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After President Trump names Bill Pulte as acting Director of National Intelligence, the House fails to reauthorize the Section 702 surveillance program. What are the risks of letting that intelligence go dark? And now that Jay Clayton has been nominated for the permanent DNI job, how quickly will the Senate move to confirm? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A key surveillance authority lapses today. The House eyes late June for NDAA floor votes. And senators push for chip export controls. David Higgins has your CQ Morning Briefing for Friday, June 12, 2026.
In this episode of the Cause+Effect Podcast, Trent Dunham, President+CEO of Dunham+Co, sits down with Josh Crowther, VP of Dunham+Co, to unpack the real reasons donors lapse. Some reasons are outside an organization's control, like personal financial pressure, economic uncertainty, or shifting cultural attitudes toward generosity. But many causes are self-inflicted — including silence, poor communication, overused urgency, and fundraising tactics that prioritize immediate ROI over long-term relationship.Trent and Josh discuss how organizations can identify lapsed donors, avoid common retention mistakes, and build stronger communication strategies that re-engage supporters. They also explore why lapsed donors often still see themselves as connected to your mission — and why that should change the way nonprofits communicate with them. For nonprofit leaders, fundraisers, and ministry teams, this conversation offers practical insight into donor retention, reactivation, and building lasting relationships with the people who make your mission possible. CHAPTERS 00:00 – Introduction01:12 – Why donors stop giving02:00 – Economic uncertainty and donor confidence04:38 – The decline in charitable giving07:05 – Why silence causes donors to lapse10:36 – The problem with constant urgency13:18 – Treating donors like wallets15:28 – How to re-engage lapsed donors
AP Washington correspondent Sagar Meghani reports a key surveillance tool that lets the U.S. collect intelligence abroad now seems nearly certain to expire tomorrow at midnight.
News and Updates: Microsoft Ditches SMS Two-Factor Authentication: Microsoft is phasing out SMS-based login codes, citing fraud vulnerability, and pushing users toward more secure passkeys using biometrics or device PINs. Faulty Drivers Secretly Draining Windows 11 Batteries: Microsoft admits third-party drivers have silently prevented laptops from entering hibernation for years, announcing stricter driver evaluation and automatic rollback via Windows Update. ShinyHunters Targets Cybersecurity Researcher: Hacking gang ShinyHunters is flooding Unit 221B with calls and emails after researcher Allison Nixon publicly urged victims not to pay the group's ransom demands. CISA Exposes Own Passwords on Public GitHub: The U.S. cybersecurity agency left plaintext passwords, AWS tokens, and access keys in a public GitHub repo named "Private-CISA" for approximately six months before discovery. Kindle Owners Jailbreak Devices After Amazon Drops Support: Amazon is ending support for 13 older Kindle models on May 20, prompting users to jailbreak their devices to maintain full functionality beyond already-downloaded content.
If you've heard that your job in the agentic coding era is to "become a manager of agents," you may have noticed something doesn't quite fit. Most of us never trained to be managers, and frankly, that's not the role most engineers want. In today's episode, I unpack what that shift _actually_ means — it's closer to a tech lead or architect mindset — and zoom in on a specific interviewing and on-the-job skill that will help you stay employable: how you think about, talk about, and take ownership of failure. Don't Just Bring Star Stories — Bring Failure Stories: Interviewers don't only want to hear how you succeeded. They want to know what you do when the pressure's on and things fall apart. If every story you tell is a highlight reel, there's a built-in social signal that you're hiding something. Get comfortable telling the other kind of story. Identify the Real Problem, Not the Proximal One: The most common failure story I hear in interviews is "the knowledge transfer was bad" or "the docs weren't good." That's not wrong — it's just incomplete. The senior mindset asks why that happened. Why didn't we have docs? Why was context insufficient? Walk it back until you hit something actionable but not too abstract. The Systemic Diagnosis is the Leveled-Up Answer: Fixing the proximal cause fixes this instance. Fixing the root cause fixes the system that keeps producing instances like this. When you connect what you learned to a systemic adjustment, you stop sounding like someone who survived a bad project and start sounding like someone who improves the organization around them. Ownership Means Owning the Outcome, Not the Task: Use the homeowner metaphor. A homeowner doesn't personally fix every leaking pipe — but the outcome of the home is theirs. As an engineer, your scope of ownership has expanded dramatically in the agentic era. You're now responsible for outcomes of code you may not have even read, and the deciding skill is how you carry that responsibility. The Word to Pair With Ownership is Relentlessness: Not in an anxious, burn-yourself-out way. Relentlessness means following a thread to its natural end — through escalation, through asking the next question, through finding the right person if it's not you. It's the antidote to "I'll let someone else handle it" syndrome. You Don't Have to Do It All Yourself: Relentless ownership is not "carry every task across the finish line personally." If you're not qualified, the owner's job is to find who is, communicate risk to stakeholders, and keep the trail alive until the outcome is resolved. That's the differentiator between a senior thinking engineer and a junior one working through assigned tickets. Failure Is Usually a Lapse in Ownership: If you make a list of five things you've failed at (and you should), you'll often find the through-line isn't lack of skill — it's that you stopped escalating, stopped following up, stopped staying with the thing until it was actually resolved. Episode Homework: Write down five real failures. For each one, ask: where did I stop being relentless? What system produced this outcome — and what would I change upstream next time?
Star Tribune columnist Patrick Reusse joins host Michael Rand for a look back at the weekend in sports. The Wild and Avalanche combined for 15 goals in the first game of their series Sunday, but nine went to Colorado. What adjustments can the Wild make in Tuesday's Game 2? The Wolves might get Anthony Edwards back for Game 1 of their series against San Antonio on Monday. That would be a big boost in a series in which Minnesota is a heavy underdog. Plus the Twins lost another top starting pitcher to elbow problems, with Joe Ryan leaving Sunday's game in the first inning.
Going after the funding network is essential. Have we been training to take Iran for years? The skyrocketing price increases we are seeing, will they ever go back down? Trump destroying 60 minutes. The great communist brainwashing. Follow The Jesse Kelly Show on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheJesseKellyShowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Join the crew as we break down Richmond's 3-1 loss to Spokane. We chat about how the injury bug is attacking this team, and how they build up in attack, and why Nils Seafurt is missed.
State Auditor Dave Boliek joins the SEANC View podcast to discuss the January lapse salary report, the need for transparency and truth in budgeting, and how audits inform hiring, corrections funding, DMV operations, and contract oversight. He also discusses the auditor's office use of technology and AI, plans for a bonds dashboard and periodic audits (including the $650M Charlotte stadium bond), and upcoming work on hurricane long-term recovery and contract metrics to hold public and private partners accountable.
Rob, Jeremy, and Joe took some time from Thursday's BBMS to discuss Kyle Bradish's mental lapse that led to a run during Wednesday's O's win. Bradish took responsibility after the game but some fans were still upset by how his emotions got the best of him. Do you support Bradish's response?
Eighty years after Indian independence, the economic fingerprint of British colonial rule is still visible at the district level. Two institutions in particular left scars: whether a district was governed directly by British administrators or by one of India's roughly 680 Indian princes, and what kind of land tax arrangement the British put in place. For example, by 1991, directly ruled districts had nine percentage points fewer middle schools and a 20-percentage-point lower probability of having a road than areas under indirect rule. The question was whether those gaps would eventually close.Lakshmi Iyer of the University of Notre Dame tells Tim Phillips that by 2011 infrastructure gaps had closed completely. Targeted post-independence programmes, including the Minimum Needs Program of the 1970s and the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan of 2001, pushed schools, health centres, and roads towards underserved districts. The picture for land tenure is mixed. Areas that historically had landlord-based systems are still 17% behind non-landlord areas in wheat yields, and the gap in fertiliser use has widened rather than narrowed. One reason, the policy response was a universal subsidy rather than being specifically aimed at places that had fallen behind.So colonial legacies can be erased, but only by policies designed to reach the places that were left behind. When policies have equalisation built in, historical gaps disappear. When they do not, the gaps persist.The research behind this episode:Iyer, Lakshmi and Coleson Weir. 2025. "The colonial legacy in India: How persistent are the effects of historical institutions?" Journal of Development Economics 177.To cite this episode:Phillips, Tim and Lakshmi Iyer. 2026. "The colonial legacy in India: How persistent are the effects of historical institutions?" VoxDev Talk (podcast).Assign this as extra listening: the citation above is formatted and ready for a reading list or VLE.About Lakshmi IyerLakshmi Iyer is Professor of Economics at the University of Notre Dame and a Research Fellow at CEPR. Her research focuses on political economy, governance, and the long-run effects of historical institutions in developing countries. The paper discussed in this episode extends two of her earlier papers, one co-authored with Abhijit Banerjee and one sole-authored, both of which are listed in the research cited section below. Research cited in this episodeIyer, Lakshmi. 2010. "Direct versus Indirect Colonial Rule in India: Long-Term Consequences." Review of Economics and Statistics 92 (4). The original paper documenting that areas brought under direct British rule had significantly lower access to schools, health centres, and roads in the post-colonial period, using Lord Dalhousie's Doctrine of Lapse as an instrument for the selectivity of British annexation.Banerjee, Abhijit V. and Lakshmi Iyer. 2005. "History, Institutions, and Economic Performance: The Legacy of Colonial Land Tenure Systems in India." American Economic Review 95 (4). Finds that districts where the British assigned proprietary rights in land to landlords have significantly lower agricultural investment and productivity in the post-independence period than areas where rights went to individual cultivators.Nunn, Nathan. 2007. "Historical Legacies: A Model Linking Africa's Past to its Current Underdevelopment." Journal of Development Economics 83 (1). Develops the theoretical case for why economies displaced into a low-production equilibrium by extraction or oppression can remain there long after the original impetus disappears.More VoxDev Talks on this topicIndia's economic development since independence: Devesh Kapur and Arvind Subramanian discuss how India's transformation across eight decades of independence has defied conventional models of development, and what it reveals about the relationship between political economy and growth.Related reading on VoxDevDrawing the line: The short- and long-term consequences of partitioning India: examines the economic and political legacy of the 1947 partition of the Indian subcontinent, and how a boundary drawn in the final weeks of empire continues to shape outcomes on both sides.Historical legacies and African development: surveys the evidence on how pre-colonial political organisation, colonial-era institutions, and the slave trade have shaped the long-run economic geography of sub-Saharan Africa.
This episode explores the complex world of will construction, focusing on interpreting legal documents, resolving ambiguities, and applying doctrines like lapse, anti-lapse, redemption, and abatement. Perfect for law students and practitioners, it provides a rigorous framework to analyze estate planning disputes.Most estates spiral into chaos not because of poorly drafted wills, but because of interpretative pitfalls lurking in seemingly straightforward language. If you're a law student cramming for the bar or a practitioner navigating estate disputes, mastering will construction is your secret weapon. This episode unveils the rigorous frameworks, nuanced doctrines, and strategic checklists that decode the complex maze of interpreting, applying, and enforcing wills.Imagine a final testament that's perfectly signed and witnessed—yet, despite initial validity, the estate becomes embroiled in controversy because of ambiguities, unexpected deaths, or missing assets. You'll discover how courts decipher the testator's true intent by meticulously analyzing the language of the will, the context, and the surrounding facts. We break down the core principles: the paramount importance of the testator's intent, the plain meaning rule, and how modern courts admit extrinsic evidence through the lens of patent and latent ambiguities. You'll learn the distinctions between these ambiguities and the strategic use of extrinsic evidence—testimony, documents, or even subjective family details—to resolve confusion.Handling unforeseen events like beneficiaries predeceasing or property vanishing from the estate is where doctrines like lapse, anti-lapse, redemption, and abatement come into play. You'll understand the crucial classification of gifts—specific, general, demonstrative, and residuary—and how each category influences the outcome in cases of missing property or insufficient assets. The episode highlights how modern law, especially in UPC jurisdictions, shifts from rigid rules toward flexible doctrines like intent-based reformations and exceptions for conservatorship sales or insurance claims, emphasizing that context and purpose matter.Navigation becomes even more critical with class gifts—the dynamic groups that can change membership over time. Learn the rules for class closure, how lapse and anti-lapse intersect within groups, and the subtle distinctions that determine whether a gift results in a beneficiary windfall or falls to the estate. We provide a step-by-step methodology, a precise checklist to analyze every gift systematically: classify, survive, apply anti-lapse, verify assets, resolve ambiguities, address insolvency, and finally, distribute.The stakes are high—misinterpretations can unravel millions in assets, igniting fragile family relationships. This episode arms you with the analytical rigor and tactical precision to untangle even the most tangled estate puzzles. Perfect for exam prep or real-world application, this deep dive transforms abstract doctrines into a practical decision tree. When the legal code becomes a labyrinth, follow this blueprint, and you'll decode it every time.Whether it's a meticulously drafted will or a family feud in the making, understanding these doctrines ensures you can construct, interpret, and defend testamentary plans with confidence. Legally, wills are more than mere documents—they're complex codes encoded in words, actions, and contexts. Unlock their secrets with this essential guide to will construction mastery.TakeawaysAlways classify each gift before analysis.Survivorship must be at least 120 hours to avoid lapsing.Anti-lapse statutes protect close relatives with surviving issue.Specific gifts are subject to redemption if the asset is missing.Abatement prioritizes intestacy, residuary, then general and specific gifts.Will construction, estate planning, legal interpretation, anti-lapse, lapse, redemption, abatement, trust law, probate, legal analysis
Today, Pastor Jack teaches that a lapse in faith often begins when we slowly stop seeking after the Lord and start managing our fears on our own. David pulled himself into the light of God's will, even in the midst of darkness. A profound way in which we need to live.
Today, Pastor Jack teaches that poor choices often stem from fear and not faith. It can place us in difficult, even dangerous positions. God's grace, however, can still deliver, and redirect us. Still, it's better to not allow our faith to falter in the first place.
Today, Pastor Jack teaches that David's situation shows us how even a man after God's own heart can make poor strategic and spiritual decisions when under pressure. But, despite David's misstep, God intervenes.
You spent a year building a feature. Someone just replicated it in a day using AI.This isn't hypothetical. Roei Samuel is watching it happen in real-time. As founder of Connected - a marketplace helping 5,700 fractionals work with scale-ups - he's spinning up products daily that took his team a year to build in 2020.His conclusion? Unless you're building quantum computing or genuine deep tech, your technology moat is dead. AI killed it.Here's what makes this different:Roei isn't being dramatic. He built and sold a media company that scaled to 9 million monthly users, worked with the Premier League, NBA, and NFL, and joined the senior management team of a PLC at 26. He's seen what creates lasting value.And his take is clear: product doesn't create defensibility anymore. Network effects do. When every feature can be replicated in weeks, the only moat is how your users create value for each other - and how hard that is to reproduce.You'll learn:Why AI just eliminated technology moats. What took a year to build in 2020 now takes a day. Your 10% optimization? It'll be copied in months. The only defensible businesses are built on network effects and brand—mechanisms competitors can't easily replicate.What network effects actually mean. It's when one user's participation improves the experience for all users. Could be data (more users = better matching), could be multi-sided supply (Roei's fractionals average 3 roles each, solving the liquidity problem), could be customers becoming promoters.How most businesses can access network effects. You don't need to be a marketplace. If you're good at turning customers into promoters—testimonials, LinkedIn posts, word-of-mouth - you're building network effects. The best businesses layer multiple mechanisms.Why hiring full-time is becoming the last resort. Smart founders now think: (1) What can I automate? (2) What requires a fractional specialist? (3) Only then, do I need full-time? This isn't theory - startups on Connected average 3.7 fractionals each.How to solve marketplace liquidity problems when starting. Don't try to build both sides simultaneously - it kills companies. Use SaaS-enabled networks: give one side free tools (dashboards, benchmarking) while you populate the other side. Roei did this launching Connected in the US.Why you shouldn't scale until you nail cohort metrics. Don't worry about growth. Start with 150-200 users. Measure daily active usage, retention, behaviors that drive engagement. Roei invested in Lapse based purely on cohort analysis—they raised £8M seed, then £30M Series A from Greylock. Zero monetization. Just strong network effect metrics.How to identify your specialty if going fractional. Lean into where you deliver tangible results fastest. Not what you're best at. Not what's most fun. Where can you prove ROI in 6 months? That's your first case study. That's how you build track record.Why living out of alignment destroys everything. Roei's real mission isn't about fractional work - it's about helping people live authentically. The reality check:This isn't anti-product. Product still matters. But product alone won't save you when competitors can replicate features in weeks. Network effects create the compounding advantages that turn good products into defensible businesses.If you're building a business in 2026 and you haven't thought about network effects, you're building on sand. AI just raised the stakes.One action: Listen to the end for Roei's hiring sequence every founder should use immediately.More from James: Connect with James on LinkedIn or at peer-effect.com
Aquesta setmana, a les Portes de Troia, parlarem dels inicis de l'edat de Ferro al Pròxim Orient i al Mediterrani oriental, després del col·lapse de l'edat del Bronze.
The CEO TC Energy, one of the largest nat gas pipeline operators in the North America, joins the show after posting better than expected results. Plus, he breaks down what AI power demand means for prices. Then with funding for DHS set to expire at midnight, TSA funding is in jeopardy. The impact for travelers during the holiday weekend. And some of the top AI companies are proving they can train their chips without Nvidia's hardware. The possible ripple effects for the rest of the market. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
The Department of Homeland Security is expected to partially shut down as lawmakers leave for recess without a deal. A long-awaited five-year farm bill is expected to be released. And House Republicans want to reverse their earmarks ban. David Higgins has your CQ Morning Briefing for Friday, Feb. 13, 2026.
Se réveiller d'une nuit complète en étant fatigué est une sensation très désagréable qui peut nous plomber. Mais s'il existe beaucoup d'astuces pour s'endormir dans les meilleures conditions possibles, le temps qu'il vous faut pour tomber dans les bras de Morphée a également son importance. Trouver le moment idéal pour s'endormir peut transformer la qualité de vos nuits, et donc de vos journées. Mais cette durée ne doit être ni trop longue, ni trop courte. Si tel est le cas, cela peut révéler des troubles du sommeil. Heureusement, Il existe des choses à faire et à ne pas faire pour être dans le bon timming. Est-ce bon signe de s'endormir vite ? Quel est le lapse de temps idéal ? Quelles sont ces astuces ? Écoutez la suite de cet épisode de "Maintenant vous savez". Un podcast Bababam Originals, écrit et réalisé par Joanne Bourdin. Première diffusion : décembre 2024 À écouter aussi : La pleine lune nous empêche-t-elle vraiment de dormir ? Qu'est-ce que la méthode 10-3-2-1-0, qui aide à s'endormir ? Comment lutter contre la zoom fatigue, cette surcharge informationnelle ? Retrouvez tous les épisodes de "Maintenant vous savez". Suivez Bababam sur Instagram. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to Chuck's Cantina Podcast where anything & everything is up from discussion. This week Rene returns to continue their discussion on the Lucasfilm changes, the current state of media trying to hold our attentions today, and more shenanigans. Chuck's drink: Coke Zero. Rene's drink: Sparkling Water. You can follow the show on Facebook, X, Lapse, & Instagram, at @Chuckscantina for more information. To contact the show please reach out to chuckscantina@gmail.com Cheers.
Welcome to Chuck's Cantina Podcast where anything & everything is up from discussion. This week Rene returns after a long hiatus to discuss the news of leadership change at Lucasfilm. We give our thoughts regarding what went right/wrong, where Star Wars is going, and Chuck's experience findnig out the news while at Galaxy's Edge. Chuck's drink: Polar Selzter Water Black Cherry. Rene's drink: Cutwater. You can follow the show on Facebook, X, Lapse, & Instagram, at @Chuckscantina for more information. To contact the show please reach out to chuckscantina@gmail.com Cheers.
Milwaukee County officials say they were caught off guard when they found out their health insurance contract had lapsed. Democrats introduce a new bill that would legalize marijuana, but it's likely doomed in the state Legislature. And, former Judge Hannah Dugan's lawyers are raising constitutional questions as they look to get her felony conviction overturned.
This week we have to have a talk about our offense and what went wrong against Man United and what went right against everyone else in the Champions League through the group stage.Want to contribute some questions to our next episode? Email westofnorthlondon@gmail.comBluesky @westofnorthlondon.bsky.socialJoin the Discord serverCheck out Bobcat
Welcome to Chuck's Cantina Podcast where anything & everything is up from discussion. This week Chuck discusses where he has been and where the podcast is going. (Spoiler Alert: It's Back) Drink: High Quality H2O. You can follow the show on Facebook, X, Lapse, & Instagram, at @Chuckscantina for more information. To contact the show please reach out to chuckscantina@gmail.com Cheers.If you would like to learn more about the Cody "Beef" Franke scholarship fund, please view this link for more information. Cody "Beef" Franke Endowed Scholarship | Ferris State University
Funky Friday was funky, when Cam Newton had his guest, Lady London stop by. The double entendre is real. There were INTELLECTUAL LAPS, over the INTELLECTUAL LAPSE. But, just know we're gonna tap in about. So let's do it!
This episode blasts Republican leaders for denying inflation, spreading misleading claims, and blocking an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies that could leave 22 million Americans facing massive premium increases. It also covers criticism of Trump's rhetoric, a $40 billion loan to Argentina instead of extending health subsidies, withheld military footage, and proposed rollbacks of environmental protections—ending with a call to vote for change.
Sermon by Pastor Jerry Jackson**11/23/25Make sure you check out our church website: https://www.tcpottershouse.comLook us up on social media:Linktree: https://linktr.ee/thepottershousetcFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThePottersHouseTC/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thepottershousetc/
Welcome to Chuck's Cantina Podcast where anything & everything is up from discussion. This week Chuck discusses flying with beer in a duty free bag, Warner Bros. being for sale, who he think's would be the best fit for the audience, and goes on a tangent about popcorn. Chucks's drink Bubly sparkling water blackberry. You can follow the show on Facebook, X, Lapse, & Instagram, at @Chuckscantina for more information. To contact the show please reach out to chuckscantina@gmail.com Cheers.If you would like to learn more about the Cody "Beef" Franke scholarship fund, please view this link for more information. Cody "Beef" Franke Endowed Scholarship | Ferris State University
Starting off with the original Xbox getting a new cosmetic hardmod to introduce power and eject button sounds, as well as a return to form with XBMC4XBOX Redux's release. We also discuss the latest Atmosphere CFW update as it contains some pretty important information for CFW users thanks to the latest system firmware update. The PS4 and PS5 get a lot more love thanks to a new kernel exploit release working on both systems. There's also a few entry points which have gotten awesome developments with Y2JB being paired with Lapse for a full jailbreak, as well as new entry points being seen with the Netflix app and now games using the Ren'py engine!
Welcome to Chuck's Cantina Podcast where anything & everything is up from discussion. This week Chuck returns to the Cantina to discuss his recent outing to Europe, taking chances to try something new, and calling those you haven't spoken with in a while. Chucks's drink Kirkland Grapefruit Sparkling Water. You can follow the show on Facebook, X, Lapse, & Instagram, at @Chuckscantina for more information. To contact the show please reach out to chuckscantina@gmail.com Cheers.
Today, we take you inside student-led canvassing efforts, professor predictions on the imminent New Jersey election, and the expiration of SNAP benefits across the country.
A federal judge orders the Trump administration to use emergency funds to pay for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) during the federal government shutdown, which is now on Day 31; Senate Republicans do not appear eager to heed President Donald Trump's call to get rid of the Senate filibuster to overcome Democratic opposition to the Republican bill that would reopen the federal government; President Donald Trump says media reports that he is considering military strikes on Venezuelan territory are not true, but questions continue from Members of Congress of both parties about the legal justification for the deadly military attacks on suspected illegal drug carrying boats off the Venezuelan coast; Just a few days until election day 2025. We will take a closer look at the race for governor in Virginia and New Jersey; Daylight Saving Time comes to end this weekend. There was another unsuccessful try this week in the Senate to pass a bill that would stop the twice-yearly clock switching and make Daylight Saving Time permanent. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The United States is now one month into the government shutdown. With food stamps set to lapse, some state governments are resorting to emergency measures. In a Truth Social post, President Donald Trump called on Republicans to "Get rid of the Filibuster," thereby bypassing the need to rely on votes from Senate Democrats. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins will join House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) to address the media on the shutdown.FBI Director Kash Patel announced on X that the agency prevented "a potential terrorist attack" over Halloween weekend. He said the FBI arrested multiple suspects in Michigan who were allegedly plotting a violent attack.
https://vimeo.com/1130739077?share=copy&fl=sv&fe=ci https://www.currentfederaltaxdevelopments.com/podcasts/2025/10/26/2025-10-27-more-irs-government-shutdown-clarifications This week we look at: Reevaluating the DC-QIE Exception (FIRPTA) Technical Revisions to Revenue Procedure 2025-32 Transitional Reporting for Qualified Passenger Vehicle Loan Interest (QPVLI) Jurisdictional Clarity for TEFRA Readjustment Petitions S Corporation Income Attribution and Substantiation Failures IRS Operations During a Lapse in Appropriations Employee Retention Credit Compliance (OBBBA) Form 1099-K Information Reporting Updates
This week we look at: Reevaluating the DC-QIE Exception (FIRPTA) Technical Revisions to Revenue Procedure 2025-32 Transitional Reporting for Qualified Passenger Vehicle Loan Interest (QPVLI) Jurisdictional Clarity for TEFRA Readjustment Petitions S Corporation Income Attribution and Substantiation Failures IRS Operations During a Lapse in Appropriations Employee Retention Credit Compliance (OBBBA) Form 1099-K Information Reporting Updates
Follow Dan on LinkedIn at linkedin.com/in/cotterdanFollow Pat on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/donald-patrick-eckler-610290824/ Predictions Sure To Go Wrong: Villareal: Affirm Case: Affirm American Backflow: AffirmVillareal:https://www.supremecourt.gov/oral_arguments/audio/2025/24-557Case:https://www.supremecourt.gov/oral_arguments/audio/2025/24-624IL app:https://www.illinoiscourts.gov/courts/appellate-court/oral-argument-audio/
Guest Chris Graham of Graham Financial Group, insurance agent in Florida. United American Insurance. Lapse in coverage could lead to rate increase. How to keep your policy when you move. Medicare Advantage Plans: pressure to cut costs. Financial incentive over care.
Earlier this week, a band of thieves slipped into the Louvre museum in Paris, grabbed millions in ancient bling, and vanished in under ten minutes. Sounds like a blockbuster, right? Except, somehow, it played out like the most boring heist movie ever. Now Kennedy is side-eyeing the museum's security and wondering how this even happened. Kennedy Now Available on YouTube: https://link.chtbl.com/kennedyytp Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@kennedy_foxnews Join Kennedy for Happy Hour on Fridays! https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLWlNiiSXX4BNUbXM5X8KkYbDepFgUIVZj Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
As federal agencies scale back and the CISA Act expires, cybersecurity experts warn that the U.S. is more vulnerable than ever. Staffing gaps that slow threat response and weaken coordination are creating openings for adversaries. Here to explain what's at risk, and how states can step up as federal support falters is the former CISO of the city of Seattle, Mike Hamilton.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Damon and Damo catch up as Damon highlights his first week as a CMC. Damo had to shave his mustache and did not like it one bit. The guys discuss the impact of the current furlough on servicemembers and civilian teammates, along with available resources for anyone in need. Diddy was sentenced to four years in prison after a guilty verdict in a prostitution case, and Damon makes a plea against political violence and mass shootings. Earlier this week, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and President Trump called top military generals and admirals to Quantico for a brief, summit, conference, or “All Call.” At the same time, the SecDef dropped a load of memos focused on refocusing the fleet and putting the warrior spirit at the forefront. This week's hero is Pfc. Jacklyn Harold Lucas, and last week's “Do Better” segment gets a much-needed follow-up with a shout-out to Freddy Whisner. A new listener-submitted “Do Better” sparks a conversation about how DRB can be handled more privately. The guys also debate whether the Super Bowl music choices alienate two-thirds of the NFL's fanbase as Damo praises PTA and Leo's latest movie, One Battle After Another, and much more. Do you have a “Do Better” that you want us to review on a future episode? Reach out at ptsfpodcast@gmail.com Stay connected with the PTSF Podcast: https://linktr.ee/Ptsfpodcast Links and more from this episode: FY26 Government Shutdown Resources - https://stjececmsdusgva001.blob.core.usgovcloudapi.net/public/documents/2025_Guide_to_Fleet_for_Government_Shutdown.pdf Hero of the Week: Private First Class Jacklyn Harold Lucas https://www.cmohs.org/recipients/jacklyn-h-lucas Picks of the Week: Damo: Chance The Rapper - Starline https://chancestuff.com/?srsltid=AfmBOorWA02aAprglTEVCypj5YxOlRdh4TGV531SgdcqPPUpNrTYIoBT Damon: BMW PTSF Theme Music: Produced by Lim0
Rutgers loses in crushing fashion in Minnesota Saturday 31-28. Rutgers Defense remains poor overall, and STILL cannot manage to get to the QB or generate turnovers. An absolutely brutal ending tarnished a great game by Antwan Raymond. Poor specials teams play for the 2nd week in a row is shocking, and has me wanting a new kicker.Jersey Guy Sports is available on all podcasting platforms. Listen on Spotify Listen on Apple Podcasts Listen on YouTube Listen on PocketCasts Listen on iHeart Radio Listen on Amazon Music Listen on TuneIn and Alexa Listen on other podcasting platforms here Socials Facebook, JGS Twitter, Threads, ...
Welcome to Chuck's Cantina Podcast where anything & everything is up from discussion. This week Chuck returns to the Cantina to discuss the final time he saw John Cena perform in front of the Chicago Illinois audience. What was the reaction, the emotion Chuck felt, and what are Chuck's top 5 John Cena Chicago moments. Chuck's drink: La Croix Lime. You can follow the show on Facebook, X, Lapse, & Instagram, at @Chuckscantina for more information. To contact the show please reach out to chuckscantina@gmail.com Cheers.
Our Top 10 for today: #MyLapseInJudgement
12 - Trump has taken action on foreign gangs and terror groups south of our border. Is this a good idea? Dom gives his analysis as we play a clip. 1210 - Is Malcolm Gladwell going to get canceled? 1215 - Side - things that have happened since the Cowboys last won the Super Bowl? 1220 - More on Malcolm Gladwell. Why did he feel the need to change his stance on transgender athletes after a panel he hosted discussed the topic? Is he going to be on the hot seat? 1235 - Executive Director of the NJGOP, Kate Gibbs, joins us today to discuss the New Jersey gubernatorial race. Does Jack Ciattarelli have the resources needed to win an election? How hard is he working? As Democrats continue to win in the Garden State year after year, what needs to change, the GOP or voters? 1240 - Does WHYY know what a “lapse in security” is? 1250 - Kim Kardashian says “No Homework”! Dom finds out who Kai Cenat is.
Matt Spiegel and Laurence Holmes were joined by Cubs manager Craig Counsell to discuss the club's frustrating 8-7 loss to the Cardinals on Tuesday and the team's mindset amid a rough patch.
Matt Spiegel and Laurence Holmes opened their show by breaking down the Cubs' frustrating 8-7 loss to the Cardinals on Tuesday. After that, Cubs manager Craig Counsell joined the show to discuss the loss and the team's mindset amid a rough patch.