June 5, 2026
A MUST-READ FROM J.D. VANCE:
Henry Nowak died the same way a civilization dies: abandoned, handcuffed by authorities who neither trusted nor cared for him, and accused of hate crimes he did not commit. His murder is as tragic as it is enraging. He should still be alive today, and he would be if the last few… https://t.co/e3HkjzWzwU
— JD Vance (@JDVance) June 5, 2026
UM, WHAT? ‘Khamenei’ says US, Israel hit by ‘decisive blow’ amid mixed signals on talks, US security alert. “Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei has not been seen or heard in public since being wounded in strikes that killed his father and predecessor, Ali Khamenei, on the first day of the US-Israeli war with Iran on February 28. His message, read out by a prayer leader at a ceremony marking the anniversary of the death of the Islamic Republic’s founder, came amid weeks of talks marked by threats and flare-ups of violence that have so far failed to secure a deal to end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a key conduit for global energy flows.”
Kudos to the Times of Israel headline writer who put scare quotes around “Khamenei.”
WHAT WOULD A PRO-FAMILY ACADEMIA LOOK LIKE? Yeah, I know, but after you stop laughing, give it a read.
MORNING IN AMERICA: US job market notches third straight month of solid growth.
The U.S. economy posted a third straight month of strong job gains in May, confirming the labor market was gaining traction after stumbling last year and giving the Federal Reserve more room to keep interest rates unchanged amid rising inflation due to the war in the Middle East.
The closely watched employment report from the Labor Department on Friday painted an upbeat picture of the jobs market. The economy added 93,000 more jobs in March and April than previously estimated and the unemployment rate held at 4.3% for a third consecutive month. While financial markets boosted the chances of an interest rate hike in December, economists said the bar remains high for monetary policy tightening.
Economists say fiscal stimulus, in the form of tax and import tariff refunds, has cushioned the impact of the U.S.-backed war with Iran, which has stoked inflation through a surge in oil prices. Corporate profits have increased since the second quarter of 2025, allowing businesses to refrain from large-scale layoffs. Economists, however, warned of risks to the labor market if the war persists.
“This report is likely to confirm to the Fed that the labor market is in a stable place, allowing inflation to be the only focus and driver of Fed policy heading into the June meeting,” said Sophia Kearney-Lederman, a senior economist at FHN Financial.
Exit question: “Donald Trump finally got the economic success he has touted since his re-election. Will it come in time to boost the GOP’s midterm chances?”
THE UNEXPECTEDLIES MOVE IN ONE DIRECTION UNDER A DEMOCRAT PRESIDENT, AND IN THE OTHER DIRECTION UNDER A REPUBLICAN:
Amazing how President Trump’s opponents keep attributing this all to “luck.” As if lower taxes and reductions in government red tape had no role? Even if it were “luck,” I’d rather gamble with Trump than a communist Democrat. https://t.co/ERqvmUBeqy
— Dan Bongino (@dbongino) June 5, 2026
I AGREE: Sam Altman joins rivals in call to prevent AI-developed bioweapons.
I mean, we’ve had enough trouble with the ones that the Chinese government developed with U.S. government funding. . .
In August 2025, in the run-up to the mayoral election in New York City, I wrote a piece for The Blaze outlining how that election was a “David Duke” test for the Democrats. They had the choice of a supporting a racist adversary of the United States in Zohran Mamdani, or repudiating Mamdani and supporting the Republican, no matter how unpalatable they might find the decision to vote “R.”
Democrats failed the test, choosing to rally around Mamdani, who is now New York’s mayor.
The consequences are being realized quickly, with Jew-hatred and virulent anti-Americanism now mainstreamed in the Democratic party, as evidenced by Democrats clearing the field for Nazi fanboy Graham Platner to win the Maine senate nomination, and Adam Hamawy winning the Democrat nomination to a Congressional seat in New Jersey. Mr. Hamawy is a squad-endorsed former Al-Qaeda volunteer who also palled around with the original Twin Towers bomber, Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman (aka “The Blind Sheik.”) Hamawy actually testified as a character witness for the Blind Sheik in the trial following the first World Trade Center bombing in 1995.
It’s been quite an eventful decade:
2016: Punch a Nazi.
2026: No not that one. https://t.co/NczaVeMNw6
— EducatëdHillbilly™ (@RobProvince) June 5, 2026
IT’S TIME FOR VICTORIA TAFT’S West Coast, Messed Coast™: A Medicaid Scam You Never Saw Coming Has California Circling the… Drums “What’s the emptiest place on the West Coast, Messed Coast™ this week? It appears to be the election counting offices in California where navel-gazing vote counters are taking their sweet time to tell Californians if their vote for change has been diluted by Tom Steyer and Karen Bass ballot harvesters and vote ‘cure’ experts. We have an update.”
THE NEEDS OF THE PARTY ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE, COMRADE:
2016: Punch a Nazi.
2026: No not that one. https://t.co/NczaVeMNw6
— EducatëdHillbilly™ (@RobProvince) June 5, 2026
VITAMIN D UPDATE: Taking Vitamin D? This Is One of the Most Important Things to Remember.
HEY, BIG SPENDER: SpaceX tells banks it won’t move its $135-a-share IPO price.
SpaceX told banks in its $75 billion initial public offering that it is set on the $135-a-share price that the firm disclosed on Wednesday in its amended IPO filing, sources told Reuters.
The company’s decision is the latest sign that Elon Musk is intent on holding the largest ever initial offering according to his preferences, upending Wall Street tradition — though sources stressed that the decision is subject to change before the IPO takes place. SpaceX didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
SpaceX began meeting with investors on Thursday in its IPO roadshow – where securities issuers and their bankers typically gather investor feedback before determining the final IPO price at a meeting held a day before the shares begin trading.
Needless to say, the company’s orbital AI data centers require a lot of cash.
NO WORD YET IF HE’LL BE KICKING OFF HIS CAMPAIGN AT THE CHATEAU MARMONT: Hunter Biden hints at 2028 presidential run.
NOW THAT’S THINKING BIG:
Now it’s time to build nuclear powered desalination plants and canals to green large parts of the American desert West. https://t.co/MkzCLWKXG1 pic.twitter.com/t4nHHu3JzW
— Unfiltered Artist (@EmpireEnjoyer3) June 5, 2026
TO BE FAIR, THAT’S WHAT THEY DO: Karoline Leavitt Is Enjoying Motherhood, and the Left Is Having a Cow.
ADAMS AND JEFFERSON MANAGED TO RECONCILE, SO MAYBE AMERICA IS NOT ENTIRELY DOOMED. FIRE’s new Blessings of Liberty podcast with Jeffrey Rosen launches with Justice Neil Gorsuch and a reminder that disagreement is not disloyalty, even when the disagreement is bitter enough to end a friendship for a decade.
I THINK I FORGOT TO LINK THIS EARLIER, BUT HERE I AM ON THE JAMES WILSON INSTITUTE’S ANCHORING TRUTHS PODCAST TALKING ABOUT SEDUCTIVE AI.
HOWEVER MUCH YOU DESPISE THE MEDIA…:
Cenk is right! Since when was the New York Times meant to report corroborated facts about Nazis who want to be senators? Their job is to report the real news, like how Jews train r-pe dogs and worked out how to starve kids with fat parents. https://t.co/1ZzkKUWG00
— Saul Sadka (@Saul_Sadka) June 5, 2026
…it will never be enough.
HIGHER EDUCATION IMPLOSION UPDATE: Low enrollment rocks U. Oregon as it works to slash $65 million, shutters dorms.
“Based on our new numbers, we will need to cut around $65 million from our budget to avoid an ongoing annual budget deficit in the coming years,” President Karl Scholz recently announced to the campus community.
He primarily blamed lower out-of-state first-year enrollment, which means lower tuition revenue, and instituted a hiring and pay freeze.
Other factors cited at a June 1 Board of Trustees meeting include increased costs and a loss in grant funding.
The university on June 2 announced it will shutter two off-campus dorm as it grapples with the budget shortfall. It will close Barnhart Residence Hall and Barnhart Dining Hall and shutter Riley Hall for the 2026–27 academic year, the Daily Emerald reported. If some students need to be housed, Riley Hall will serve as an overflow dorm.
Weird, but I didn’t see anything in that report about reducing administrative bloat.
Previously: If only someone had warned them.
HEH:
🚨 LMAO!! President Trump just dropped this absolute GEM: He's filling the newly improved Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool with leftist tears
Straight from the source 🤣🤣
📽️ @TheRicanMemes pic.twitter.com/NJrOdFR750
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) June 4, 2026
It’s fun having a POTUS having so much fun.
CUBA FALLING: I Didn’t Even Know You Could Do This Many Sanctions.
BE PREPARED: Home-Businesses First-Aid Emergency-Kit for Camping-Car. #CommissionEarned
I DID NAZI THAT COMING:
Ro will be traveling to Maine tomorrow to actually campaign for Graham Platner.
You quite literally cannot make this up. pic.twitter.com/0SzBzXB1EJ
— Eyal Yakoby (@EYakoby) June 5, 2026
COVID SIX YEARS AGO TODAY: California County Will Allow Outdoor Social Gatherings of 12 People—and Outdoor Protests of 100 People.
Six years ago today. This was real. This was policy. This is how we found ourselves living in ANIMAL FARM. pic.twitter.com/c82IHBSBna
— John Podhoretz (@jpodhoretz) June 5, 2026