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Friday February 13th, 2026

"It Is Not A Question of Who Is Right Or Wrong But What Is Right Or Wrong That Counts."
--Geoff Metcalf
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World & Nation

2nd US Aircraft Carrier Being Sent to Middle East
U.S. Aircraft Carrier Will Be Sent to ...

The world's largest aircraft carrier has been ordered to sail from the Caribbean Sea to the Middle East as President Donald Trump considers whether to take possible military action against Iran.

The move by the USS Gerald R. Ford, according to multiple media reports citing unnamed government officials, will put two carriers and their accompanying warships in the region as Trump increases pressure on Iran to make a deal over its nuclear program.

Trump said earlier this week that he was considering making such a move.

The USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier and three guided-missile destroyers arrived in the Middle East more than two weeks ago.

The U.S. has 11 aircraft carriers, and their schedules are usually set well in advance.



Trump's EPA Rolls Back Major Climate Change Rule

US EPA revokes scientific finding ...

The Trump administration on Thursday announced the repeal of a scientific finding that greenhouse gas emissions endanger human health, removing the legal basis for federal climate regulations.

It also ended subsequent federal greenhouse gas emission standards for all vehicles and engines of model years 2012 to 2027.

The move represents the most sweeping climate change policy rollback by the administration to date, after a string of regulatory cuts and other moves intended to unfetter fossil fuel development and stymie the rollout of clean energy.




Sudden increase in Nancy Guthrie reward money is worrying: ex-FBI agent

Nancy Guthrie reward money ...

The staggering $100,000 cash reward being offered in Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance is worrying because it indicates investigators have very few leads to go on, a former FBI agent has claimed.

The FBI doubled its initial cash reward for information leading to a breakthrough in the case late Thursday — nearly two weeks after the 84-year-old vanished from her Tucson, Ariz., home.

“When I see the FBI is offering more money for information that tells me that the FBI doesn’t have the information,” retired FBI agent Jennifer Coffindaffer told Newsweek.

Coffindaffer warned, though, that offering up such big rewards often triggered an influx of “completely bogus” tips.


Man seen on video with backpack near Nancy Guthrie’s home cleared of involvement in disappearance 

The one strategy authorities could use on Nancy Guthrie’s kidnapper: hostage negotiator

DNA splatter reveals Nancy Guthrie was bleeding from ‘either the hands or face,’ expert says




French judge’s scores ignites 2026 Olympics ice dancing scandal

French judge's score for Madison Chock ...

The figure skating world is screaming sacré bleu over the scoring by French judge Jézabel Dabois that cost American pair Madison Chock and Evan Bates gold in the ice dance competition and handed the controversial French duo Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron the top prize.

Dabois’ scoring has come under intense scrutiny in the 24 hours since Beaudry and Cizeron edged out Chock and Bates with a total score of 225.82, a mere 1.43 points better than the U.S. duo to win the gold.

The French judge’s scores drastically differed from those of her fellow judges and herself when it came to the American and French skaters.

Gold medal contender overpowered in alarming Olympics hockey loss

Team USA decides on starting goalie for Olympics opener




Ukraine Hopes for 'Serious and Responsible' Talks With Russia in Geneva

In Geneva, U.S. and Ukraine officials ...

Ukraine hopes for "serious and responsible" talks with Russia backed by the U.S. in Geneva on February 17-18, the head of Kyiv's delegation said on Friday.

The Ukrainian team remains the same and was "formed taking into account the military, political, and security components of the process," Rustem Umerov said on the Telegram app.

Moscow announced earlier on Friday that the Kremlin aide Vladimir Medinsky will head the Russian delegation instead of Igor Kostyukov, its head of military intelligence.




GOP senator, Minnesota AG clash at Capitol Hill hearing: 'Sit there and smirk, it's sick'

GOP senator, Minnesota AG clash at ...

A Republican senator accused Minnesota’s attorney general of flashing a "despicable" smirk Thursday following a tense exchange at a hearing on Capitol Hill, — a reaction the Democrat in turn described as a "nice theatrical performance."

Tensions escalated at the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs oversight hearing after Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., alleged Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison was encouraging unrest in Minnesota, which has been rocked by recent anti-U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) protests and the shooting deaths of Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good.

"Were you ever concerned about encouraging — I guess, people that support you — to go out and put themselves into harm's way by impeding and obstructing a legal law enforcement action. Did that ever concern you?" Johnson asked Ellison.




Russia Pushes Back on US Bid to Build Armenia Nuclear Plant

U.S. Ditches Russia Signs Nuclear Deal ...

Senior Russian officials have challenged the viability of U.S. proposals to build a nuclear power plant in Armenia, in a sign of Moscow's concern about the risk of losing a lucrative energy deal in a country it sees as part of its sphere of influence.

Vice President JD Vance, on a visit to Armenia this week, signed an agreement that could pave the way for the plant's construction and open what Vance called "a new chapter in the deepening partnership between Armenia and the United States."

Sergei Shoigu, secretary of Russia's Security Council, said on Friday that Soviet technology had enabled Armenia's existing nuclear plant to withstand a devastating 1988 earthquake. He said the U.S. plan raised safety concerns. "Armenia, as we know, is a seismically active region," state news agency RIA quoted Shoigu as saying.

"If the construction of small



White House fires court-appointed US attorney on day he is sworn in

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche argues that judges don't choose US attorneys, only the president does
Interim U.S. attorney for NY fired ...

President Donald Trump's administration fired a U.S. attorney the same day he was sworn in for the role this week.

A board of judges for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York tapped Donald T. Kinsella to serve as U.S. attorney for the Northern District of New York, according to a court announcement that said Kinsella was sworn in on Wednesday. But Kinsella was then booted from the post on Wednesday.

Deputy U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche was blunt about the firing in a Wednesday post on X.

"Judges don’t pick U.S. Attorneys, @POTUS does. See Article II of our Constitution. You are fired, Donald Kinsella," Blanche wrote.



DOJ sues Harvard for withholding records on alleged race-based admissions

Trump administration sues Harvard over ...

The Department of Justice is suing Harvard University for allegedly withholding records that would determine whether the liberal Ivy League institution is continuing to discriminate on the basis of race in the admissions process.

The US Supreme Court nearly three years ago found that Harvard had run afoul of federal civil rights law in its undergraduate admissions, using “racial balancing” to reduce the number of Asian Americans accepted at storied institution.

The suit, filed Friday in Massachusetts federal court, claimed that “at every turn, Harvard has thwarted the Department’s efforts to investigate potential discrimination.”



Ignore the doomsayers — Trump and Lee Zeldin’s green rollback is a breath of sanity

By Joe Borelli

There once was a time when doomsday cults and apocalyptic predictions were the realm of messianic preachers and the Book of Revelations.

But buckle up, because we are about to hear some of the wildest predictions now that EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin has decided to cut some of America’s most burdensome, ineffective and costly regulations.

“We are all gonna die!” they’re sure to scream.

Zeldin’s cancellation of the Obama-era Endangerment Finding is sure to prompt warnings that the Earth’s polar ice will melt, wildfires will spread, rivers will overrun, locusts, frogs, slaying of the first-born.



The real reason Trump keeps beating the media at its own game

President Trump's knowledge of media industry's financial struggles, elite bias and attention-driven model becomes his greatest political asset
By Mark Halperin

There are many reasons why covering Donald Trump is the journalistic challenge of a lifetime.

His temperament. His velocity. His volume. The sheer fact that he can generate three news cycles before most reporters have finished their first cup of coffee.

But there is one explanation that is often overlooked, and it may be the most important of all: Donald Trump understands the business of news better than any modern president — better, in many cases, than the people who work in it.

That may sound surprising. It shouldn’t.



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