Amid the fallout from the Epstein scandal, Trump is reaching deep for anything that might distract away from his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein—including threatening a football team, touring the Fed, releasing MLK files, even tweeting a bizarre clip of a woman catching a snake. But this time, none of it seems to be working and his base is still demanding one thing, and one thing only: the release of the Epstein files. More importantly, says Ana Marie Cox of The New Republic, Trump is losing more than just his base—the scandal is reminding all Americans of “the moral stakes.” Even his photo-op at the Federal Reserve building—another attempted distraction from the scandal engulfing his administration—backfired big time as Fed Chair Jerome Powell fact-checked Trump’s false claims in real time. As former Congressman Joe Walsh puts it, Powell showed “every damn American how you deal with a bully.”
Day: July 27, 2025
Police responded to an assault in progress around 4:30 a.m. in a building near 148th Street and 94th Avenue in Jamaica and found the victim, who told them she had been raped, an NYPD spokesman said.
The video, which was taken in February, began circulating on social media last week and shows William McNeil Jr. staring at the camera as an officer is seen smashing his driver’s side window and demanding that he get out.
Phil Robertson died on May 25 at the age of 79.
David Peterson encountered more traffic than the Bay Bridge in rush hour, but was resourceful enough Saturday night to record outs when the Mets needed them.
Chinese 12-year-old swimmer Yu Zidi makes her debut on world stage — and doesn’t disappoint [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
Trump’s meeting with a key European official comes as his tariff deadline nears [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
Sabrina Ionescu delivered a vintage performance when the Liberty desperately needed it.
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1940
1940 Billboard chart debuts
Alga from south-east Asia is major threat to biodiversity, say experts as they warn of environmental catastrophe
Thousands of tonnes of an aggressive invasive seaweed from south-east Asia are piling up on the beaches of the strait of Gibraltar and Spain’s southern coast in what local environmentalists say is a major threat to the region’s biodiversity.
Since May, the local authority in Cádiz has removed 1,200 tonnes of the alga Rugulopteryx okamurae from La Caleta, the city’s most popular beach, including 78 tonnes in a single day.
