Friday, January 09, 2026

Minneapolis Mayor: 'I dropped an 'F' bomb, they killed somebody'

  
 

 

U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, October 2025 | BEA News

 

US Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis

BEA News: U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, October 2025

The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has issued the following news release today:

https://www.bea.gov/system/files/trad1025-chart.png 

The U.S. goods and services trade deficit decreased in October 2025 according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis and the U.S. Census Bureau. The deficit decreased from $48.1 billion in September (revised) to $29.4 billion in October, as exports increased and imports decreased. The goods deficit decreased $19.2 billion in October to $59.1 billion. The services surplus decreased $0.4 billion in October to $29.8 billion.



Opinion | A sickening moral slum of an administration.

Trump and his acolytes are worse than simply incompetent.
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It is What it is. . . | WUERKER cartoon

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Venezuela plays essentially no role in bringing fentanyl into the U.S., and only a limited one in the trafficking of cocaine | SEMAFOR

What’s at stake
Some in the Trump administration have tried to make the domestic case for the US capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro by arguing it helps stem drug shipments into the U.S.
  • Maduro, now facing federal charges in New York, has long been accused of aiding drug trafficking
  • The Trump administration described its operation targeting Venezuela as part of a war on drugs, accusing Maduro of causing overdose deaths in the U.S.

But experts say Venezuela plays essentially no role in bringing fentanyl into the U.S., and only a limited one in the trafficking of cocaine. 

Vice President JD Vance tried to push back on criticism of the administration’s logic as flawed, posting on X: “If you cut out the money from cocaine (or even reduce it) you substantially weaken the cartels overall.”

Debatable: Maduro and the drug fight

(Image credit: Jane Rosenberg/Reuters)
 
Morgan Chalfant
Deputy Washington editor, Semafor
Jan 9, 2026, 2:01am MST
 
Politics
 
Title iconWho’s making the case
1. Rahul Gupta, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy under President Joe Biden, argued that defanging the drug trade requires more than taking out any one figure:
 “Nearly four out of five overdose deaths in the United States now involve fentanyl. That fact alone explains why this crisis cannot be solved by taking down any single figure. Fentanyl is cheap, compact, and lethal at microscopic doses, produced through decentralized networks designed to survive disruption. 
  • Its supply chain spans continents — chemical precursors from China, synthesized in Mexico, and transported across the southern border in quantities small enough to evade traditional enforcement — before spreading into communities far from any border. 
  • From there, it moves quickly onto street corners, into emergency rooms, and through small towns, turning a global pipeline into a local catastrophe.
“This is the same mistake made in the 1990s, when the fall of Pablo Escobar was supposed to end cocaine trafficking. It didn’t. The market reassembled, routes shifted, and deaths rose.
 “International accountability matters. But ending this crisis requires evidence-based action at home — and a refusal to conflate headlines with results.”
 
2. Melissa Ford Maldonado, director of the Western Hemisphere Initiative at the America First Policy Institute and a former Trump White House official, said Maduro’s capture will disrupt drug networks and deter dealers:
 “The US capture of Nicolás Maduro is a major victory in the fight against the drug cartels, even if the impact isn’t immediate or easily measured. 
  • Venezuela isn’t solely to blame for America’s drug crisis, but Maduro protected, enabled, and profited from criminal networks trafficking drugs across the Western Hemisphere. 
  • Taking this regime offline disrupts those networks and serves as a warning to other bad actors.

“For years, corrupt regimes partnered with cartels while hiding behind sovereignty, confident they would never face real consequences. That era is now over. This action sends an unmistakable message: If you amass power by harming American communities and poisoning American citizens, you will be held accountable.”

3. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the Trump administration’s argument doesn’t pass muster given the president’s pardon of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, who had been convicted on drug trafficking charges: 
  •  “Not when in the same time frame you are pardoning a convicted Latin American former president drug dealer. 
  • I mean, this feels like it was much more about oil than about drugs and, again, the signal that the president sent by pardoning Hernández undermines the whole case. 
 Maduro is a bad guy. I’m glad he’s gone. But Saturday he talked a lot more about oil than drugs or democracy.”
Title icon

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Notable

  • Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., is among those disputing Trump’s claim that his actions against Venezuela are about drugs, noting that fentanyl largely comes from Mexico.

Army Recognition confirms strong global growth and ranks among leading defense news websites in 2025

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Data from Google Analytics and independent benchmarks published by Similarweb confirm the sustained rise of ArmyRecognition.com as a leading global platform for defense and military news. 
  • Between 2024 and 2025, internal Google Analytics data show a strong acceleration in digital performance, with total active users more than doubling from approximately 10 million to over 21 million. 
  • Over the same period, new users increased from 17 million to nearly 40 million, highlighting the platform’s growing ability to attract new professional audiences worldwide. 
This sustained growth reflects a clear expansion of Army Recognition’s international reach across all regions and defense domains. External rankings published by Similarweb throughout 2025 further position ArmyRecognition.com among the most visited defense news websites globally, confirming its rising influence and credibility within the international defense media landscape. Read more

Two charts showing the growth of Army Recognition’s audience through various indicators between 2024 and 2025. (Picture source: Army recognition)


How China’s New Arctic Route is Changing Global Trade

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