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Speaker Johnson Clarifies Comments Claiming Trump Was “An FBI Informant” in Epstein Case | The Gateway Pundit

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Speaker Mike Johnson appeared to walk back his statements on Trump working as an FBI informant in the Epstein case.

Last week CNN reporter Manu Raju asked Speaker Johnson why President Trump keeps calling the Epstein case a hoax.

“What he’s talking about is the Democrats who are doing this with impure motives. If they cared so much about this, why didn’t they do something during the four years of the Biden administration when the Biden DOJ had all the records,” Johnson said to reporters on Thursday.

Johnson: What Trump is referring to is the hoax that the Democrats are using to try to attack him. He has never said or suggested or implied— I’ve talked to him about this many times, many times. He is horrified. It’s been misrepresented. He’s not saying that what Epstein did is a hoax. It’s a terrible, unspeakable evil. He believes that himself.

When he first heard the rumor, he kicked him out of Mar-a-Lago. He was an FBI informant to try to take this stuff down. The president knows and has great sympathy for the women who have suffered these unspeakable harms. It’s detestable to him. He and I have spoken about this as recently as 24 hours ago. What he’s talking about is the Democrats who are doing this with impure motives. If they cared so much about this, why didn’t they do something during the four years of the Biden administration when the Biden DOJ had all the records. They didn’t say a word about it. Now, they’re doing it for political purposes. Not everybody, but a lot of them, and that’s what the President’s frustrated about, and we all are, that they’re creating a hoax, just like they did with the Russian dossier, because they think it’s going to somehow be mud thrown on him. It’s not. He has no culpability in this thing at all. The president has clean hands. He wants all the records out. He has told me that himself.

WATCH:

In a statement to the Washington Post, Speaker Johnson clarified his comments on Trump working as an FBI informant on the Epstein case.

“The Speaker is reiterating what the victims’ attorney said, which is that Donald Trump, who kicked Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago, was the only one more than a decade ago willing to help prosecutors expose Epstein for being a disgusting child predator,” Johnson’s statement read.



This story originally appeared on TheGateWayPundit

Pharmacist says flick this switch before bed for ‘deep’ sleep

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People who wake up in the middle of the night could improve their sleep by making a simple change to their bedtime routine, an expert has revealed. While insomnia can affect anyone, with almost 40% of UK adults estimated to suffer from at least one symptom every day, research suggests that sleeping problems are most common in women.

Curley Superintendent Pharmacist Sobia Qasim explains: “Research shows that women are significantly more likely to wake up during the night than men, with some studies suggesting that they are twice as likely due to sleep disturbance.”

Fortunately, several simple tips, such as dimming lights one hour before bed, could help women struggling to enjoy a good night’s sleep.

Offering advice, Sobia shared four reasons why women might be more likely to wake up in the night and how to prevent it from happening.

The stress load

Sobia explained: “Unfortunately, at bedtime, women’s mental load doesn’t just switch off. From remembering key events at school to planning meals and managing work, women’s brains often stay active even as they try to relax for the evening. This is known as ‘cognitive arousal’, as stress and responsibility replay in the mind during sleep.

“The main stress hormone, cortisol, also tends to increase more in women in response to emotional stressors, making it harder to fall back asleep once woken. Research has suggested that women are 40% more likely to experience insomnia than men due to high stress levels.”

She continued: “A helpful way to reduce bedtime ‘mental load’ is to write down a to-do list or worries right before bed, which will send a signal to the brain that tasks are being left till the morning, and that’s okay. Pair this with a short deep breathing exercise, such as inhaling slowly through the nose for 4 seconds, hold your breath gently for 7 seconds, and exhaling completely through your mouth for 8 seconds. This will lower cortisol levels and make it easier for you to fall asleep quickly.”

Circadian rhythms

“There are many neurological differences that affect women’s sleep. Their circadian cycles are slightly shorter than men’s, meaning they might feel sleepier earlier in the evening; however, they are also biologically primed to wake up earlier in the morning,” the pharmacist said.

Sobia advised: “Try to keep a bedtime and wake-up time the same each day, even on weekends, to stabilise your body clock. Also, try to limit evening light exposure by dimming screens and lighting 1 hour before bed, which will help with deep, less easily disturbed sleep stages.”

Bladder sensitivity

Sobia said: “Nocturia is another reason women find that their sleep is broken. Hormonal changes, pregnancy, and childbirth all affect bladder function and pelvic floor strength, making it more likely for night-time bathroom trips. The issue is that by the time women have woken up, it takes them a longer amount of time to get back into a deep sleep than men.

“In a survey, nearly half of women over 40 reported waking up at least once in the night to use the bathroom, and this figure rises during pregnancy and after menopause. Men also experience nocturia, especially with age; women are affected more at a younger age, and it tends to worsen, disrupting sleep cycles.”

She shared: “A simple way to reduce the night-time bathroom trips is to avoid drinking fluids like caffeine and alcohol at least 2 to 3 hours before bed, as both can irritate the bladder. You can also try pelvic floor exercises regularly to improve bladder control and reduce nocturia over time.”

Sharing a bed

“Bed-sharing may bring the relationship closer; however, it also causes many disturbances,” the expert pointed out. “Women are significantly more likely than men to be woken up by their partner’s snoring or movement, as research suggests.

“As women have a light sleep cycle, even the smallest of disruptors, such as late-night phone scrolling, a shift in position, or sleep talking, are enough to fully wake them up. In one survey, 55% of people reported that snoring is one of the biggest sleep disturbers.”

Her advice was to use firmer mattresses or memory foam to minimise movement transfer and keep separate blankets. Sobia added: “If you sleep next to a snorer, use nasal strips or a humidifier, and don’t hesitate to sleep in separate beds if needed, to prioritise good sleep quality.”



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Luxury Yacht Sinks First Time It Hits the Water: Video

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The owner of a luxury yacht worth around $940,000 had to swim to shore after his brand new 85-foot vessel, dubbed “The Dolce Vento,” launched for the first time on Tuesday off the coast of northern Turkey.

After hitting the water for its maiden voyage, the boat turned to its side and began to sink a couple of hundred feet offshore. A video widely shared on social media captured the boat being led into the water, and one person jumping as it sank.

Related: Video Shows Las Vegas Billionaire Traveling the East Coast With Two Megayachts — One Just Carries the Toys

So far, no cause has been officially determined, but Boat International reports that an investigation has been opened, and local outlets are blaming a “stabilization issue.”

Local reports also said the captain and two crew members swam to shore without injury.

Related: These Luxury Boats Are Owned By Some of the Wealthiest People in Tech and Include Swimming Pools and Basketball Courts




This story originally appeared on Entrepreneur

White House economic advisor Kevin Hassett says Fed needs full independence from Trump

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A top aide to President Trump who is on his short list to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve said on Sunday that the central bank should be “fully independent of political influence,” including from Trump.

“I would say 100% that monetary policy, Federal Reserve monetary policy, needs to be fully independent of political influence, including from President Trump,” White House National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett told CBS News’ “Face the Nation” show.

“The fact is that we’ve looked at countries that have allowed the leaders to take over the central banks, and what tends to happen is that it’s a recipe for inflation and misery for consumers,” he said.

White House National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett is on President Trump’s short list to be the Fed’s next chair, Face the Nation

Trump’s repeated demands that the US central bank cut rates immediately and frequent berating of Fed Chair Jerome Powell for his stewardship of monetary policy have fueled questions about the Fed’s ability to set interest rate policy without regard to politicians’ wishes.

So, too, has Trump’s bid to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, who has sued to challenge her dismissal.

Powell’s term as Fed chair is due to end in May. Trump’s short list of candidates to succeed him includes Hassett, former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh. and current Fed Governor Christopher Waller.

“I don’t have a plan to overhaul the Fed right now. I’m just happy to do my job,” Hassett said.


Jerome Powell at a press conference.
Federal Chair Jerome Powell’s term ends in May. REUTERS

Hassett endorsed US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s call on Friday for renewed scrutiny of the Federal Reserve, including its power to set interest rates and said he would be prepared to implement the vision outlined by the Treasury secretary. He declined to provide details.

Trump has said that questions about the mortgages on properties Cook owns – and are the subject of a criminal probe by his administration – are sufficient cause for dismissal. Cook has filed a lawsuit seeking to block her unprecedented removal, setting up a legal battle that could upend long-established norms for the Fed’s independence.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Why the food industry and the left really hate MAHA ambassador RFK Jr.

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Of all Donald Trump’s Cabinet picks, it’s Robert F. Kennedy Jr. who attracts the most vitriol, which is saying something.

You could see just how much the Health and Human Services secretary is despised last week at a Senate committee hearing when Democrat after Democrat abused him with slurs like “charlatan” and demanded he resign. There is an orchestrated campaign to force him out that includes the overplayed political ploy of an “open letter from nine former CDC leaders” and another letter from 1,000 current and former HHS employees calling on him to resign.

But why would he resign? He’s only just getting started on Trump’s Make America Healthy Again agenda, which is popular with Americans of all stripes, especially Republicans, 73% of whom rated it favorably in the latest Insider Advantage poll.

It addresses public concern that transcends party lines about chronic disease, food safety and vaccine skepticism, the latter of which can be blamed on the lies we were told during the COVID-19 pandemic, not on RFK Jr.’s six months in office.

MAHA is a threat to powerful entrenched interests, and RFK Jr. is under siege from all sides as he tries to implement his plans to solve chronic disease in the United States.

Conflicts of interest

Take Tuesday’s Oversight Committee hearing focusing on the “severe health crisis” facing American children, with almost one in five classified as obese.

“Better Meals, Fewer Pills: Making Our Children Healthy Again” is the MAHA-friendly topic, which ought to be a no-brainer.

But sinister vested interests are trying to sabotage RFK Jr.’s plans to dismantle the commercial apparatus that “put Froot Loops at the top of the food pyramid,” as he puts it, and eliminate the leftist ideology that has infected the health arena.

In December, after Trump had won the presidential election and announced that he had chosen RFK Jr. to head HHS, the Biden administration rushed through the latest federal guidance on nutrition. Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2025-2030, was supposed to incorporate the latest science on diet, nutrition and health outcomes.

But it was yet another last-ditch effort to control Trump from the political grave, tying his administration to unhealthy, woke, industry-driven dietary recommendations like seed oils and reduced meat-eating for climate alarm purposes.

The new Biden dietary guidelines also applied a ridiculous “health equity lens” to food, emphasizing race and income rather than healthy nutrition, and making it much harder to measure and communicate.

The Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, which produced the convoluted 453-page report, is portrayed in the media as a group of infallible experts, but it is assessed by US Right To Know, a nonprofit public health research group, as being “plagued” by conflicts of interest, including funding from vegetarian company Beyond Meat.

Of 20 DGAC members, 13 had “high-risk, medium-risk or possible conflicts of interest” with food, pharmaceutical and weight loss companies or industry groups, according to the Right to Know report “Assessing Conflicts of Interest of the 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee.”

Another 2022 study in the Journal of Public Health Nutrition found that 95% of the committee members had conflicts with the food and/or pharmaceutical industries, including Kellogg, Abbott, Kraft, Mead Johnson and General Mills.

“Trustworthy dietary guidelines result from a transparent, objective and science-based, process,” wrote the authors in their paper “Conflicts of interest for members of the US 2020 dietary guidelines advisory committee.

“Our analysis has shown that the significant and widespread [conflicts of interest] on the committee prevent the DGA from achieving the recommended standard for transparency without mechanisms in place to make this information publicly available.”

MAHA insiders say that the committee has been compromised by woke ideology and industry capture, and that its deep state partners are determined to sabotage the plan by RFK Jr. to revise the dietary guidelines toward natural animal fats, full fat dairy and raw milk, and away from seed oils, ultra processed food and synthetic additives and dyes.

Science, not ideologies

Food is at the center of the MAHA movement, and RFK Jr. has said the Biden dietary guidelines report “looks like it was written by the food processing industry.” The first closed-door meeting of the new MAHA Commission in March resolved to rip up the guidelines and start again.

“We will make certain the 2025-2030 Guidelines are based on sound science, not political science,” Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said in a statement released after meeting.

“Gone are the days where leftist ideologies guide public policy.”

Powerful food and beverage interests are implacably opposed to MAHA’s dietary agenda, so Tuesday’s hearing should show us which members of Congress are beholden to them.

Democrats hate RFK Jr. because he’s an apostate who helped propel Trump to victory last year and because he calls out donations from Big Pharma. Some establishment Republicans don’t care for him either and fear he is undermining faith in vaccines.

But that faith was undermined by the real charlatans during the COVID-19 pandemic who lied that the mRNA so-called vaccine would stop transmission, must be administered to healthy children and had no downside.

Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) last week even tried to blame RFK Jr. for recent measles outbreaks in the US, when anyone paying attention knows that the origin was illegal alien shelters in cities like Chicago.

He should blame his woeful leader Joe Biden for allowing in millions of unvetted, unvaccinated people and sending them all over the country. Measles is the least of it.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Bill Gates’ early BASIC code for MOS 6502 released as open source – Computerworld

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Microsoft has released the source code for the BASIC version it developed in 1976 for the MOS 6502 processor, a central component of many early home computers, The Register reports.

As far back as 1975, Bill Gates and Paul Allen developed Microsoft’s first product: BASIC for the Altair 8800 with the Intel 8080 processor. The following year, Gates and Ric Weiland ported the language to MOS 6502. In 1977, Commodore licensed the code for $25,000 and used it in its PET, VIC-20, and Commodore 64 computers. Millions of copies of these computers were sold, helping to popularize the home computer.

The now-published version 1.1 of the code consists of 6,955 lines of assembler and is available on GitHub under an MIT license. It contains a full BASIC implementation with support for floating-point arithmetic, string and array handling, math functions, input and output, and efficient memory usage for 8-bit systems.



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

This pettable Poké Ball is a Tamagotchi-style toy with over 150 Pokémon inside and I need it now

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Japanese toymaker Takara Tomy is releasing a Poké Ball virtual pet toy so you can fulfill your dreams of carrying your favorite Pokémon around with you everywhere. I don’t know how this one slid under my radar when it was announced at the end of August (perhaps because all my attention has been on ) but now that I’ve seen it, I must have it. While it appears to be a Japan-only release, the product page shows it will have an English language option in the menu. Pre-orders are open (though currently sold out on ), and the device will ship on October 11, according to .

The toy costs ¥7,480 or about $51 — but I shudder to think how much that number will jump with tariffs factored in. Per the listing, there are seven partner Pokémon you can care for: Pikachu, Eevee, Sprigatito, Fuecoco, Quaxly, Lucario and Sylveon. And if you pet the device, they’ll react. There are also 150 other Pokémon to interact with, though it’s unclear what the extent of those interactions will be beyond battles (and… ?). Regardless, l hope Wooper is one of them.



This story originally appeared on Engadget

See Who Won 2025 Best Album, Best Group & More – Hollywood Life

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Image Credit: Getty Images

The 2025 MTV Video Music Awards started and ended with a bang! Some of the music industry’s most recognizable names in pop, rock, hip-hop and more genres came together to perform, present and accept their own awards — and we’ve compiled the entire winners list right here. In addition to the annual VMAs categories, including Best Album, Video of the Year and Best Group, MTV also gave special awards out to a select handful of artists.

Receiving the first-ever Latin Icon Award, Ricky Martin dedicated the win to his fans and pointed out how long he’s been chipping away at show biz.

“Thank you so much because it’s been 40 years. I started when I was a baby, and we’re still here,” the “Livin’ lad vida loca” hitmaker said during his speech. “We just want to unite countries, we just want to break boundaries. We just want to keep music alive.”

MTV also bestowed its Rock the Bells Visionary Award to Busta Rhymes and the highly coveted Video Vanguard Award to Mariah Carey. Ariana Grande presented her with the trophy and even bowed before her on stage.

Keep reading to see the entire VMAs 2025 winners list!

Video of the Year

Ariana Grande – “brighter days ahead” – Republic Records

Artist of the Year

Lady Gaga – Interscope Records

Song of the Year

ROSÉ & Bruno Mars – “APT.” – Atlantic Records  

Best New Artist 

Alex Warren – Atlantic Records

Best Pop Artist 

Sabrina Carpenter – Island

MTV Push Performance of the Year 

KATSEYE – “Touch” – HYBE/Geffen Records (Jan 2025)     

Best Collaboration 

Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars – “Die With A Smile” – Interscope Records

Best Pop 

Ariana Grande – “brighter days ahead” – Republic Record 

            

Best Hip-Hop 

Doechii – “Anxiety” – Top Dawg Entertainment/Capitol Records  

Best R&B 

Mariah Carey – “Type Dangerous” – gamma.        

Best Alternative 

sombr – “back to friends” – SMB Music/Warner Records 

Best Rock 

Coldplay – “ALL MY LOVE” – Atlantic Records               

Best Latin 

Shakira – “Soltera“ – Sony Music US Latin

Best Afrobeats 

Tyla – “PUSH 2 START” – FAX Records/Epic Records           

Best K-Pop

LISA ft. Doja Cat & RAYE – “Born Again” – Lloud Co./RCA Records

Best Country 

Megan Moroney – “Am I Okay?” – Columbia Records       

Best Album 

Sabrina CarpenterShort n’ Sweet – Island           

Best Long Form Video 

Ariana Grande – “brighter days ahead” – Republic Records

Video for Good 

Charli xcx – “Guess featuring Billie Eilish” – Atlantic Records

Best Direction 

Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra” – Interscope Records

Best Cinematography 

Kendrick Lamar – “Not Like Us” – pgLang/Interscope Records

Best Editing 

Tate McRae – “Just Keep Watching (From F1® The Movie)” – Atlantic Records

Best Choreography 

Doechii – “Anxiety” – Top Dawg Entertainment/Capitol Records

Best Visual Effects 

Sabrina Carpenter – “Manchild” – Island

Best Art Direction 

Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra” – Interscope Records

Best Group 

BLACKPINK

Song of the Summer 

Tate McRae – “Just Keep Watching (From F1® The Movie)” – Atlantic Records




This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

The UK seaside town full of abandoned shops where high street has been ‘crushed’ | UK | Travel

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Ayr (Image: Getty)

On Scotland’s picturesque west coast, one place was labelled the country’s worst seaside town — and the tenth worst in the UK. It scored poorly in the survey of 3,800 Which? members, with just two stars for its tourist attractions, and middling marks elsewhere.

But locals tell a more nuanced story. While they agreed the high street is “crushed” and “full of empty shops”, they highlighted the town’s charms. From pretty surrounding landscapes to major international events, Ayr, they argued, is far richer than its reputation suggests — just often overlooked by tourists and struggling like the rest of the UK with blighted high streets.

Drone photography capturing ayr town centre with river ayr flowing through on overcast day

Locals say the town centre is in decline and there are lots of empty shops (Image: Getty)

Irene, who has always worked in Ayr and now runs a small tobacco shop that has survived since 1902, said she had “definitely” seen a decline in the town centre.

Recalling its heyday, she told The Express: “Going back maybe 20 odd years ago, the town was buzzing. The high street was buzzing.” But now there were “very few shops”, and she said more cafes, charity shops, barbers, and nail bars had moved in.

She said a combination of high rents, increased minimum wage, and National Insurance contributions has “crushed all the businesses—not just the small ones, but the large ones as well”.

“There are some independent stores, and just talking to other retailers, I think we’re all in the same boat; we’re all really struggling.”

However, she emphasised that the situation isn’t unique to Ayr and is similar across the UK. She noted how it was a “vicious circle” as more empty buildings reduce footfall for surviving retailers.

Her niche cigar business attracts tourists from caravan holidaying site Haven Park because “they can’t get it anywhere else really,” but the number of visitors is lower than in past times.

Beach at Ayr in South West Scotland on an Overcast Summer Morning

Ayr has a long sandy beach and promenade (Image: Getty)

Gordon Pickens, whose traditional family butcher’s has been in Ayr since 1888, linked the decline to the high running costs, which smaller shops cannot afford.

“The trouble with here was they’re all big stores,” he said. “They’re all big premises no one can afford to take on, and they’re all high rates as well. So between the high rates, high rent, people can’t afford to move into them.”

He said nearby Prestwick was faring better thanks to its smaller premises. “They haven’t got the big department stores, so independent shops can afford to open up there. Much cheaper rents and rates.”

However, he told a different story to Which? survey, which gave it three out of five for scenery. He emphasised: “The surrounding areas are lovely. There are golf courses, parks, and a beach — it’s all nice. It’s literally just the shops.”

Culzean Castle view from public beach

Locals pointed out nearby sights like Culzean Castle (Image: Getty)

Karen McClelland, who runs a small bed and breakfast in Ayr, said that despite the challenges, her three-bed B&B is usually full from May to September.

Many of her guests come from Glasgow and the central belt, drawn by the racecourse, weddings, and the annual air show, when the “whole town comes alight”. While there had been fewer international visitors since COVID, it had started to pick up.

She believed Ayr’s strong point is “100% the promenade and the beach”, but acknowledged the town centre needed work.

“When it comes to the high street, the town, the shopping area, I don’t think it’s terribly different from many other towns nowadays. We lost a lot of the big shops and it’s kind of taken over by pound shops and charity shops, which is a real shame.”

She also pointed to the success of smaller Prestwick. “I’m old enough to remember the days before shopping centres and before supermarkets,” she added. “So I think it was the advent of the shopping centre [and the retail park] that has killed the high street.”

She believed that Ayr is often overlooked compared to places like Edinburgh, Glasgow, or the West Highland Way, but highlighted the array of activities in the area.

“We’ve got Culzean Castle, there’s Dumfries House, Robert Burns was born here,” she said. “You can easily spend a week in Ayr just having a look at what there is to see.”

Having lived there for 25 years and set to enter semi-retirement, she added: “I’ve been looking to potentially downsize and move elsewhere, but you know what, I quite like it and I’m only five minutes from the beach, so I’ll probably end up staying.”

Ayr Town Scotland from Harbour.

Ayr has a harbour and views over the Isle of Arran (Image: Getty)

Councillor Bob Shields agreed that Ayr town centre, once the shopping destination of Ayrshire, needed regeneration, and stressed that work is under way.

He said: “It doesn’t help any high street to have buildings that are boarded up and looking for new owners. So the council is trying to address that and look at ways of getting smaller businesses to attract them into the town, and try and regenerate a whole new culture of town centre shopping.”

He added: “The internet’s taking its toll on every high street in the country and it’s just a matter of accepting that and deciding how to regenerate it.”

Plans could include attracting more independent businesses, adding housing to the town centre to boost footfall, making transport and parking more accessible, and reviving the esplanade with traditional seaside attractions, like a crazy golf course.

“We lost our railway station for a while due to a major fire at the Station Hotel, so hopefully we’ll be looking at a new railway station and turn it into a transport hub,” he added.

“These are all part of the council’s regeneration plans, but all things in council take their time,” he said. “It’s a long process. Years of degeneration take years of regeneration to fix it all.”

“I think the public is right to be impatient. They walk around the high street and say there’s nothing happening, but to be honest, there is a lot happening,” he said. “We ask the public to be patient, but I can see where they’re coming from.”

Cllr Shields pointed to Ayr’s proven ability to draw crowds. He said the last two International Ayr Shows drew a quarter of a million people, and he predicted Ayr would be the “busiest seaside resort in the whole of the UK” during this year’s September 5-6 event.

“People say there’s nothing to do or see in Ayr,” he said. “I think the criteria depends on what people are looking for. If you want beaches, it’s hard to top Ayr’s beach.”

He also praised its views over the Isle of Arran, championship golf courses, and Glasgow Prestwick Airport just minutes away, and said “it is a matter of building on those things”.

Cllr Shields noted setbacks like soaring building costs, the council not owning the old station hotel site, which means their “hands are tied legally at the moment”, and the sheer time it takes to make changes.

But between its natural beauty and the ability to host events that rival anywhere in the UK, its defenders insist Ayr has all the makings of a great seaside town.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Trump Went To The US Open And Got Booed Twice At A Tennis Tournament

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The booing of a president is not a reliable indicator of a political party’s future, but when a president gets booed each time they are shown on the screen at an event, it isn’t a coincidence.

When a president gets booed during the National Anthem, that’s uncharted territory.

Here is Trump getting booed during the Anthem:

Trump was making his saluting sleeping face, which he must think makes him look serious and patriotic, but in reality, he looks like a confused dope who is trying to do what he thinks a patriotic person would do.

The crowd apparently wanted to make sure that it got its point across, because when Trump was shown on the screen later, he drew even more boos.

Video:

This was the US Open, a tennis tournament. It isn’t like Trump was outside an NFL stadium tailgating before kickoff. Tennis tournaments aren’t known for their vocal crowds with outspoken political beliefs.

This was the protest outside the tournament:

It takes a seriously high level of unpopularity to get booed at a tennis tournament, and there may have never been a president in US history who was booed at a sporting event during the National Anthem.

If I were a House or Senate Republican watching this scene with an ounce of common sense, I might start to suspect that my reelection campaign could be in trouble.

Midterm elections have historically been a referendum on the incumbent president.

If this is how voters feel about Trump at a tennis tournament, imagine how people feel about him when they have to fill up the gas tank, buy groceries, or pay their utility bills.

Voters are angry, and that anger has been turned on Trump and his party.

Donald Trump can’t escape. Everywhere he goes, he is reminded that he is a failed president whom most Americans can’t stand.

What do you think about Trump getting booed at the US Open? Join the discussion in the comments below.

Leave a comment



This story originally appeared on Politicususa