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    Happy Thursday! Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown read the book Inner Excellence by Jim Murphy on the sidelines of his team’s playoff appearance last week, and now it’s an Amazon bestseller. The TMD team wonders what might happen if we handed out copies of Liberal Fascism to players before the games this Sunday.

    Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

    • President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Wednesday redesignating the Houthis, an Iranian-backed rebel group controlling parts of Yemen, as a foreign terrorist organization. The designation undid former President Joe Biden’s 2021 decision to remove the militants from the terrorist list and followed more than a year of Houthi attacks on military and commercial vessels traversing the Red Sea—a campaign that has sunk two vessels, killed four seafarers, and forced shipping companies to avoid the strategic waterway in favor of longer routes. Also on Wednesday, the Houthis released the 25 multinational crew members of the Galaxy Leader, a Bahamas-flagged cargo ship, after holding them hostage since November 2023 in ostensible solidarity with Hamas. In addition to its attacks on international shipping, the group has launched more than 350 missiles and drones at Israel since October 2023.
    • The United Kingdom detected a Russian spy ship near the English coast for the second time in three months, British Defense Secretary John Healey said Wednesday. Healey told Parliament that the Russian ship, used for “gathering intelligence and mapping Britain’s critical underwater infrastructure,” first appeared in November but left U.K. waters after a British submarine surfaced nearby. Healey’s announcement followed a string of recent Russian maritime activity in and around NATO waters, including near the Finnish coast, where the European Union accused Moscow of intentionally damaging a key undersea power cable that runs between Finland and Estonia in December.
    • The House passed the Laken Riley Act on Wednesday, making it the first bill to reach President Trump’s desk this term. The bill—named after an Augusta University nursing student who was murdered in Georgia by an illegal immigrant from Venezuela last year—requires Immigration and Customs Enforcement to detain undocumented immigrants who are charged, arrested, or convicted for “burglary, theft, larceny, or shoplifting.” The House vote was 263-156 after 46 Democrats joined Republicans to support the measure, which passed the Senate Monday on a vote of 64-35. The lower chamber initially approved the bill in March of last year, but it stalled in the Democrat-controlled Senate. 
    • Acting Defense Secretary Robert Salesses announced plans on Wednesday to deploy more than 1,500 troops to the southern border with Mexico. The new deployments, which represent a 60 percent increase in the military presence there, will assist the area’s existing National Guard and reserve personnel in building physical barriers, among other tasks. The Department of Defense also will provide aircraft for the deportation of some 5,000 migrants currently detained near San Diego, California, and El Paso, Texas, by U.S. Customs and Border Protection. “This is just the beginning,” Salesses said of the move, which followed President Trump’s national emergency declaration on the southern border Monday. 
    • A 17-year-old male gunman shot two students, killing a 16-year-old girl, before fatally shooting himself at Antioch High School in Nashville on Wednesday morning. The Metro Nashville Police Department said Wednesday that authorities had not identified links between the shooter and his victims, and a report by the Tennessean found that the assailant had participated in various antisemitic, alt-right online communities before perpetrating the attack. 
    • A new wildfire broke out in the Los Angeles area on Wednesday, forcing the evacuation of tens of thousands of people and covering an area of more than 10,000 acres as of 10 p.m. PT, according to the U.S. Forest Service. The blaze—known as the Hughes fire—burned in and around a state park, fueled by high winds and dry brush. The two largest fires in the Los Angeles area—in the Palisades and Eaton neighborhoods—were 70 percent and 95 percent contained, respectively, as of Wednesday evening. 
    • Record-breaking snowfall and freezing temperatures hit the southeastern United States this week, killing at least 10 people. More than 2,000 flights in and out of airports from Texas to Florida were canceled as a result of the winter storm, and state officials urged drivers to stay off the roads. “We don’t do ice well,” Van R. Johnson, the mayor of Savannah, Georgia, said Tuesday. “It’s a time for Netflix and soup.”

    Drill, Maybe, Drill 

    Oil pump jacks are shown in a field on June 27, 2024 in Stanton, Texas. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

    Together with a flurry of Day 1 executive orders, President Donald Trump’s first speech back in office signaled his plans to keep a key campaign promise: to “drill, baby, drill.” 

    “We have something that no other manufacturing nation will ever have: the largest amount of oil and gas of any country on earth,” the president said in his inaugural address on Monday. “We will bring prices down, fill our strategic reserves up again, right to the top, and export American energy all over the world.” 





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