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Convict who murdered University of Miami football player, ex-girlfriend in jealous rage sentenced to life in prison over death row

“He can escape man, but he can’t escape the judgment God has for him. He will suffer.”
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Viktor Orbán and Donald Trump’s Attacks on Independence

President Donald Trump With Viktor Orban Summit

Today, President Donald Trump will welcome Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán to the Oval Office. Orbán has spent a career casting himself as a freedom fighter. First, against the oppressive yoke of Soviet communism. More recently, against the United States, the European Union, George Soros and others he claims propagate “woke” ideology.

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While Orbán spends a fortune projecting himself as an unflinching bulwark of conservative values in a world swallowed up by the blackhole of cultural decline, the reality of his politics tells a different story.

Having spent years representing the United States of America in Hungary, I came to see Orbán as an extraordinarily talented man. But his talent has little to do with advancing conservatism. His true talent is the nihilist flair with which he challenges and ultimately stomps out Hungarians’ belief in the very notion of independence—the idea that any individual or entity prioritizes neutral principles over partisan politics.

Independence is a concept fundamental to the health of any democracy—and it has been systematically dismantled in Hungary. Institutions that otherwise produce knowledge by pursuing truth are coercively captured or co-opted by the state. Those who resist are framed as partisan operatives, foreign agents, or worse. What’s left is a poor country subsumed with politics, propaganda, and polarization; a state that stomps out independence while feigning conservatism. 

Magyar Hang, a conservative newspaper in Hungary, knows this well. It is independently owned and controlled—a rarity in a country where a single political machine controls approximately 85% of the media. And because it is independent from Orbán’s direct control, no printshop in Hungary will print it. It matters not that it is conservative.

With no way to print their conservative Hungarian newspaper in Hungary, each week it is printed across the border in Slovakia and then driven across the border into Hungary for distribution. Ironically, Orbán and his friends also had trouble reproducing and distributing their message during the dark days of communism. It was George Soros’ Open Society Foundation who helped out nascent political parties like Orbán’s by providing them with support, including with copy machines to “promote the free exchange of ideas and information, despite state controls.”

Orbán sees independence—whether it be independent media, universities, or civil society organizations —much like Hungary’s former communist overlords. That anyone would work in support of democracy for all is simply a ruse. Those who give their lives for it are, in the words of Trump, “suckers” and “losers,” The Hungarian Prime Minister appears to share this perspective with the American President.

Theirs is a war not so much on liberals or even just a war on independent institutions (central to any democracy), but on the very idea that anything is ever “independent.” To them, everything is politics. Politics is everything. Politics justifies anything.

In Hungary, when organizations such as Atlatszo expose how billions in public funds find their way into the pockets of Orbán’s family, their facts aren’t attacked, they are. To Orbán, institutions like these aren’t independent civil society organizations, but arms of the opposition. Agents of George Soros. For Orbán, as for Trump, independent media doesn’t exist. News organizations that they don’t control are not independent, they are the “opposition.”

Rather than contest facts, Orbán transposes his own politics onto inherently apolitical individuals and organizations. Orbán has even created a bureaucracy to “protect Hungarian sovereignty” from facts published by independent Hungarians.

The consequences of this philosophy can quickly spiral out of control. If there’s no such thing as independence, everything is thrust into this zero-sum game of total politics. If journalists are partisans, their facts are irrelevant. If independent civil society doesn’t exist, protests are plots by billionaires or foreign powers. If serving the Constitution means nothing, the civil service is the “deep state.” If academic freedom is “woke ideology,” universities are partisan enclaves. This is how Orbán’s Hungary works.

That’s why Orbán forced the independent Central European University out of Hungary. It’s why he funnels billions from state assets and shady Russian energy deals into Mathias Corvinus Collegium, which trains loyal culture warriors. It’s why a Christian church like the Hungarian Evangelical Fellowship is hounded out of public life, forced to abandon aid programs for the poor; while the Reformed Church, with a former Orbán minister at the helm, thrives under state patronage.

What connects Orbán’s targets is not ideology inasmuch as his contempt for their independence.

Everything is collapsed into a single equation of allegiance. This is what living without independence means: no neutral ground, no shared truth, no legitimate disagreement. Only loyalty. Everything becomes an endless contest of “us” versus “them.” 

So when Trump speaks of journalists as the “enemy of the American people,” he isn’t simply distracting from the content of their work. He, like Orbán, is creating a political culture that, at its core, builds its legitimacy not through the strength of ideas, but by eradicating the notion that independence exists.

Yet democracy, at its core, depends on faith in independence. One Founding Father called it “self-evident.” And democracy only works when truth-seeking institutions that rely on facts inform and, if necessary, guard our democratic processes.

Within our government, prosecutors, judges, and civil servants swear an oath to uphold the U.S. Constitution. Outside of government, independent media, civil society organizations, and academia are meant to operate with professional independence. They don’t serve a leader; they serve reality. They don’t do this work because they are partisan. They do it because they’re faithful to the truth.

Authoritarians reward obedience and punish independence until the public believes independence was always a myth. That’s the true contagion of the end of independence—both as a model for governance and as a disease infecting society. Every corrupt deal, every politically-motivated prosecution, and every smear campaign, is a performance, a public execution of independence and the values needed to keep our democracy.

In America, powerful lawyers, university presidents, and corporate executives think they’re tactfully satisfying the President’s ego by performing a little lie, by doing something in a “deal” with Trump that they would do anyway. But like in Orbán’s Hungary, these “deals” serve a clear purpose. They signal the death knell of the one thing our democracy cannot live without: independence.

Every institution that offers its independence up for the chopping block brings us one step closer to the end of independence. Orbán spent decades asphyxiating it in Hungary. Just look at what Trump has accomplished here in a mere nine months.

When the two meet in the Oval Office today, Orbán will plead for American investments and an exemption from Trump’s important Russian energy sanctions. The reason is simple: Hungary’s economy is in shambles and those shady Russian energy deals bankroll Orbán’s campaign to stomp out independence—all while he masquerades as a conservative.

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One lesson took the CEO of Habit Burger’s career from consultant to the C-suite

Habit Burger CEO Shannon Hennessy poses in the company's test kitchen.
Habit Burger CEO Shannon Hennessy told Business Insider that her favorite piece of career advice is to invest in your own confidence.

  • Habit Burger CEO Shannon Hennessy told Business Insider the advice she gives to young professionals.
  • Excessive interview prep or fixating on landing a perfect job won’t help you long-term, she said.
  • Hennessy said the best investment is your own energy because “your confidence lags your competence.”

Most early-career professionals worry about mastering the right skills or perfecting their résumés. Shannon Hennessy thinks they’re missing the real recipe for success.

As CEO of Habit Burger & Grill, a rapidly expanding chain under the Yum! Brands umbrella, Hennessy has cooked up plenty of wins — from a new partnership with the Los Angeles Dodgers to spearheading a swath of ambitious remodels. But it wasn’t until she got out of her own way that she says she flourished professionally.

“I felt like, early on in my career, I held myself back more than anybody else,” Hennessy told Business Insider.

She consistently second-guessed herself, worrying about how she was perceived in meetings during her early years as a McKinsey consultant, or being overly concerned about the potential risks or downsides that came with big financial deals.

“I had a great early mentor who said to me, ‘Your confidence lags your competence,’ and that was like a light bulb moment for me, like, ‘God, I’m not going to be the one to hold myself back.'”

Feeling confident in her work was a hard-won battle for Hennessy, but the 47-year-old mother of two said a combination of confidence and self-belief shaped her leadership journey more than any other skills she learned from the Wharton School of Business or during her MBA at Northwestern University.

“I find people tend to think about, like, ‘What are the classes I should take to get the career I want? What’s the job I should get as the first rung on the ladder, and how do I prep for the interview?’ I actually feel like the thing that makes the biggest difference is whether you feel good in that moment and you’re being your best self.”

Hennessy now focuses on having a predictable daily routine — she wakes up early, exercises six days a week, and refuses to work on weekends, which she saves for family time. This allows her to protect her energy and feel her best, enabling her to show up as her best self at work.

“One of my classic pieces of advice is to invest in your own confidence and what it takes to feel at your best, because the rest will follow,” Hennessy said.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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WRONG FICHE

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