, Messi continues to train away from teammates with trainers since sustaining the injury in the Copa America final on July 14.

When will Messi return from injury? 

It’s unclear when Messi will return from injury. 

A few dates to keep in mind: Messi could join Argentina for two World Cup 2026 qualifiers on Sept. 5 (vs. Chile in Argentina) and Sept. 10 (away vs. Colombia). 

What happened last time Columbus played Inter Miami? 

Inter Miami beat Columbus 2-1 on June 19 – with Messi and Luis Suarez away from the club during Copa America. Ian Fray and Leo Campana scored for Miami, while Cucho Hernández scored for Columbus. 

Which team would winner face in Leagues Cup quarterfinals?

The winner of the Inter Miami-Columbus match will face the winner of Tuesday’s match between Tigres UANL and New York City FC.

Leagues Cup 2024 Round of 16 schedule

Here are the other Leagues Cup matches in action on Tuesday night:

∎FC Cincinnati vs. Philadelphia Union, 7:30 p.m. ET (Apple TV)

∎Tigres UANL vs. New York City FC, 8 p.m. ET (Apple TV; FS1, UniMás)

∎Cruz Azul vs. Mazatlán, 8 p.m. ET (Apple TV)

∎Toluca FC vs. Colorado Rapids, 10 p.m. ET (Apple TV)

∎Club América vs. St. Louis CITY SC, 10:30 p.m. ET (Apple TV)

∎LAFC vs. San Jose Earthquakes, 10:30 p.m. ET (Apple TV)

∎Seattle Sounders FC 4, PUMAS UNAM 0

When is the Leagues Cup final?

The Leagues Cup final and third-place match will be on Aug. 25. The participants will be decided after the quarterfinals on Aug. 16-17, and the semifinals on Aug. 21.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Since its violent revolutionary founding, the Islamic Republic of Iran has spread chaos around the world, attempted to assassinate Americans on our own soil and vowed to destroy Israel, our closest ally in the Middle East. America remains far stronger than Iran, yet a Kamala Harris presidency would empower this terrorist regime to do far worse.  

Every American should be deeply concerned that Vice President Harris’s weakness would only continue Joe Biden’s policy of emboldening and enriching Iran. 

For decades, Iran — directly and through proxies — has committed and underwritten terrorism with the explicit goal of killing Americans and expelling us from the Middle East so that the ayatollahs can dominate this vital region.  

The ayatollahs came to power in 1979, holding more than 50 Americans hostage for more than a year during the Carter administration. In 1983, Iran and its terror proxies murdered hundreds of American Marines stationed in Beirut. And during the Bush administration, Iran’s proxies kidnapped Americans in Lebanon and murdered U.S. airmen in Saudi Arabia. 

The terror campaign continued against our troops in Iraq, which I saw firsthand as Iranian-backed terrorists killed hundreds of Americans. Iran, by the best estimates, was responsible for more than 600 American deaths in Iraq. 

In contrast to the Obama administration’s weakness, Iran largely pulled in its horns during the Trump presidency for a simple reason — the ayatollahs once again feared America.  

Under President Donald Trump, Iran’s economy went into free fall, limiting its ability to fund its shock troops around the world. Afraid of American retaliation, Iran and its proxies didn’t carry out major terrorist attacks. And the Iranian nuclear program was mostly contained after the U.S. removed itself from Barack Obama and Joe Biden’s unenforceable Iran deal. 

Sadly — and dangerously — none of that is true today.    

Thanks to the Biden-Harris administration’s refusal to enforce sanctions, Iran’s economy has rebounded and even expanded. Iran’s oil exports have more than quadrupled, giving it the cash to fund attacks on our troops in the Middle East and our allies, as well as assassination plots against Trump and others. The Biden administration even used U.S. taxpayer dollars to pay ransom to Tehran for wrongly detained prisoners.    

Today, Iran is not deterred, as our military commander in the region confirmed when I questioned him in a congressional hearing in March.    

The ayatollahs are killing American troops, and they’re responsible for supporting Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel. They’re funding their proxies across the Middle East; Iranian-backed militias in Iraq, Syria, and Jordan have attacked U.S. forces more than 175 times since October 7. In response, we have responded an anemic 11 times as of July 30.   

But as bad as Biden has been, Kamala Harris’s policies are — and would be — far worse.   

As vice president, she has surrounded herself with pro-Iran advisors: her National Security Advisor Phil Gordon is linked to a senior Pentagon official reportedly involved in an Iranian influence operation. At the same time, she has tried to bully Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu into accepting Hamas’s ceasefire demands.  

And if she becomes president, Harris would kill American energy production, benefiting Iran with higher oil prices.  

Harris’s weak, conciliatory views towards the ayatollahs, combined with her catering to the pro-Hamas wing of the Democratic Party, would gravely endanger our national security and undermine the confidence and security of our allies. 

For decades, Iran — directly and through proxies — has committed and underwritten terrorism with the explicit goal of killing Americans and expelling us from the Middle East so that the ayatollahs can dominate this vital region.  

Instead, what America needs is peace through strength — something Harris will not and cannot deliver. What we need is a return of President Trump and his successful policies to the White House.,

He killed Qasem Soleimani and deterred further attacks by Iran. That’s the strong, decisive leadership America needs: instead of appeasing the ayatollahs, Trump stood up to them. It worked once, and he can do it again.

 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Rep. Thomas Massie is suggesting that Republicans could dismantle the Department of Education (DOE) if the GOP wins control of both Congress and the White House in November.

‘Would [former President Trump] follow through with it? Honestly, I think it depends on who controls Congress and who his Cabinet secretary is,’ the Kentucky Republican told Fox News Digital on Tuesday.

The Kentucky Republican made the comments the day after Trump’s interview on X with owner Elon Musk in which Trump suggested doing the same.

‘What I’m going to do, one of the first acts – and this is where I need an Elon Musk; I need somebody that has a lot of strength and courage and smarts – I want to close up the Department of Education, move education back to the states,’ Trump said Monday night.

Massie introduced a bill late last year that would do just that, and it currently has more than 30 House GOP co-sponsors, including vocal Trump allies like Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Byron Donalds, R-Fla.

While he has not had conversations with Trump or his campaign about the bill, Massie said it’s an issue he’s discussed with the Trump-aligned Republican lawmakers ‘all the time.’

It signals that the effort, long pushed by conservatives, could potentially materialize if Trump and Republicans take over the levers of power in Washington in November.

The DOE was established under former President Carter in 1979 when he split it from the Health and Human Services Department. It’s charged with regulating federal student aid funds and ensuring equal access to education, among other responsibilities.

It faced conservative backlash almost instantly, with former President Reagan threatening to dissolve it, though he was ultimately unsuccessful. 

‘Reagan promised that he would try to eliminate it, and he never did. And then [people] became comfortable with [the] Department of Education, and it started seeming like a radical notion just to do what Ronald Reagan said he would do, so I felt the need to reintroduce this bill,’ Massie said.

The Kentucky Republican, who has been at odds with Trump in the past, said he was ‘pleasantly surprised’ to hear him discuss it on Monday.

He argued that the funding that goes toward managing the DOE and its 14,000 Washington, D.C., employees ‘could be distributed to the school systems instead of burning … on extra red tape.’

Massie also said that other core facets of academic policy like student lunches and the Head Start program are run by the Department of Agriculture and HHS, respectively.

More than 160 Republicans voted for an amendment by Massie to dismantle the DOE in March 2023, though it ultimately failed.

But despite its foundations in the Reagan era, the push to dismantle the DOE has been used as a political cudgel by Democrats after its inclusion in Project 2025, a Heritage Foundation-backed set of policies and recommendations for a new Republican administration.

Trump and his allies have distanced themselves from Project 2025, which Democrats have cast as a far-right and repressive vision for the country.

Massie similarly said he had no knowledge of Project 2025’s details, pointing out that he’s pushed to end the DOE before the initiative was formed.

‘I would just say, regardless of any other initiatives, this stands on its own. Organizations like the Heritage Foundation [and FreedomWorks] have been for getting rid of the Department of Education … since they were created, and Reagan was for it,’ Massie said. ‘So, I don’t think it’s a radical notion. I think what’s radical is having a federal school board. And I think education is better without it.’

Massie indicated he would support former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos – who has advocated for phasing out the department she ran – to head it again.

The Trump campaign did not comment directly on Massie’s bill but told Fox News Digital when asked, ‘As President Trump has repeatedly stated on the campaign trail, he is committed to cutting the Department of Education and returning important decisions about education back to parents, teachers and educators at the state level. The DOE has been failing America’s students for too long, and it’s time for serious change.’

When asked for comment, the DOE referred Fox News Digital to Vice President Harris’ campaign, which did not immediately return a request for comment.

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With Vice President Kamala Harris riding a wave heading into next week’s Democratic National Convention, former President Trump and his campaign appear to be stepping up their efforts to blunt her momentum.

Trump’s campaign tells Fox News it plans to counter-program during the Democrats’ national nominating convention, which kicks off next Monday in Chicago.

‘We’re going to roll out some stuff,’ a Trump campaign senior adviser told Fox News.

The adviser, who asked to remain anonymous to speak more freely, said the campaign will put ‘a whole cadre of people’ – including Trump and top surrogates – into the field next week.

‘We’re certainly going to have key people in the battlegrounds and available to the media to counterprogram,’ the adviser said. 

And one of those key people will be Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley, Fox News has learned.

In years past, it was traditional for a presidential candidate to lay low while the other party held its national nominating convention. 

But last month, as the Republicans held their convention in Milwaukee, President Biden briefly campaigned in the key swing state of Nevada before cutting his trip short after catching COVID.

Days later, Biden’s blockbuster announcement that he was ending his re-election campaign following his disastrous late June debate performance against Trump upended the 2024 election.

At his more than hour-long news conference last week, Trump argued that he wasn’t currently criss-crossing the campaign trail because he is leading in the race — even as the latest polls indicate Harris has closed the gap in national and key battleground state surveys. 

Trump defended his pace on the campaign trail, saying he’s ‘competing a lot’ and added that he would further pick up the pace ‘after their convention.’

Sources in Trump’s political orbit tell Fox News that top advisers to the former president are quietly aiming to persuade Trump to tamp down the insults to Harris and the questioning of the vice president’s racial identity and instead focus on branding her an ultra-liberal and spotlighting her stance on the border, crime and inflation

Trump allies are also publicly pitching Trump to refocus his attention.

‘You’ve got to make this race not on personalities,’ former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said Monday in an interview on Fox News’ ‘America’s Newsroom.’ ‘Stop questioning the size of her crowds and start questioning her position.’

McCarthy emphasized that Trump has ‘a short time frame to do it, so don’t sit back. Get out there and start making the case.’

Trump is expected to spotlight an economic argument against Harris on Wednesday at a campaign event at the Harrah’s Cherokee Center’s Thomas Wolfe Auditorium, in Asheville, North Carolina.

It’s the former president’s second stop in the crucial southeastern battleground state in the three and a half weeks since Harris replaced Biden at the top of the Democrats’ 2024 ticket.

The Trump campaign earlier this week announced that the former president will hold a rally in another crucial swing state – Pennsylvania – on Saturday.

And Trump’s running mate, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, holds campaign events Wednesday in Michigan, Thursday in Pennsylvania, and Friday in Wisconsin.

The former president on Monday returned to X [formerly known as Twitter], where he posted a series of campaign videos leading up to his interview hours later with Elon Musk. The multi-billionaire investor who is considered one of the richest people in the world, owns the social media platform and earlier this summer officially endorsed the former president.

Trump, who was banned from Twitter for a couple of years, made a brief return last year to post his mugshot and a link to collect fundraising donations, before going dark again until Monday.

But Trump’s campaign says the return to X isn’t a one-off this time around.

A Trump campaign senior adviser emphasized that moving forward, we’re ‘going to continue to see a lot of alternative platform work.’

‘You’ll see him on X talking to millions of people. You’ll see him on all kinds of conversational podcasts and streams coming up the rest of the campaign. And he’ll still be doing – as he always does – press availabilities, and he will obviously keep doing rallies and special large audience events,’ said the adviser, who also asked for anonymity to speak more freely.

‘Whether it’s on X or any of these other things, the president is unafraid of having unscripted conversations about the issues that matter, in stark contrast to Kamala Harris,’ the adviser added.

While technical difficulties which delayed the interview with Musk for over 40 minutes grabbed headlines, Trump also gained over 900,000 new followers on X as of Monday night.

Dan Eberhart, an oil drilling chief executive officer and a prominent Republican donor and bundler who raised big bucks for Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign and who is supporting Trump again after backing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in the GOP presidential primaries, told Fox News that ‘you’ve always got to be assessing the state of the race, and I would like to see more offense from the Trump campaign. Trump, the man, is the campaign’s best asset. Put him out there.’

‘Immediately after the Democrat convention closes, I would like to see the gloves come off in a full-throated campaign for Trump,’ Eberhart emphasized.

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The Premier League hopes to reduce frustration with the VAR system with the launch of a social media account that will provide near real-time updates and explanations regarding officiating and operational decisions for every match.

Teams voted in favor of keeping VAR in June despite huge amounts of criticism about the technology-aided officiating system last season, with Wolverhampton Wanderers initiating a petition to scrap it.

‘In the absence of live VAR audio being broadcast, as it is not permitted in football, the Premier League Match Centre will be able to relay on social media near-live information from the VAR Hub during a game,’ the league said in a statement on Tuesday.

In addition to posting refereeing decisions, the X account, @PLMatchCentre, will also provide insights directly from the VAR hub and refereeing experts with the aim of bringing transparency, the league said.

Experts from PGMOL, the league’s officiating body, will also clarify the laws of the game and provide additional information and updates on the VAR decision-making processes when necessary.

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Against the backdrop of the scoring saga that may cost U.S. gymnast Jordan Chiles a bronze medal from the 2024 Paris Olympics, the Romanian Olympic and Sports Committee announced that gymnast Ana Maria Barbosu will take possession of the bronze medal Friday in a ceremony in Bucharest.

According to Tuesday’s press release, Octavian Morariu, a member of the International Olympic Committee for Romania, and Mihai Covaliu, president of the Romanian Olympic and Sports Committee, will hand Barbosu the medal.

It is unclear if Chiles has already returned her bronze medal or if the medal Barbosu is set to receive is the same one; messages left Tuesday for the International Olympic Committee inquiring about the matter were not immediately returned.

At the women’s floor exercise final on August 5, Chiles’ score was increased to 13.766 from 13.666 after U.S. coach, Cecile Landi, appealed a deduction that she had received on one element, known as a tour jete full. The appeal, known as an ‘inquiry’ in gymnastics, wiped away the deduction, moved Chiles into third and knocked Barbosu off the podium.

When the Romanian Gymnastics Federation filed its case with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), it was basically appealing the validity of Landi’s appeal, hoping that Chiles’ score would be reverted back to 13.666.

2024 Paris Olympics: Follow USA TODAY’s coverage of the biggest names and stories of the Games.

When CAS agreed, the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) re-adjusted its order of finish for the event and the International Olympic Committee said it would be asking Chiles to return her medal so it could be reallocated to Barbosu.

Complicating this further, the CAS did not reach out to the right U.S. officials as it prepared for last week’s Romanian appeal of Chiles’ bronze medal, a person with knowledge of the situation who did not want to be identified told USA TODAY Sports’ Christine Brennan Monday. 

According to USA Gymnastics, CAS said it cannot reconsider its ruling, even with the existence of the new evidence. Instead, USAG and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee have said they plan to challenge that CAS decision by filing an appeal with the Swiss Federal Tribunal, which is the highest court in Switzerland.

The Swiss Federal Tribunal usually only intervenes in CAS decisions in cases where there has been a blatant procedural issue, so it is unclear what the Americans will argue, specifically, or whether their efforts will succeed.

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CHICAGO — Just 14 games into a difference-making New York Yankees debut, Jazz Chisholm Jr. is facing the possibility of season-ending injury.

According to manager Aaron Boone, his lefty-hitting third baseman is likely headed to the injured list due to an unspecified UCL injury.

‘To what extent, we’re still kind of working through,” said Boone, who could not dismiss the chance of Chisholm having to undergo a season-ending surgery.

Chisholm underwent an MRI on Tuesday. X-rays taken Monday night came back negative.

‘We’ll see what the extent of it is, and what the next several days are like, but I don’t know that,” Boone said prior to Tuesday night’s game against the White Sox at Guaranteed Rate Field.

All things Yankees: Latest New York Yankees news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

As to the possibility that Chisholm suffered a UCL tear that would require Tommy John surgery to his non-throwing arm, Boone said: ‘I’m not going to speak until all the doctors have weighed in on it. I just know it’s a UCL injury.

‘So, we’ll see what we have here over the next 24 hours.”

Since arriving via trade from the Miami Marlins on July 27, Chisholm made an immediate impact with his power-speed element, batting .316 average with seven home runs and 11 RBI.

Chisholm’s seven homers in his first 12 games as a Yankee established a franchise record.

Plus, his exuberant personality and the joy he exhibited in playing the game was viewed as a needed energy boost for a club that had lost 23 of its last 34 games upon his arrival.

‘He’s been really impactful for us, and hopefully this is something that’s a shorter period and we can get him back and rolling,” said Boone. ‘Certainly, tough to not have him in there.”

Chisholm was listed with the Yankees reserve players for Tuesday’s game and will remain with the team for now, according to Boone, while awaiting further medical opinions.

In Tuesday’s lineup, switch-hitting Oswaldo Cabrera was at third base, batting eighth, with DJ LeMahieu on the bench against a right-handed starter and Ben Rice starting at first base.

Boone suggested that an infielder would be summoned soon from the minors, with Oswald Peraza in consideration, and ‘we’ll kind of mix and match and see what makes the most sense.”

Rehabbing from a calf strain, following a setback, right-handed hitting veteran infielder Jon Berti is at Tampa, Fla., and could begin a minor league rehab assignment in ‘the next week or so,” said Boone.

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