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'NFL RedZone' host Scott Hanson says he's heard a fascinating bye week concept if the NFL expands to 18 games
With talks about the NFL expanding to a 18-game regular season growing, "NFL RedZone" host Scott Hanson said he heard an interesting concept about bye weeks.
Hanson, 54, said he heard a concept about a potential league-wide bye week if the NFL were to expand to 18 games.
"If you had an 18th game, do you add a second bye week? I've even heard a concept where maybe they add an extra game but add an extra bye week that is a complete league-wide bye week," Hanson told Fox News Digital in a recent interview as he's partnered with Lowe’s.
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"Maybe there is an NFL weekend in the middle of October, early November, somewhere in the middle of the season, where nobody plays a game, let the players recoup, get their bodies right, everyone can get away from football, just a little bit, and then come and play the back half of the season."
Hanson did preface that for an 18th game to be considered a possibility, a lot of big entities need to get on the same page.
"Well, look at, the biggest thing about that is the league and the Players Union and all the partners within the NFL ecosphere all need to get on the same page. And this is big business and a big change. Should it occur? So, they have a lot of talks to do through that," Hanson said.
Hanson also noted how much later the Super Bowl would take place if the NFL implemented an 18-game regular season.
"But if you add that game, you extend the season, maybe by two weeks, if there's the extra bye, meaning the Super Bowl is pushed back to maybe even beyond Valentine's Day, a lot of moving parts there," Hanson said.
Super Bowl LVI was the furthest into a calendar year that a Super Bowl has been played, when the Los Angeles Rams beat the Cincinnati Bengals 23-20 on February 13, 2022. Super Bowl LXI, next year’s big game, will push the date even further, as it is scheduled to be played on February, 14, 2027, also known as Valentine's Day.
Hanson said that he will personally be happy if they add more games, because he loves football.
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"More games means more action. It means more touchdowns for me on NFL Red Zone," Hanson said. "I'm gonna smile, you know, if it ultimately becomes a reality."
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New Yorker journalist who boasted about shoplifting triggers massive blowback online
New Yorker writer Jia Tolentino was called out after bragging about stealing from Whole Foods in a Wednesday interview alongside far-left commentator Hasan Piker, who also said he was "pro-stealing."
"I will say, I think that stealing from a big box store — I’ll just state my platform — it’s neither very significant as a moral wrong, nor is it significant in any way as protest or direct action. But I did steal from Whole Foods on several occasions," Tolentino said during a New York Times Opinion podcast.
She explained a specific scenario in which she stole lemons from Whole Foods and didn't feel bad about it.
"I’ve been involved in a neighborhood mutual aid group since 2021," Tolentino said. "And so every week I would go get groceries for Miss Nancy, my now-family friend who lived nearby. And she wanted to go to Whole Foods. She wanted food from Whole Foods. And I was like, ‘OK, great.’ And so I’d be getting Miss Nancy all of her groceries, and then I would finish, and I’d be like, ‘Oh my God, four lemons, I forgot four lemons.’ And on several occasions I was like, ‘I’m just going to go back, grab those four lemons and get the hell out.’"
The New York Times' Nadja Spiegelman, who hosted the conversation with Tolentino and Piker, deemed the idea that people are stealing small things from big corporations and feeling justified in doing so, "microlooting."
Tolentino was called out by commentators on X, The Atlantic, The Free Press and even some fellow New Yorkers cited by The New York Post.
The Atlantic's Thomas Chatterton Williams wrote a piece headlined "Theft Is Now Progressive Chic," taking issue with the pair's argument.
"It is difficult to know where to begin with such moral reasoning, if it can be called reasoning," Williams wrote. "At a time of kleptocratic governance and corporate oligarchy, Tolentino and Piker resort to a game of jaded whataboutism. For them, theft is a kind of perverse virtue signaling. Societal problems do not just excuse personal wrongdoing; they ennoble it."
"Both Tolentino and Piker seem to justify stealing from large companies such as Whole Foods, which is owned by Amazon, because those corporations exploit workers and already budget for theft," he continued. "Why wring our hands about shoplifting when it’s been accounted for? Such an attempt to normalize petty crime makes Vicky Osterweil’s 2020 manifesto, In Defense of Looting, look high-minded."
The New York Post reported that Tolentino lives in a $2.5 million brownstone in New York, and spoke to New York City residents about Tolentino's remarks.
"She is rich … and I am not. We don’t live on the same planet at all," said Andrea Jones, 49, who lives in Gompers Houses public housing, according to the Post. "Because of her they’ll raise the price and I have to pay more. She is hurting me, she is not helping me."
"I wonder why CVS has everything from toothpaste to deodorant locked behind plastic," the Post's Lydia Moynihan wrote in reaction to Tolentino's remarks.
In another post to X, Moynihan called for Tolentino to be banned from Whole Foods.
American Enterprise Institute (AEI) fellow Robert Pondiscio wrote, "I just cancelled my subscription to @NewYorker. I'll be shoplifting it from now on. Fair is fair, @CondeNast."
"Whole Foods should post her picture and bar her from entering in the future," Jonah Goldberg, the editor-in-chief at the Dispatch, wrote.
Whole Foods did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.
"Has there even been a more perfect marriage of smug elitism, contempt for commonsense morality, and masturbatory self-importance?" podcast host Coleman Hughes asked.
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Piker said he was pro-stealing from big corporations because they "steal" from their workers.
"I’m pro-stealing from big corporations, because they steal quite a bit more from their own workers," Piker said on "The Opinions" podcast. "However, one thing that might even help your ethical dilemma is the fact that the automated process that they design, these companies know will increase shrink, right?"
Asked about the argument that if a ton of people started stealing from Whole Foods, they would raise the prices, Piker said he supported it.
"Yeah, chaos. Full chaos. Let’s go. I mean, look, I’m in favor of fast and free buses and also government-owned storefronts. And two of those policies, the mayor of this beautiful city is currently working on," he said.
"'Microlooting' and "social murder" are part of this new soft socialist language that gives permission to break the law and kill," Kirsten Fleming, a New York Post columnist, wrote in reaction to the news.
Reason reporter Billy Binion called Tolentino out for shoplifting while shopping for her "mutual aid group."
"The most maddening part about this is she says she stole while shopping for her mutual aid group. Those networks supposedly exist to bring communities together, build trust, and pay it forward. Hard to think of a better way to undermine that than to steal from your own community," Binion wrote.
The National Review's Jim Geraghty reacted with the suggestion, "If you commit crimes, don't brag about them on podcasts."
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Batya Ungar-Sargon, a host at NewsNation, called out both Piker and Tolentino in posts to X as well as in a Substack column headlined, "The Rich Don’t Play by the Rules So Why Should I?" Ask Three Rich Leftists Celebrating Theft and Murder."
"In pretending that they steal out of unfairness, out of hatred for corporations and corporate abuses, the educated rich get to cosplay as members of the working class, a gambit designed to disguise their own immense privilege. They get to pretend to loathe the system they wouldn’t replace for anything in the world," she wrote on X.
The New Yorker and Tolentino did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Fox News Digital.
Experts reveal how to spot fake 'Wagyu' so you don't get ripped off on premium beef
From grocery store shelves to restaurant menus, premium beef labels are popping up everywhere — but these labels don't always mean what shoppers think.
Wagyu, once reserved for ultra-premium Japanese beef but now found on everything from burgers to steakhouse specials, is a prime example. Beef labeled "Wagyu" can vary widely in quality, origin and value, The New York Times recently reported, and customers can be at risk of getting ripped off.
"When consumers see 'Wagyu' on a menu or label today, they generally think of an elevated, premium eating experience — exceptional tenderness, rich flavor and that melt-in-your-mouth quality driven by high marbling," said Stephanie Hamilton, a Colorado-based brand manager at JBS Imports, a major global beef producer.
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"It signals indulgence and affluence, and many people understand that Wagyu cattle are different from conventional beef cattle," Hamilton told Fox News Digital.
But that perception doesn't always match reality.
"It's often misunderstood," Hamilton added. "Many consumers assume Wagyu automatically means beef imported from Japan — when in reality, most Wagyu available in the U.S. is raised here and reflects Japanese genetics rather than Japanese origin."
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Evan Carter, the Seattle-based co-founder of The Meat Dudes, a brand focused on Wagyu education and consulting, said the term has become even broader in practice.
"When consumers see Wagyu today, it usually just means the beef has some level of Wagyu genetics, but beyond that, it can vary a lot," Carter said.
"It could be a full blood Wagyu animal with traceable lineage, or it could be a blend with a smaller percentage of Wagyu genetics mixed in."
The biggest differences come down to origin and genetics, Hamilton agreed.
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"True Japanese Wagyu is full-blood Wagyu cattle that are born, raised and harvested in Japan, under very strict production standards. It's rare outside the country and typically very expensive."
American Wagyu, by contrast, is raised domestically using Japanese genetics, often blended with traditional U.S. beef production methods.
"That results in exceptional marbling and flavor but with a style that's more familiar to U.S. consumers," she said.
Because the term isn't tightly regulated in the U.S., experts say it can sometimes be used loosely — especially in restaurants.
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"There's a lot of misunderstanding about Wagyu," said chef Jesse Schenker, who serves authentic Japanese A5 Wagyu at his restaurant FOUR in Oyster Bay, New York.
"I think consumers associate the word 'Wagyu' with higher price points, but when you see Wagyu on a menu, you have to be careful that it's not just being used as a buzzword because restaurants can price gouge if they are not using actual Wagyu," he told Fox News Digital.
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"In America, the words 'Wagyu' and 'Kobe' beef on menus get consumers excited and, in turn, operators can charge more for ingredients that may be of lesser quality."
Fox News Digital reached out to the American Wagyu Association for comment.
To avoid overpaying for something that may not live up to the label, experts offered a few tips.
Schenker pointed to pricing as a potential red flag.
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"If it's not expensive enough, be cautious as it might not be real," Schenker said.
"For example, if you see a 16-ounce American Wagyu steak on a menu for $49, you know it's not real — it should be more like $79."
He also advises shoppers to pay attention to details, from marbling when buying beef to how a restaurant presents itself.
Carter said asking a few simple questions can go a long way.
"The best thing consumers can do is ask a couple simple questions: where is it from and what kind of Wagyu is it?" he said. "The more transparency you get, the better chance you have of getting something that actually lives up to the name."
Carter added, "If a restaurant or butcher can tell you the ranch, you're usually on the right track."
Experts agree that, while Wagyu can be worth it, other high-quality but less expensive cuts can be just as indulgent.
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"The simplest tip is to think of Wagyu as an experience," Hamilton said.
"If you're buying or ordering Wagyu, treat it as a moment to indulge."
SEE IT: 2-year-old steals show at White House as Trump spotlights 'miracle cure' for deaf boy
During an event at the White House on Thursday, President Donald Trump highlighted a 2-year-old boy, Travis Smith, who was born deaf but can now hear after taking a "miracle cure."
The child can now "hear his mom, Sierra, say, 'I love you,'" the president said, inviting the mother to speak.
"Regeneron works miracles," the woman said, referring to the company behind the treatment.
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"He didn't know his name. He couldn't hear me tell him how much I love him. And now with Regeneron and this amazing surgery, he can listen to music. And he loves it. And he loves to dance," she said.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has given accelerated approval for Regeneron's Otarmeni gene therapy product, the company said in a statement.
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The company indicated that the treatment will be made available for free in the U.S.
"Regeneron will provide Otarmeni at no cost to clinically eligible individuals in the U.S. This may not necessarily reflect out-of-pocket costs for administration of this free therapy, which would be outside of the control of Regeneron; individuals should consult with their healthcare provider and/or insurance provider," the company said.
Administering the treatment involves surgery, according to the company.
"The surgical procedure to administer Otarmeni uses an approach similar to cochlear implantation and allows use in young infants," the statement said. "Otarmeni should be administered by a surgeon experienced in intracochlear surgery and trained in the Otarmeni administration process and should only be administered using the provided Administration Kit for use with Otarmeni."
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Trump noted during the White House event that Regeneron has "agreed to offer their prescription medications at heavily discounted most favored nation prices."
"With this announcement, 17 of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, representing 80% of the branded drug market, have now agreed to sell their drugs to American patients at the lowest prices anywhere in the world," he said.
American journalist Ahmed Shihab-Eldin acquitted on all charges after 52 days detained in Kuwait, family says
Kuwaiti-American journalist Ahmed Shihab-Eldin, who was detained in Kuwait under new security and misinformation laws, has been acquitted on all charges, his family announced on Thursday.
"We are relieved that Ahmed Shihab-Eldin has been found innocent after 52 days in detention," Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) CEO Jodie Ginsberg said in a statement.
"Ahmed’s freedom and safety remain our topmost priority and we will continue to closely monitor his case," Ginsberg added.
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Shihab-Eldin was arrested on March 3 in Kuwait, where he was visiting family, and faced charges related to "spreading false information, harming national security, and misusing his mobile phone" – which the CPJ designed to promote press freedoms called "vague and overly broad accusations that are routinely used to silence independent journalists."
A spokesperson for Shihab-Eldin’s family confirmed Shihab-Eldin was acquitted but declined additional comment until further information is known. He is expected to be released immediately.
On March 2, Kuwait’s Ministry of Interior posted a chilling message warning against photographs or information related to missiles or relevant locations. Khalid Ibrahim, Executive Director of the Gulf Centre for Human Rights, told CPJ that dozens have been arrested since the war began in cases related to freedom of expression.
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Kuwait then issued a decree stipulating up to 10 years in jail for anyone who undermines "the prestige of the military or deliberately works toward eroding public trust in them," according to the Kuwait Times.
Shihab-Eldin, who is known for work at The New York Times, HuffPost, BBC, Al Jazeera, Vice News and other outlets, posted video of a U.S. fighter jet crash near a U.S. base in Kuwait shortly before he was detained.
The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A State Department spokesperson previously told Fox News Digital that the Trump administration "has no higher priority than the safety and security of Americans" and they were aware of reports of Shihab-Eldin’s detention.
"Whenever an American is detained abroad, the Department works to provide consular assistance in accordance with our authorities under U.S. and international law," the State Department spokesperson added.
The CPJ asked Americans to keep Shihab-Eldin’s situation visible by signing a petition and posting about his detention with the hashtags #freeahmed and #freeahmedeldin and #journalismisnotacrime.
USA's next Ryder Cup captain decided after Tiger Woods turns down offer: report
Jim Furyk is returning as the captain for the United States' Ryder Cup team next year, The Associated Press reported Friday.
It's a blast from the past, although not necessarily a positive past - Furyk captained the 2018 team that was shellacked in France, with his captain's picks combining to go 2-10.
Keegan Bradley captained last year's team at Bethpage Black, which had an embarrassing first two days but gave a valiant effort at an unprecedented comeback in Sunday singles. They fell just short, 15-13, after entering the day trailing by seven points.
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Members of that USA team backed Bradley after their loss, but it appears to be for naught.
Furyk led the Americans to victory as Presidents Cup captain in 2024, and he was said to be a reliable voice as an assistant to Bradley at Bethpage.
Furyk's 2018 team had issues behind the scenes, too, as Patrick Reed was not happy with being benched twice. He also blamed Jordan Spieth for the two not playing together, which Reed felt could have been successful.
Furyk would be the fourth U.S. captain to get a second chance dating to 1979, considered the modern era of the Ryder Cup, when continental Europe became part of it, along with Davis Love III (2012 and 2016), Tom Watson (1993 and 2014) and Jack Nicklaus (1983 and 1987).
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Tiger Woods' name was floated around for the tournament in Ireland, but he took himself out of consideration shortly following his arrest on March 27. It was not known which way Woods was leaning when his SUV clipped the back of a trailer being pulled by a pickup truck on a residential road in Florida, turning his SUV on its side. Woods was arrested and briefly jailed after Florida authorities determined he was impaired.
Europe has won 11 of the last 15 matches dating to Oak Hill in 1995. Last year, they became the first team to win back-to-back events since they won three straight from 2010 to 2014. It was also the first time a team won on foreign soil since Europe's Miracle at Medinah in 2012.
Luke Donald will try to become the first captain to win three straight times in September 2027 at Adare Manor. Europe returned all but one player from the 2023 squad to Bethpage, the lone difference between an identical twin brother.
Furyk played in all nine Ryder Cups from 1997 to 2014 before becoming an assistant for the first time in 2016. He's remained an assistant since 2021.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Blue state residents 'fleeing in droves' after ‘insane’ progressive takeover, says top state attorney
A top state attorney in Democrat-controlled Maryland says he has had enough and is throwing in the towel after saying the Old Line State has suffered an "insane" "ultra-progressive" takeover.
In an interview with Fox News Digital, Haven Shoemaker, state attorney for Maryland’s Carroll County, said that after decades in public service, he is "sick to death" of the policies that "emanate" from the state capital in Annapolis. He said he is especially disgusted with Maryland’s "sanctuary" policies and the high taxes he said are being levied in part to pay for more services for illegal immigrants.
"Maryland has become California on the Chesapeake," said Shoemaker. "It only gets worse. It's not getting better. And at some point, I just had to make a personal decision that it's time to throw in the towel and head for what I believe are greener pastures."
Shoemaker is not the only one. He said that he sees Marylanders giving up on the state "all the time."
"The State of Maryland has one of the worst outward migration numbers of any state in the country right now," he said. "So, I don't know who’s going to be the last to foot the bill for the profligate spending that Annapolis likes to engage in, but it's not going to be me, I can tell you that."
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Moore's office did not respond to Fox News Digital's questions. Fox News Digital also reached out to Maryland House Speaker Joseline A. Peña-Melnyk and Senate President Bill Ferguson for comment.
Born in Baltimore in the 1960s, Shoemaker spent three decades in local and state politics before taking the job as Carroll County’s top prosecutor in 2023. His career in public service includes seven years as mayor of Hampstead, Maryland, four years as a Carroll County commissioner and nine years in the Maryland House of Delegates. He rose to the role of House Minority Whip for the Maryland Republican Party.
Despite years deeply involved in state politics, Shoemaker said his decision to abandon Maryland has been a long time coming.
"I've been contemplating this move for a while, but the linchpin for me was this most recent legislative session where they essentially made Maryland a sanctuary state for illegal immigrants," he told Fox News Digital.
Earlier this year, the Maryland General Assembly passed an emergency measure to ban local and state law enforcement agencies from cooperating with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) through what is known as the 287(g) program. Maryland Democratic Gov. Wes Moore, whose name has been floated as a possible 2028 Democratic presidential candidate, signed the bill into law.
While emphasizing that law enforcement would continue cooperating with ICE on deporting individuals who "pose a risk to public safety," Moore lauded the bill, saying, "We will not allow untrained, unqualified and unaccountable agents to deputize our brave local law enforcement officers," according to WYPR.
While signing the measure, Moore stressed his view that "Maryland is a community of immigrants," saying, "It is not our weakness, it's our strength."
Shoemaker, meanwhile, said that Maryland’s sanctuary-style policies are "just part of the problem."
"In addition to that, their tax policy here is horrendous," he said. He pointed to how state leaders raised taxes in Maryland last year by $1.6 billion.
The tax raise was passed by the State Assembly and approved by Democratic Gov. Wes Moore as part of a $67 billion state budget in 2025. The raise was part of a plan to address roughly a $3.3 billion budget deficit. Maryland’s budget is relatively large compared to other states, despite the state ranking 18th in population and 42nd in land size.
Shoemaker said that state leaders are "already looking at a structural deficit going into next year's budget of another billion and a half or so." He asserted the "handwriting is on the wall" that "Maryland politicians are beholden to their ultra-progressive base."
In the end, Shoemaker said that he has finally decided to escape to the South and head for North Carolina.
"A lot of taxpayers from across the State of Maryland are fleeing in droves," he said. He added a warning to Moore and other Maryland leaders: "If you want to staunch the bleeding that's occurring, maybe you should rethink your policies."
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Trump admin steps up next phase of effort to protect children’s health
FIRST ON FOX: The Trump administration is stepping up its response to childhood lead exposure, launching new EPA public-education tools while pressing states to use previously awarded lead-mitigation funds that had gone unused, Fox News Digital learned.
"There's no safe level of lead exposure, and it's well documented that children are more susceptible to the risks of lead. We've made a lot of progress over the decades in reducing childhood exposure to lead, but there's still more work to do," Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Deputy Administrator David Fotouhi told Fox News Digital in a Zoom interview.
The EPA is revamping its website and launching a new story map tool aimed at making critical information on the risks of lead exposure easier for the public to access. The move comes as the agency shifts funding toward higher-impact efforts and steps up pressure on states to address contamination risks.
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Lead can be commonly found in paint, household dust, drinking water, air, and soil. The new tools will provide information to the public on current regulations for prevention.
"We’re also enforcing our rules when it comes to the lead renovation and painting rule. This comes up when you've got older homes, 1978 and older. Those are the ones that are more likely to have lead in the home, in the paint," said Fotouhi. "When those homes are being renovated, it's critical that folks are following our standards for ensuring the safety of any children that are occupying that home during that renovation."
The agency announced $3 billion in new funding for states to reduce lead in drinking water while also reallocating $1.1 billion in unused funding. Fotouhi explained to Fox News Digital that previous federal dollars to protect against lead poisoning and replace service lines sat unused in a handful of states.
"We've really focused on is making sure that states that received lead funding in the past are putting that money to good use," said Fotouhi. "We encountered a number of situations where states had received funding from EPA to replace lead service lines but had not taken and spent those funds to do that work."
There are 4 million lead service lines carrying drinking water to homes, according to a 2025 EPA report.
The EPA's broader push to prevent lead poisoning also included $26 million for states and territories last year to address lead in drinking water at schools and child-care facilities, underscoring the administration’s focus on children’s exposure risks.
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A committee of senior leaders was reestablished in 2025 across the agency’s program offices and 10 regions as part of EPA’s agency-wide effort to reduce children’s exposure to lead.
"This is federal, this is precious federal grant funding. Designed specifically to reduce human health risk from lead exposure, and the states need to be doing their job here and putting that funding to good use," said Fotouhi.
The administration has cast children’s health as a cross-agency priority, with HHS helping drive that push through the White House’s Make America Healthy Again initiative, which has focused in part on childhood chronic disease and environmental toxins.
Over a dozen Dems demand Trump admin protect Iranians living in the US
More than a dozen Democratic lawmakers have signed onto a letter urging President Donald Trump's administration to protect Iranians living in the U.S. who could not safely return to Iran.
"We write to urge the Trump administration to immediately institute protections for Iranian nationals currently in the United States who cannot return home safely," the letter states.
"The Administration must not forcibly return Iranian families in the United States to Iran — where they face the dual threat of the regime’s humanitarian abuses and dangers a resumption of the war poses — and should therefore pause deportation flights and designate Iranians for temporary protection, such as Temporary Protected Status (TPS) or Deferred Enforced Departure (DED)," it continues.
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The letter accuses the Trump administration of launching "attacks on Iran unlawfully, without the constitutionally required congressional authorization, plunging millions of innocent civilians into a state of insecurity, with the human cost of the conflict mounting daily."
"Having initiated the current war with Iran, the Trump administration bears a moral and humanitarian responsibility to provide Iranian nationals with an immediate shield from removal," the message asserts.
"The Administration should also provide assistance to Iranians in the United States while they are unable to return home, by resuming the processing of immigration benefits and expediting the issuance of work authorization documents," the letter states.
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The April 23 letter is directed to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Acting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Acting Director Todd Lyons, and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director Joseph Edlow.
The letter is signed by Sen. Ed Markey of Massachusetts, Rep. Yassamin Ansari of Arizona, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware, Sen. Alex Padilla of California, Sen. Jacky Rosen of Nevada, Sen. Adam Schiff of California, Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, Sen. Peter Welch of Vermont, Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, and Reps. Dan Goldman of New York, Hank Johnson of Georgia, Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois, Dave Min of California, Seth Moulton of Massachusetts, Brad Sherman of California, Lateefah Simon of California, and Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton of Washington D.C.
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Fox News Digital reached out to the White House to request comment on Friday.
Rubio has yanked the lawful permanent resident status of multiple individuals with ties to the Iranian regime. For example, the State Department announced earlier this month that "the niece and grand niece of deceased Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Major General Qasem Soleimani were arrested by federal agents following Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s termination of their lawful permanent resident (LPR) status."
"Hamideh Soleimani Afshar and her daughter are now in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. As identified by both press reporting and her own social media commentary, Soleimani Afshar is an outspoken supporter of the totalitarian, terrorist regime in Iran," the department noted in the April 4 notice.