header.html



 
TODAY.html
Wednesday February 11th, 2026

"It Is Not A Question of Who Is Right Or Wrong But What Is Right Or Wrong That Counts."
--Geoff Metcalf
 Providing an on line Triage of the news since 1998
Will
My son has narrated the last book I wrote.
Please consider listening to it and encouraging others to do so too.
(Click on Book Cover)

World & Nation

Third Nancy Guthrie ransom note sent to TMZ, including demand for bitcoin in exchange for information: report
Activity in Nancy Guthrie's ransom ...

A new letter in the bewildering Nancy Guthrie case has been sent to TMZ, reportedly including a demand for one bitcoin in exchange for information about “Today” show co-host Savannah Guthrie’s mother’s kidnapper.

TMZ reported that the $66,000 payment would be in exchange for the “name of the individual involved.”

The letter, the third alleged note sent out since Nancy was last seen on Jan. 31, contained details of a working bitcoin address, TMZ host Harvey Levin said during Wednesday’s appearance on Fox News’ “America Newsroom.”



Nancy Guthrie kidnapping search derailed as suspect released after police search new area
New images released in Nancy Guthrie ...

Authorities have conducted another search at an Arizona site as part of the ongoing investigation into Nancy Guthrie's vanishing, following the release of a suspect, with investigators once again hitting a 'dead end.'

The 84-year-old Nancy was reported missing on February 1 after she didn't show up for her regular Sunday church service. A worried member of the congregation then quickly reached out to her family, who notified authorities. Evidence of blood and forced entry was subsequently found at Nancy's residence, prompting investigators to suspect she had been abducted.

A suspect was taken in for questioning on Tuesday evening and released after several hours as the investigation hit a dead end once more. Since her disappearance, authorities have carried out multiple searches of the surrounding area, Nancy's property, and the home of her daughter, Annie, as well. These operations come after an investigator disclosed the disturbing noise that was detected just before Nancy went missing.



Iranian regime executing wounded protesters in hospital beds — as brutal retribution continues ‘every day’: sources

Iranian regime executing wounded ...

Iranian thugs are executing of anti-regime protesters with wanton and brutal abandon — even murdering wounded demonstrators lying in hospital beds, sources told The Post.

Horrifying footage is being shared inside Iran of security forces raiding hospitals to look for those wounded during last month’s protests, where thousands of others were killed in the brutal crackdown.

“They were in hospitals, with IV lines or breathing tubes attached to them,” one source said of the people being killed.

“And then, when you look closely, you realize they were shot in the head.

“They were executed — given the final shot — inside the hospital,” the source added.

Another source said that the executions are being carried on “every day,” with another claiming that sexual violence against the protesters is running so rampant that “some of the detained girls have even asked their families to send them contraceptive pills.”



FAA Reopens El Paso Airspace After 'Special Security' Closure

WXYZ-TV - UPDATE: The FAA said the ...

The Federal Aviation Administration reopened the airspace around El Paso International Airport in Texas on Wednesday morning, just hours after it announced a 10-day closure that would have grounded all flights to and from the airport.

The Federal Aviation Administration said in its X post that it has lifted the temporary closure of the airspace over El Paso, saying there was no threat to commercial aviation and that all flights will resume.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy wrote in an X post that the FAA and the Defense Department "acted swiftly to address a cartel drone incursion. The threat has been neutralized and there is no danger to commercial travel in the region."

He said normal flights are resuming Wednesday morning.



Democratic congresswoman sparks online outrage over 'deranged' question to ICE director about 'going to hell'

Democratic congresswoman blasted after asking ICE chief if he is going to hell
Rep LaMonica McIver asks ICE director ...

Democratic Rep. LaMonica McIver, who is currently facing charges related to interfering with ICE officers at a detention facility, is facing strong pushback online over her line of questioning to ICE Acting Director Todd Lyons in a heated hearing Tuesday.

"How do you think Judgment Day will work for you with so much blood on your hands?" McIver asked Lyons during a hearing in which Democrats lashed out on multiple occasions against ICE and President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda in general while highlighting the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, both killed by federal immigration agents during altercations in Minneapolis in recent weeks.

Lyons responded, "I'm not going to entertain that question."

"Of course not," McIver said back. "Do you think you're going to hell?"



Pardoning Maxwell 'Not a Priority' for Trump

Trump kicked out creep Epstein', says ...

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Tuesday that pardoning Ghislaine Maxwell is not a priority for President Donald Trump or his administration, following Maxwell's decision to invoke her Fifth Amendment right during a House Oversight Committee deposition this week.

"This is not something I've discussed recently with the president because, frankly, it's not a priority," Leavitt told reporters during a White House press briefing.

"He's focused on many of the issues that the American people are dealing with and providing solutions to those issues."

Leavitt added that the last time she spoke with Trump about the matter, he made clear that granting clemency to Maxwell was "not something he's considering or thinking about."




Senators Reaffirm 39% Cap at Hearing on FCC Broadcast Rule

FCC chair signals shift toward ...

A Senate Commerce Committee hearing Tuesday on the Federal Communications Commission's national television ownership cap revealed rare bipartisan agreement on one central point: The 39% audience reach limit was set by Congress and cannot be unilaterally rewritten by the FCC.

Lawmakers from both parties also signaled that any action affecting the cap — including decisions tied to Nexstar Media Group's proposed $6 billion acquisition of Tegna — must be taken by the full commission, not advanced at the bureau level.

Those findings could seriously complicate Nexstar's merger plan and open any approval to legal challenges.



Iran Won't Negotiate Over Its Missile Capabilities

Iran's missile capabilities are its red ...

Iran's missile capabilities are its red line and are not a subject to be negotiated, an adviser to Iran's supreme leader said on Wednesday, as Tehran and Washington eye a new round of talks to avert conflict.

U.S. and Iranian diplomats held indirect talks last week in Oman, amid a regional naval buildup by the U.S. threatening Iran.

"The Islamic Republic's missile capabilities are non-negotiable," Ali Shamkhani said according to state media while appearing in a march commemorating the 47th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution.

Washington has long sought to extend talks on Iran's nuclear capabilities to cover its missile program as well. Iran has said it is prepared to discuss curbs on its nuclear program in return for the lifting of sanctions, but has repeatedly ruled out linking the issue to other questions including missiles.



China's Xi Makes Public Reference to Military Purges

military purges

China's military has grown stronger in the past year in its fight against corruption, President Xi Jinping told the Chinese armed forces on Wednesday, making a rare public reference to the graft probes linked to the country's top generals.

China's two highest-ranked generals have been ensnared in disciplinary probes, with He Weidong expelled in October last year and Zhang Youxia placed under investigation in January, marking one of the most high-profile purges of the Chinese military in decades.

"The past year has been unusual and extraordinary," Xi told the military in a virtual address. "The People's Army has deepened its political education, effectively addressed various risks and challenges, and undergone revolutionary forging in the fight against corruption."



Meet Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo — the 2026 Winter Olympics skier going viral for insane hill climb
Meet Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo — 2026 ...

Competitors find it hard to fault Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo because he has it all: Technique, tactics, power and speed.

On Tuesday, the Norwegian cross-country skiing phenomenon was unstoppable again as he earned his second Olympic gold medal in his second outing at the Milan Cortina Games, comfortably winning the preliminary rounds and final of the classic sprint.

The 29-year-old is one medal away from the Winter Olympics all-time record tally of eight golds, shared by three retired Norwegian greats of cross-country skiing and biathlon.

American claims gold in women’s mogul final after Olympic favorite’s shocking stumble

Olympic officials figured out why medals keep breaking after investigation

Chloe Kim puts on a show in 2026 Winter Olympics debut after injury scare




Trump’s about to cancel Obama’s most outrageous power grab

By Judge Glock

President Trump is on the brink of ordering a massive policy shakeup — “the largest act of deregulation in the history of the United States,” says Environmental Protection Agency chief Lee Zeldin.

When Trump’s EPA orders the end of a 2009 finding that greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide are a threat to public health, it will halt 16 years of federal efforts to mandate vast changes in American life without legal justification.

The so-called Endangerment Finding led to a host of regulations whose estimated costs exceeded a trillion dollars.

When the bill stalled, Obama charged ahead with executive action. 



Gov Pritzker ignored my letter — after his sanctuary policies killed my daughter

I sent Gov JB Pritzker a letter with 11 questions about Illinois sanctuary policies that protected the illegal immigrant who killed my daughter Katie Abraham
By Joe Abraham

I am a lifelong Illinoisan, and I have met my social contract. I’ve done everything properly. I’ve been law-abiding and I’ve been productive. And if I didn’t do these things, I would have been punished. So I’ve met my side of the bargain. But I want my governor to know that he hasn’t met his end of the bargain.

Recently, I sent Gov. JB Pritzker a letter asking straightforward questions about the sanctuary policies he champions — policies that protected an illegal alien who went on to kill my daughter. I asked for a response by January 19, 2026, the one-year anniversary of Katie’s death. To this day, I have received nothing.

The pain our family has experienced in the past 12+ months since Katie’s death is beyond description. I wish I could explain it to people. The pain is so unbearable at times it has made me almost unable to function. I am haunted by the knowledge that I will never walk my daughter down the aisle, I’ll never hold her children, I’ll never see her again. I would give anything – anything – and the rest of my days for just one more hour with her.



right_menu.html Resolution Group International ATLANTIC CAPTAIN'S ACADEMY GOLDEN RAM SPORTSMAN'S CLUB