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Senate Confirms Markwayne Mullin As Homeland Security Secretary

The Senate has confirmed Markwayne Mullin as the new Secretary of Homeland Security in a mostly party-line vote, installing the Oklahoma Republican to lead the department during a period of heightened political and operational strain. President Donald Trump selected Mullin to replace former Secretary Kristi Noem, as the administration faces ongoing pressure over border security and federal immigration enforcement policies. Mullin takes over at a critical time, with a budget battle in Washington contributing to disruptions affecting airports and other parts of the nation’s transportation system. Democrats continue to push for changes to immigration enforcement operations, citing recent deadly protests as part of the broader debate over the department’s role and authority.

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TSA Agent Resignations Surge as ICE Deploys to U.S. Airports

Immigration agents began deploying to more than a dozen U.S. airports Monday as a growing number of TSA officers quit or call out during the ongoing government shutdown, creating major disruptions for travelers nationwide. Hundreds of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were sent to airports in cities including New York, Newark, New Orleans, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Phoenix. The move comes as staffing shortages among Transportation Security Administration workers lead to long lines and delays. Federal officials say more than 400 TSA employees have resigned since the shutdown began on February 14, with absentee rates climbing to 11.5%—the highest level in weeks. Authorities warn those numbers could continue to rise as workers remain unpaid. The deployment follows comments from President Donald Trump, who said ICE agents could assist at airports amid the staffing crisis. However, officials say ICE personnel are not currently being used in secured screening areas due to lack of specialized training and clearance. The situation has added to growing concerns among travelers, some of whom described chaotic scenes and uncertainty about safety at airports. Meanwhile, the Department of Homeland Security remains at the center of a political standoff in Washington, as lawmakers debate funding and push for changes to immigration enforcement policies.

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Dems DHS Shutdown Wreaks Havoc, Crime is Down In Memphis, RIP Sheridan Gormon

On this episode of the Carl Jackson Show, Carl dives into the tragic murder of Sheridan Gorman, a Loyola University student, and the devastating impact of sanctuary cities. He's joined by Dr. Curry Myers, a leading criminologist, to discuss the case and the alarming rise of crime in blue cities. They also explore the connection between crime rates and the policies of the Democratic party, including the recent DHS shutdown. With stats and stories from Memphis, Tennessee, and Chicago, this conversation sheds light on the importance of enforcing the law and keeping communities safe. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/carljacksonradio X/Twitter: https://twitter.com/carljacksonshow Parler: https://parler.com/carljacksonshow Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thecarljacksonshow http://www.TheCarlJacksonShow.com Visit our Store https://CarlJacksonStore.com

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Who is telling the truth about Iran's missiles?

Who is Telling the Truth about Iran's Missiles?

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Trump visits Memphis to tout crime-fighting efforts

President Trump highlighted his crime crackdown at a roundtable event during a visit to Tennessee Monday. Last September, the Trump administration launched the Memphis Safe Task Force, a multi-agency effort involving federal officers, local police and the Tennessee National Guard to fight violent crime. Before the initiative was launched, the city of Memphis had the highest rate of violent crime per capita in the country, according to the FBI. Now, overall crime is down in Memphis about 43% compared to last year. The task force says it made close to 7,000 arrests and seized almost 1,100 illegal firearms since the crackdown began.

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Historic Hawaii Floods Leave Thousands Without Power

More than 2,000 people remained without power Sunday afternoon after Hawaii suffered its worst flooding in more than 20 years when heavy rains fell across the islands. Heavy rains fell on soil already saturated by downpours from a winter storm a week ago. Raging waters lifted homes and cars, causing an expected $1 billion in damages. The storm prompted evacuation orders for 5,500 people north of Honolulu — though they were later lifted — and more than 200 people were rescued from the rising waters. No deaths have been reported as of yet, Molly Pierce, spokesperson for Oahu's Department of Emergency Management, said Sunday afternoon. By Sunday afternoon, Hawaiian Electric restored power to about 1,200 people in Waialua on the North Shore of Oahu, according to the company. Customers' power was proactively turned off Friday because of the flooding. Crews continue to assess the damage and make repairs, and Hawaiian Electric expects to return power to 2,000 more people later Sunday. In Maui County, about 100 people were without power Sunday afternoon, and all major outages were addressed on Hawaii Island, according to the company. The worst of the storms appear to be over, Hawaii meteorologist Matthew Foster told The Associated Press. By Sunday afternoon, the weather shifted from widespread showers to scattered rain from Oahu, Maui County to Hawaii Island, Foster said. Less than 5 inches (13 cm) of rain is expected for Hawaii Island, with between 1 to 2 inches (3-5 cm) in other areas. Winds will pick up out of the northeast sides of the islands, which have more vegetation and can handle more rain, Foster said. It will take a couple days for the moisture to push past the islands, and drier and more typical March weather can be expected by Wednesday. Additional flooding could still occur, but more on an isolated scale rather than widespread, Foster said. A boil water notice remained in place Sunday for North Shore areas from Mokuleia to Turtle Bay, and residents were encouraged to report damages to the city. Gov. Josh Green said the cost of the storm could top $1 billion, including damage to airports, schools, roads, homes and a Maui hospital in Kula. Officials were concerned that the 120-year-old Wahiawa dam could fail, though that worry has primarily passed since water levels have dropped, Pierce said. The dam continues to be monitored. Winter storm systems known as “Kona lows,” which feature southerly or southwesterly winds that bring in moisture-laden air, have been responsible for the deluges in the past two weeks. The intensity and frequency of heavy rains in Hawaii have increased amid human-caused global warming, experts say.

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Military Plane Crashes In Colombia, Killing At Least 1 And Injuring 77

Colombian officials say that a military cargo plane with about 125 people on board, most of them soldiers, crashed shortly after taking off in southwestern Colombia. The military command says at least one person was killed. The air force says at last 77 people have been rescued alive as rescue efforts continue at the crash site. The Hercules C-130 plane had 11 crew members and 110 soldiers on board. Defense Minister Pedro Sánchez says that the “tragic accident” occurred in Puerto Leguizamo, a remote municipality in the Amazonian province of Putumayo, that borders Peru and Ecuador.

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How does this battle compare with those of 1991, 2001 and 2003?

How does this battle compare with those of 1991, 2001 and 2003?

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The future of Iran's leadership

U.S. & Israel Continue to Crush the Iran Military

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ICE at the airports is a brilliant move

ICE At the Airports is a Brilliant Move

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Jewish Ambulances Set Ablaze In Uk, Belgium Deploys Soldiers To Jewish Sites

Police in London are investigating a suspected antisemitic hate crime attack after four vehicles belonging to a Jewish ambulance service were set on fire. Though it has not been classified as a terrorist incident, counterterror officers have been put in charge of the investigation. No one was injured. The London Fire Brigade says ambulances belonging to Hatzola Northwest, a volunteer organization that provides emergency medical response, were damaged by the fire early Monday morning. Multiple oxygen cylinders on the vehicles exploded, causing windows to break in an adjacent apartment block. Soldiers were deployed on the streets of leading Belgian cities on Monday to bolster security for the Jewish community, after what officials said were antisemitic attacks in Belgium and the Netherlands. The move follows an explosion this month at a synagogue in Liege that authorities called an antisemitic act. “From today we're putting soldiers back on the streets in Brussels and Antwerp because safety is a basic right,” Belgian Defense Minister Theo Francken said in a post on X on Monday. The deployment, in collaboration with federal police, will provide security at Jewish sites including synagogues and schools, Belgian authorities said in a press release last week. Antwerp "is again a little safer..... the Jewish community too. We say NO to antisemitism!" Francken said on Monday. The upgrade in security also follows an arson attack on a synagogue in Rotterdam and an explosion at a Jewish school in Amsterdam in neighboring The Netherlands. Dutch police have arrested five suspects, aged 17 to 19, over the synagogue attack in Rotterdam. The U.S. embassy in Oslo was also targeted in a bombing earlier this month branded by Norwegian investigators as an act of terrorism. None of the attacks caused injuries. A Belgian defense ministry spokesperson said on Monday that soldiers would be deployed in three different phases: First in Brussels and Antwerp, later in Liege. Rights advocates have raised concerns about possible attacks against Jewish communities around the world following the launch of the U.S. and Israeli war with Iran.

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Dem Shutdown Chaos Continues

Today Josh dives into the chaos still being caused by Democrats as the partial government shutdown drags on. The shutdown is now impacting airports across the country, with TSA agents not showing up for work and some reportedly quitting as the standoff continues. Josh also breaks down the latest developments in the war with Iran, including what the President said about the conflict and why some on the far left are showing peak hypocrisy with protests taking place in Cuba. Later in the show, Josh discusses a case currently being argued before the Supreme Court that could have wide-reaching ramifications for mail-in ballots and election procedures. Josh wraps up by examining the continued fallout from Joe Kent’s resignation and why the President is now weighing in directly on the situation.

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Minnesota Wild Reporter Jessi Pierce & Children Found Dead In House Fire

The National Hockey League says it is morning the death of longtime Minnesota Wild reporter Jessi Pierce and her three children in a weekend house fire. An NHL statement on Sunday said the team is devastated at the loss of 37-year-old reporter Jessi Pierce and her children. Fire crews said they responded Saturday to 911 calls of a house on fire in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. They said an adult and three children were found dead in the home. Pierce covered the Wild for NHL.com for the past decade. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

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U.S. Air System Under Strain

The strained U.S. air-travel system was stretched even further on Monday after two pilots died in a runway accident that shut New York's LaGuardia Airport and President Donald Trump deployed armed immigration agents to help with hours-long lines that have cropped up at security checkpoints nationwide. The crash between an Air Canada Express jet and a fire truck at LaGuardia injured dozens of passengers and led to hundreds of flight cancellations at the start of the working week, the latest disruption for airports and carriers already contending with a weeks-long budget standoff in Congress and surging fuel costs. Travelers have endured hours-long waits at security screening checkpoints in recent days as absentee rates have spiked among Transportation Security Administration employees who have gone without pay for more than a month. Hundreds of people were lined up on Monday at some of the nation's busiest airports, including Los Angeles and Atlanta. "If the leadership was right we wouldn’t have circumstances like this," Atlanta resident John Edwards told Reuters as he waited at the city's airport, where 42% of TSA agents were absent on Sunday. On Monday morning, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents wearing flak jackets and pistols stood guard in airports in Atlanta, New York and New Jersey, according to Reuters witnesses. They were not wearing masks, which they had done regularly while carrying out Trump's immigration crackdown in major cities. Authorities said the agents would provide crowd control, but Trump said they would also make arrests - raising concerns that the chaotic raids that have played out on the streets of Minneapolis, Chicago and elsewhere might come to the nation's airports as well. "They're able to now arrest illegals as they come into the country. That's very fertile territory," Trump told reporters. In Washington, there was little sign that the standoff between Trump's Republicans and opposition Democrats would end soon. Democrats have refused to fund the Department of Homeland Security without new curbs on immigration agents, who have killed U.S. citizens and sparked public outrage during their crackdown. Though the White House has engaged in talks, Trump said Monday he would not sign off on any compromise until Congress first passed a series of voting restrictions that Democrats have rejected, adding another potential roadblock to a deal. Airlines are also facing rising fuel costs, which have spiked since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran more than three weeks ago. United Airlines said Friday it would cut flights through the busy summer travel season, citing elevated oil prices. A separate 35-minute ground stop at nearby Newark Liberty International Airport on Monday morning added to delays after air-traffic controllers evacuated their tower because of a burning smell from an elevator, the Federal Aviation Administration said. In New York, the pilot and first officer of an Air Canada Express jet were killed when the plane collided with a fire truck while it was landing, while another nine people were hospitalized with serious injuries. The CRJ-900 plane, operated by regional partner Jazz Aviation, had been carrying 72 passengers and four crew members. Some 572 flights were cancelled, more than 50% of LaGuardia's daily total. U.S. aviation has faced a chronic shortage of air traffic controllers, but it was not immediately clear what led to the crash, and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and other officials were traveling to New York to investigate. Air-crash investigations typically find that accidents result from multiple contributing factors, rather than a single cause. Kathryn Garcia, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, said the fire truck was responding to a separate aircraft that had reported an "issue with odor." According to air traffic control audio, a controller can be heard telling the craft that a fire truck was en route and clearing a truck to cross a runway. Moments later, the controller can be heard saying: "Stop, stop, stop, truck 1 stop, truck 1, stop." On Monday morning, the Air Canada jet could be seen on the runway, surrounded by emergency vehicles, its crushed cockpit pointing skyward.

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ICE Sent at Airports to Help TSA

ICE Sent at Airports to Help TSA

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Is Iran Willing to Negotiate?

Is Iran Willing to Negotiate?

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Trump Says Iran 'Wants To Make A Deal'

President Trump is postponing his deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Hours ahead of his original Monday deadline, the president announced that the United States will delay attacks on Iranian power plants for five days. In a social media post, he said the two countries have had “very good and productive conversations” that could yield “a complete and total resolution” in the war. The president had warned of a strike against Iran’s power plants if the Iranians didn’t reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

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The Truth Of True Cruelty

While the left and their media allies clutched pearls over President Trump’s tweet about Robert Mueller, calling it the height of cruelty, the real victims of heartless Democrat policies were ignored once again.

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Trump Sends ICE To Airports, Dems Tailspin

President Trump is stepping up to protect American travelers by supplementing overwhelmed TSA agents with ICE officers, directly addressing the chaotic security lines plaguing America's major airports.

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