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Congressional disputes over ICE shooting could lead to shutdown

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TUESDAY, JANUARY 13

ICE SHOOTING DISPUTES COULD SHUT DOWN GOVERNMENT  Some lawmakers are escalating widespread calls for disciplinary action against the ICE agent who shot Renee Good and increased oversight of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. Others are rejecting the effort. The disagreements in Congress could lead to a government shutdown at the end of January.  READ
SUPREME COURT HEARS 2 KEY WOMEN’S SPORTS CASES  The Supreme Court is set to hear oral arguments in two pivotal cases on “transgender” participation in women’s sports today, a step toward deciding whether two states are constitutionally allowed to have laws protecting female athletes. Here are the details.  READ
IRAN CALLS FOR NEGOTIATION, WARNS AGAINST WAR  Iran’s top diplomat yesterday said the nation is “fully prepared for war,” warning it will target Israeli and U.S. military assets in the region if President Donald Trump follows through on threats to strike. Iran is also prepared to negotiate, the diplomat said, “but these negotiations should be fair, with equal rights and based on mutual respect.”  READ
SENATOR KELLY SUES HEGSETH OVER CENSURE  Arizona Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly filed a lawsuit yesterday against Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, alleging unconstitutional retaliation over a November video in which Kelly told U.S. troops they “can” and “must” refuse unlawful orders from the Trump administration.  READ
VANCE REPORTEDLY DISGUSTED BY SEXUALIZED AI IMAGES ON X  As AI-generated sexual exploitation prompts international regulatory action, U.S. Vice President JD Vance has reportedly acknowledged the moral gravity of the issue. In a private meeting, Vance described the proliferation of sexually manipulated AI images on X as “entirely unacceptable.”  READ
POPE LEO PROCLAIMS JUBILEE YEAR FOR ST FRANCIS  In commemoration of the 800th anniversary of the death of Saint Francis of Assisi, Pope Leo XIV has proclaimed Jan. 10, 2026 to Jan. 10, 2027, an extraordinary Jubilee Year! Here’s how Catholics can obtain a plenary indulgence during this time.  READ
POPE MEETS WITH VENEZUELA’S MACHADO AT VATICAN  Pope Leo met privately with Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado at the Vatican yesterday. Machado is currently on a diplomatic tour that will include meetings with several world leaders, reportedly including Trump.  READ
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FEMALE LAWMAKERS URGE COURT: PROTECT WOMEN’S SPORTS  A coalition of 207 female lawmakers and 38 family policy organizations from across the U.S. has filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court, urging the justices to uphold laws in Idaho and West Virginia that keep male athletes out of women’s and girls’ sports competitions. The Supreme Court will hear arguments in the cases today.  READ
BISHOP BARRON CALLS FOR DEFEAT OF IRANIAN REGIME  Bishop Robert Barron praised the bravery of Iran’s protesters in a statement on social media yesterday, decrying the theocratic government as “a source of so much mischief and suffering these past several decades” and praying it “will find its way to the trash-heap of history.”  READ
WHY DO WE FAIL IN OUR NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS?  Not pointing fingers! But have you already begun to buckle under the resolutions you just made at the beginning of the month? Why does this always seem to happen? Here’s the scientific answer.  READ
CATHOLIC 101  Some of the weirdest passages in Scripture are the ones about the Nephilim. Who were the Nephilim? WHAT were the Nephilim?  READ
SAINT OF THE DAY  Less than 10 years after St. Hilary (c. 310–367) converted to the Catholic faith, the people of Poitiers called on him to be their bishop. Not long after his ordination to the episcopacy, Hilary was exiled for his orthodox beliefs by Emperor Constantius II. Rather than becoming discouraged, Hilary continued to propagate the faith. He wrote his most famous work, “On the Trinity,” during his exile.  READ

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