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Newsom’s California rail project now expected to cost $126B, official admits, with still no tracks laid

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California’s high-speed rail costs have ballooned to an estimated $126 billion, with critics calling the LA-to-San Francisco project a “train to nowhere.”
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President Trump makes endorsement in California gubernatorial race: ‘He will be a GREAT Governor’

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President Donald Trump endorsed California gubernatorial candidate Steve Hilton ahead of the upcoming June primary in the Golden State.
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Behind ‘No Kings’ St. Paul protest: $250K production machine equal to a Def Leppard concert

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The No Kings rally at the Minnesota Capitol required about 30 trucks, massive sound systems and video screens, and an estimated $250,000 in production infrastructure
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Hypocrite ‘Squad’ Member Absolutely Demolished For What She Says Is ‘Act of Violence’

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Hypocrite ‘Squad’ Member Absolutely Demolished For What She Says Is ‘Act of Violence’

Rep. Ayanna Pressley is facing mounting backlash after making a claim that many critics say perfectly encapsulates the hypocrisy of today’s far-left politicians.

“Eviction is an act of violence,” Pressley declared in a video posted to social media Thursday. “And we have to do everything to prevent it.”

“It degrades the health of communities. There is great stigma associated with it,” she continued. “Housing is a human right.”

That rhetoric might resonate with progressive activists—but it’s colliding head-on with reality.

Pressley, a prominent member of the so-called “Squad,” has spent years pushing aggressive rent cancellation policies and eviction moratoriums, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. This week, she doubled down, introducing legislation that would block evictions from appearing on credit reports while funneling taxpayer dollars into legal aid for tenants.

But critics say there’s one glaring problem: while Pressley rails against landlords, she appears to be benefiting from one.

According to her 2024 financial disclosure, Pressley and her husband hold up to $8 million in assets tied to four Massachusetts rental properties. Her spouse reportedly brought in as much as $350,000 in rental income and property sales—hardly the picture of someone opposed to the landlord-tenant system she now condemns.

That disconnect didn’t go unnoticed.

“Great. When can I move into your house for free?” journalist Brad Polumbo quipped in response to Pressley’s comments.

“The only violence in this statement is what Ayanna Pressley is doing to the meaning of words and the English language,” conservative commentator Steve Guest added.

In response to the criticism, a spokesperson for Pressley defended her stance, saying, “Evictions are destabilizing life events with devastating consequences for the physical, financial, and mental wellbeing of those being evicted, who are disproportionately women and families with young children.”

But for many Americans—especially those who believe in personal responsibility, property rights, and free markets—the explanation rings hollow.

After all, eviction is a legal process rooted in contracts. When tenants fail to pay rent, landlords—many of whom are middle-class Americans themselves—still have mortgages, taxes, and maintenance costs to cover. Labeling that process “violence,” critics argue, isn’t just misleading—it’s dangerous.

And the controversy doesn’t stop there.

Pressley has already drawn scrutiny for inflammatory rhetoric in the past, including comparing agents from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to the Ku Klux Klan.

“In the same way that the KKK cannot be reformed, another — you know, masked militia group — I do not believe that ICE can be reformed and that this has anything to do with training and protocols,” Pressley said in a previous interview.

For conservatives and many supporters of former President Donald Trump, the pattern is clear: radical rhetoric, sweeping government overreach, and policies that often contradict the personal financial interests of the politicians pushing them.

In their view, Pressley’s latest comments are just the latest example of a political class that plays by one set of rules in public—and another behind closed doors.

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