Category Archives: general

Fire crews continue battle at massive UMass apartment blaze

A massive apartment complex fire displaced more than 200 Amherst residents this weekend, leaving a major cleanup job and the community reeling.

### Fire Origin and Spread

The fire originated at an under-construction building located at 47 Olympia Drive. Due to its proximity, intensity, and wind conditions, the blaze quickly spread to the nearby building at 57 Olympia Drive. Both buildings have been deemed a total loss. Demolition efforts to aid in extinguishing the fire were expected to be completed over the weekend.

“The building is still burning,” Amherst Fire Chief Lindsay Stromgen told the Herald Sunday morning. “We can’t fully extinguish this because of its size, and in fact, we can’t get to the far side—you can see it’s the woods. The only way we can actually put all of the fire out is to tear it down.”

### Impact and Evacuations

No injuries were reported in the massive blaze, but around 230 residents—mostly UMass Amherst students—have been displaced from the complex. The State Fire Marshal, Amherst Fire Department, and Amherst Police Department are investigating the cause of the fire. However, according to the Amherst Fire Department, “the fire is not suspicious in nature.”

Amherst Town Manager Paul Bockelman issued a state of emergency on Saturday, urging residents to halt non-essential water use to conserve water for firefighting efforts. Fire Chief Stromgen anticipated that the state of emergency would be lifted soon as the fire department’s water needs lessened.

### University Resources and Response

UMass Amherst has compiled a dedicated webpage providing updates and resources for affected students, including information on food aid, basic needs, counseling, financial assistance, and donation opportunities. The university has placed some students in temporary on-campus residences.

“While we are incredibly relieved that no one has been injured, the Friday night fire at the Olympia Drive Apartment complex has had a significant impact on the more than 220 affected students who were displaced and lost their personal effects,” UMass President Marty Meehan said in a statement. “In recognition of that, I ask all members of the UMass community to keep these students in their thoughts and to consider supporting them directly during this difficult time.”

Meehan encouraged community members to support the Foundation Student Care and Emergency Response Fund. Additionally, a resource center has been set up on campus for affected students, and displaced residents can access dining halls for free.

“I’m deeply appreciative to Chancellor Reyes for his leadership, and thankful for all first responders, the town of Amherst, and so many others who have gone above and beyond to support our affected students and community throughout this weekend,” Meehan added. “I also wish to express my heartfelt gratitude to Governor Healey, whose consistent outreach, engagement, and partnership throughout the weekend have been an invaluable source of support to our students and the university community.”

### Fire Details and Timeline

The first 911 calls came in around 8:19 p.m. Friday, reporting a fire at the under-construction building at 47 Olympia Drive. Upon arrival, fire units found the blaze had already spread to nearby buildings.

The Amherst Fire Chief confirmed that explosions occurred at the construction site, likely caused by fuel tanks and other construction equipment. A crane also collapsed during the fire.

The construction site featured a four-story building in the framing stage—primarily wood with windows but no exterior walls or sprinkler system, according to Chief Stromgen. The building burned to the ground in about half an hour. It was situated approximately 15 feet from the 57 Olympia Drive apartment building.

Though the 57 Olympia Drive building did have a sprinkler system, Stromgen explained that these systems are designed to combat smaller fires, such as trash fires, rather than the full-scale blaze experienced here.

### Ongoing Demolition and Firefighting Efforts

On Saturday afternoon, crews began demolishing 57 Olympia Drive while the fire was still active.

“The reason that demolition is done so quickly is that the building is unstable,” Stromgen said. “There’s no way to put firefighters inside, let alone let occupants go in and get their belongings. This is totally, completely unsafe for anybody in the building.”

Remnants of the torn-down building were still smoking Sunday morning as crews worked to fully extinguish the blaze. The fire chief noted that fires continued to flare up sporadically in the still-standing units.

The entirety of the building was expected to be torn down by Sunday afternoon, with the hope that demolition and extinguishment would be completed by Monday morning. Afterward, the next steps would be turned over to the building owners.

The community continues to support the displaced residents as cleanup and recovery efforts are underway following this devastating fire. For ongoing updates and resources, please visit the UMass Amherst dedicated fire response page.
https://www.bostonherald.com/2025/11/09/fire-crews-continue-battle-at-massive-umass-apartment-blaze/

CBS’s Bari Weiss Fires Its Climate Crisis & Race & Culture Hysteria Units

**CBS News Lays Off Most of Its Climate Crisis Production Staff Amid Leadership Changes**

CBS News recently announced the dismissal of most of its climate crisis production team as part of broader layoffs affecting dozens of news staff members last week. Under the leadership of the new Editor-in-Chief, Bari Weiss, the network appears to be scaling back its dedicated climate crisis coverage.

Tracy Wholf, the coordinating producer of the climate crisis unit, was among those let go. Reports suggest that without Wholf, the climate unit has effectively been disbanded. Wholf’s departure followed an internal email she sent advocating for the inclusion of climate change context in reports about Hurricane Melissa. She had recommended adding a sentence linking the storm’s rapid intensification to climate change: “The above-average Atlantic Ocean temperatures, made worse by climate change, helped Melissa rapidly intensify into a category 5 storm.” Wholf cited research from Imperial College as support for this assertion.

In addition to changes in the climate coverage team, CBS News also dismantled its race and culture unit. This move led to accusations of discrimination from former employees. Trey Sherman, an associate producer in the race and culture unit who was laid off, stated, “Every producer on my team who got laid off is a person of color. Every person who gets to stay and will be relocated within the company is a white person.”

The network’s new owners, Charles and Louis Ellison, have expressed a commitment to restoring “real journalism” and delivering accurate, unbiased reporting without racial or political agendas.

Commenting on these developments, Charles Rotter of the “Watts Up With That” blog emphasized the importance of returning to traditional journalistic standards. He noted that reporters once clearly distinguished between evidence and opinion, data and doctrine. Today, however, many reporters appear to defend predetermined narratives rather than investigate the truth. Rotter suggests that CBS’s shift away from this mindset could mark a return to sanity in journalism. Environmental issues may still be covered, but ideally without assuming predetermined conclusions.

As these changes unfold, viewers may soon encounter weather reports and environmental coverage that focus on facts rather than politicized messaging.

**About Bari Weiss**

Bari Weiss has garnered attention not only for her editorial decisions but also for her strong public stance on various issues. Known for her pro-Israel views, she has faced ongoing threats, reflecting the contentious environment surrounding media and politics today.

**Reflections on Current Times**

The evolving media landscape and societal tensions have sparked thoughtful commentary from various voices:

> “I have never written that there is a threat of fascism in America. I always considered the idea overwrought. But now I believe there really is such a threat and it will come draped not in an American flag, but in the name of tolerance and health.”
> — Dennis Prager

> “It’s better to live one day as a lion than a dozen years as a sheep.”
> — Charles M. Schulz

> “How do you tell a Communist? Well, it’s someone who reads Marx and Lenin. And how do you tell an anti-Communist? It’s someone who understands Marx and Lenin.”
> — Ronald Reagan

> “The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the convinced Communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction (i.e., the reality of experience) and the distinction between true and false (i.e., the standards of thought) no longer exist.”
> — Hannah Arendt, *The Origins of Totalitarianism*

As CBS News navigates these changes, the hope among many is for a renewed focus on fact-based, unbiased journalism that serves the public interest without advancing particular ideological narratives.
https://www.independentsentinel.com/cbss-bari-weiss-fires-its-climate-crisis-race-culture-hysteria-units/

DHS: ICE recibió más de 200.000 solicitudes de empleo para arrestar a inmigrantes “delincuentes”

El Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas (ICE) ha recibido más de 200,000 solicitudes de ciudadanos que buscan unirse a la agencia “para ayudar a expulsar de Estados Unidos a los peores delincuentes inmigrantes ilegales”, informó este viernes el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional de Estados Unidos (DHS) en un comunicado.

La secretaria de Seguridad Nacional, Kristi Noem, declaró que los estadounidenses “están respondiendo al llamado de su país” para servir en las tareas de detención y deportación de inmigrantes. “Los estadounidenses patriotas desean defender la patria expulsando de Estados Unidos a los peores delincuentes inmigrantes ilegales”, afirmó Noem.

Según el DHS, la agencia ofrece incentivos económicos para atraer nuevos aspirantes, entre ellos bonos de firma de hasta $50,000 dólares, reembolso o condonación de préstamos estudiantiles, y beneficios de jubilación mejorados. También se incluyen compensaciones adicionales para agentes especiales y oficiales de deportación, como el 25% de pago extra por disponibilidad operativa y horas extras por tareas “administrativamente incontrolables”.

Aunque el DHS destacó el interés “sin precedentes” por incorporarse al ICE, el comunicado no precisa desde cuándo se contabilizan las solicitudes ni cuántas han sido aprobadas o están en proceso de revisión.

### Defensores Nacionales

El Servicio de Ciudadanía e Inmigración de Estados Unidos (USCIS) también reportó un récord en su reciente campaña de contratación. Desde el 30 de septiembre, la agencia ha recibido más de 35,000 solicitudes para formar parte del programa Defensores de la Seguridad Nacional, la mayor cifra en su historia, según el comunicado.

El director del USCIS, Joseph Edlow, aseguró que “la campaña Defensores de la Patria ya ha sido un éxito rotundo y ha calado hondo en el pueblo estadounidense”. Añadió que los nuevos reclutas “no solo solicitan un empleo, sino que se postulan para proteger nuestros valores y defender nuestra patria”.

De acuerdo con el DHS, los seleccionados se encargarán de entrevistar inmigrantes, revisar solicitudes y detectar casos de extranjeros con antecedentes penales o presuntamente vinculados a actividades ilícitas.

El USCIS ya ha realizado “cientos de ofertas de empleo” y prevé incorporar a los primeros candidatos “en las próximas semanas”, dijeron.

Los Defensores Nacionales podrían recibir bonos de hasta $50,000 dólares, reembolsos educativos y opciones de teletrabajo o flexibilidad laboral para algunos cargos. Según la agencia, el objetivo es atraer rápidamente a “personas comprometidas con los valores nacionales” y acelerar los procesos de selección para puestos que no requieren título universitario.

Sigue leyendo:
https://eldiariony.com/2025/11/09/dhs-ice-recibio-mas-de-200-000-solicitudes-de-empleo-para-arrestar-a-inmigrantes-delincuentes/

‘Bill & Ted’ star Alex Winter says he would not have been okay if he hadn’t escaped Hollywood spotlight

**”Bill & Ted” Star Alex Winter Opens Up About Escaping the Pitfalls of Show Business**

*NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!*

Alex Winter, known for his iconic role in the “Bill & Ted” franchise, has revealed how escaping the harsh realities of show business was crucial for his well-being. Currently starring on Broadway alongside his “Bill & Ted” co-star Keanu Reeves in *Waiting for Gadot*, Winter opened up in an interview with *The Guardian* about the challenges of early success and how surviving years of sexual abuse and trauma compelled him to leave Hollywood and start anew.

For much of his teenage years, Winter, who made his Broadway debut at just 12 years old, worked tirelessly both onstage and behind the scenes. In 1987, he landed a breakthrough role as Marko in the vampire cult classic *The Lost Boys*. Two years later, he gained widespread recognition playing Bill S. Preston in the beloved comedy *Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure.*

Winter moved to Los Angeles just shy of graduating from NYU’s film school and began focusing on work behind the camera, directing music videos and commercials, and co-writing various television hits. However, by the age of 26, he felt “fried” and decided he needed an escape.

“I just wanted to get the hell out of the public eye, and just be on the tube, going to my office in Soho and start a family,” Winter shared. He shifted his focus to directing and filming documentaries, expressing satisfaction with this new direction. “My career is where I want it, which is that I have the ability to do whatever interests me the most,” he added. “But I would not have been OK had I not split.”

### Years of Trauma Behind the Scenes

In 2018, Winter courageously disclosed that he was sexually abused by an unnamed adult who has since passed away. At the time of the abuse, Winter was performing alongside Yul Brynner in *The King and I*, while grappling with intense and prolonged trauma.

“There was ‘The King and I’ eight shows a week, happy face feeling genuinely happy in that role. Great relationship with my mom and dad; great relationship with the co-workers around me; doing interviews, signing autographs, living this amazing … and then this nightmarish other existence,” he told *The Guardian* in 2020.

Winter also revealed the long-lasting effects of his experience, including extreme post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). “It will wreak havoc on you. It’s a way in which you relate to the world around you and to yourself, and it’s very nuanced, but you can become very fractured,” he explained. “You slowly compartmentalize. You keep this thing over here, you keep that thing over there, and you don’t have any natural equilibrium. That fracturing just gets worse and worse and worse.”

He described how by his mid-20s, he was barely holding himself together. “By your mid-20s, it’s like you’re holding those different selves together with duct tape. That’s when you see kids overdosing or blowing their heads off. In my case, I was just like, I need to stop doing this thing where these eyes are on me all the time and I don’t feel safe or comfortable … I just want to go ride the subway and help raise a family and do my writing and directing.”

Winter has also warned that children placed in high-pressure Hollywood environments will inevitably face psychological repercussions.

*For more entertainment news and updates, stay tuned and subscribe to our newsletter.*
https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/bill-ted-star-alex-winter-says-he-would-not-have-been-okay-he-hadnt-escaped-hollywood-spotlight

Pipe Bomber’s Actions Enabled Speaker Pelosi to Certify the 2020 Election for Joe Biden

Published November 9, 2025

# A Hidden Trigger: Pipe Bombs and the Certification of the 2020 Election

On January 6, 2021, Congress convened in Washington, D.C. to carry out the final constitutional step of certifying the results of the 2020 presidential election, formally recording the electoral votes for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.

At nearly the same time, law enforcement discovered two improvised explosive devices — pipe bombs — planted near the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the Republican National Committee (RNC) on Capitol Hill. While the motives and perpetrators behind the bombs remain unresolved, a report by the House Subcommittee concluded:

> “The pipe bombs placed many lawmakers, staff, law enforcement, and residents in harm’s way. The devices played a role in diverting law enforcement personnel from the Capitol at a critical time.”

## How the Bombs Arguably Enabled the Certification

From a right-leaning vantage point, one can argue the following sequence of events:

### Diversion of Security Resources

The discovery of bombs outside the RNC and DNC forced federal authorities — including the United States Capitol Police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation — to divert manpower and attention away from the Capitol building itself.

As the report states, while this diversion did not guarantee the breach of the Capitol would succeed, it “plainly worked” as a disruption.

### Timing of the Breach and the Certification Timeline

The joint session of Congress reconvened later that evening and completed the certification of the electoral vote count.

With resources already stretched thin by the bomb scenes, the security posture at the Capitol was under far greater strain, arguably easing pressure on Congress to complete its work.

### Political Optics and Momentum

The events of that day created chaos and urgency. For Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her team, ensuring the certification proceeded despite the chaos was both a statement of resilience and a political imperative.

The diversion of security forces arguably reduced the time and space for other actors to delay or obstruct the process in Congress.

### The Certification Is Completed

Regardless of external events, the certification of Biden/Harris moved forward and was finalized.

## Why This Matters

### Accountability and Security

The unresolved bomb-plantings raise questions about whether law enforcement preparedness was sufficient, and whether political theatre exploited those failures.

### Narrative Control

For those on the right who questioned the timeline or legitimacy of the certification process, the bomb diversion narrative offers a plausible explanation for how the certification went forward despite widespread objections and contested claims.

### Policy Implications

If a diversion facilitated the certification environment, then reforms around protective coordination, perimeter security, and the resource demands of simultaneous threats become more urgent.

## Counterpoints Worth Noting

– The exact intent of the pipe bomber(s) is unverified. The report itself calls the “diversion” interpretation “pure speculation.”
– The certification would have happened under constitutional processes; the bombs alone did not guarantee the outcome.
– Many observers argue that broader legal and electoral mechanisms (state certifications, court decisions, etc.) were the primary enablers, rather than on-site events in Washington, D.C.

## Implications of the Pipe Bomb Diversion on the 2020 Election Certification

### Heightened Security Awareness

The pipe bombs exposed vulnerabilities in Capitol security and the coordination of federal law enforcement. From a right-leaning perspective, this underscores the need for stronger contingency planning during politically charged events. The fact that a few devices could divert critical resources highlights systemic weaknesses in protecting lawmakers and sensitive processes.

### Acceleration of Certification Despite Objections

The diversion of security resources arguably reduced obstacles for Congress to proceed with certifying the election. For those skeptical of the 2020 election outcome, this raises questions about how external events can influence legislative procedures intentionally or unintentionally.

### Political Leverage and Narrative Control

Chaos on the ground created by the bombs gave political leaders, particularly Speaker Pelosi, both urgency and leverage to ensure the certification was completed. Right-leaning analysts could argue this illustrates how crises can be used to frame political narratives and shape outcomes, even indirectly.

### Precedent for Handling Future Election Disputes

The events of January 6, including the bomb discoveries, set a precedent in managing contested elections. Policymakers may now weigh the balance between security, transparency, and the pace of certification. Right-leaning observers might interpret this as evidence that election processes can be influenced by events outside normal legal channels.

### Legal and Investigative Ramifications

The unresolved nature of the pipe bomber case leaves questions about accountability. From this perspective, if such events are left unaddressed or unexplained, they could be perceived as facilitating outcomes favorable to one political side.

### Public Perception and Trust

Finally, the bomb-related disruptions feed into broader debates about election integrity and institutional trust. Right-leaning viewpoints may see this as further proof that procedural vulnerabilities can inadvertently empower certain political agendas.

## Overall Takeaway: A Crucial, Overlooked Factor in the 2020 Election Certification

The events of January 6, 2021, are often reduced to the image of rioters storming the Capitol. Yet, a right-leaning examination reveals a more complex story: the presence of pipe bombs near the DNC and RNC played a pivotal, though underreported, role in shaping that day’s outcomes.

These devices forced federal and local law enforcement to divert attention and resources at a moment when the certification of the 2020 election hung in the balance. From this perspective, the bombs were more than a security threat — they inadvertently created conditions that allowed Speaker Nancy Pelosi and congressional Democrats to push through the certification without major interruption.

While the Constitution ensures that Congress certifies electoral votes, the realities on the ground — distractions, threats, and logistical strain — can influence the pace and ease of such processes.

The implications are profound for conservatives and right-leaning observers: the January 6 events show that even small, seemingly peripheral actions like the placement of pipe bombs can have outsized effects on political outcomes. They highlight vulnerabilities in Capitol security, the influence of chaotic events on procedural decisions, and the importance of vigilance in protecting electoral integrity.

Ultimately, the pipe bombs serve as a stark reminder that the integrity of American elections is not just determined by ballots, courts, or laws, but also by the real-world circumstances surrounding the counting and certification of votes.

For those questioning the processes of January 6, it is a cautionary tale: external forces, even violent disruptions, can tip the scales—intentionally or not—toward a predetermined outcome.

In this light, January 6 was not merely a day of protest or breach; it was a convergence of political maneuvering, security challenges, and unforeseen events — all of which collectively enabled the certification of Joe Biden’s 2020 victory.

Recognizing these dynamics is essential for understanding both the fragility and the resilience of the American electoral process.

**Sources:**
JOE HOFT EXCLUSIVE: Pipe Bomber’s Actions Enabled Speaker Pelosi to Certify the 2020 Election for Joe Biden.
https://newscats.org/pipe-bombers-actions-enabled-speaker-pelosi-to-certify-the-2020-election-for-joe-biden

RB Jonathan Taylor’s huge day leads Colts to overtime win vs. Falcons

Jonathan Taylor delivered a huge performance in the Colts’ thrilling overtime victory over the Falcons. It’s no surprise that Taylor once again earned the title of Colts Player of the Game after an outstanding display on the field.

The sixth-year running back recorded a season-high 244 rushing yards and three rushing touchdowns on 32 carries during Indianapolis’ 31-25 overtime win against Atlanta in Berlin, Germany. Taylor’s standout performance included an 83-yard touchdown run, the longest rushing play of the season, breaking Falcons running back Bijan Robinson’s previous mark of 81 yards.

In overtime, Taylor sealed the victory by scoring the game-winning touchdown. He finished the game by gaining 33 yards on five consecutive carries during the final drives. With an impressive average of 7.6 yards per carry, Taylor led the Colts in both rushing yards and scoring. Remarkably, he ran for just 11 yards fewer than quarterback Daniel Jones, who threw for 255 yards.

Heading into the game, Taylor needed 105 rushing yards to surpass the 1,000-yard mark for the season. After his dominant outing, reaching a 2,000+ yard rushing season now seems well within reach. In total, he amassed 286 all-purpose yards, adding three receptions for 42 yards. Taylor was also one of three Colts players to record three or more receptions during the game.

Through the first 10 weeks of the season, Jonathan Taylor has tallied 15 rushing touchdowns and 1,139 rushing yards, underscoring his vital role in the Colts’ offense. His remarkable consistency and explosive plays continue to make him a force to be reckoned with on the field.
https://coltswire.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/colts/2025/11/09/jonathan-taylors-huge-day-leads-colts-overtime-win-falcons/87183294007/

Emeka Egbuka’s sixth TD of the season gives Bucs 7-0 lead

The Buccaneers are off to a strong start at home against the Patriots. Quarterback Baker Mayfield threw a 21-yard touchdown pass to Emeka Egbuka, giving Tampa Bay an early 7-0 lead. This score capped a quick six-play, 65-yard drive that energized the team and the home crowd.

Earlier in the drive, Mayfield and Egbuka connected on a crucial 24-yard gain that moved the Bucs into New England territory. Egbuka continues to impress this season and now leads all rookie receivers with six receiving touchdowns.

Despite dealing with a hamstring injury recently, the No. 19 overall pick appears healthy and ready to contribute on the field this Sunday.
https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/emeka-egbukas-sixth-td-of-the-season-gives-bucs-7-0-lead

Five things we learned in Miami Hurricanes’ needed win over Syracuse

The Miami Hurricanes bounced back from their disappointing loss to SMU with a four-touchdown win over a struggling Syracuse team, keeping their playoff hopes alive. Miami needed the win, and ultimately got the victory. Here are five things we learned from Saturday evening’s win:

### 1. The Offense Started Poorly

Hurricanes fans were getting restless in the first half as Miami’s first four drives ended in punts. UM did not get on the board through the first 27 minutes of the game against a defense that has been one of the worst in the Power 4. Several things tripped the Hurricanes up. A potential big play was batted down at the line, and UM made mistakes like dropped passes that caused drives to stall.

As halftime neared, Miami’s offense was clearly struggling. It was a bad look for an offense that was hovering just above 50th in the nation. Going forward, the Hurricanes will need to put pressure on teams early.

“I thought the players attacked the opportunities with a lot of energy and I think after some moments of struggling, we finally just cut it loose,” Miami coach Mario Cristobal said. “I think it’s that simple. We called it more freely, played more freely. We just cut it loose and stopped worrying about the outcome and started focusing more on the process.”

### 2. But It Ultimately Showed Up

After a slow first half, UM started putting up points. Offensive coordinator Shannon Dawson reached into his bag of tricks, pulling new plays out including running wide receiver Malachi Toney as a Wildcat quarterback. Toney threw a touchdown pass to quarterback Carson Beck, and Beck tossed a backwards pass to offensive lineman Francis Mauigoa for a touchdown.

The Hurricanes ended the game with 385 total yards, a bit below their season average. They scored 31 points and put the game out of reach by the start of the fourth quarter. UM also got a spark on offense from freshman running back Girard Pringle Jr., who averaged 7.9 yards per carry and scored his fourth touchdown of the season.

“Great eyes. He sees it really well,” Cristobal said. “Very explosive—you saw that. He has a different gear as well.”

### 3. Defense Wins Games

While Miami’s offense struggled early, the defense dominated. Syracuse’s offense was not the toughest test Miami’s defense has faced, but the Hurricanes aced it all the same. Miami held Syracuse scoreless until the third quarter and constantly caused havoc.

UM finished the game with a season-high three sacks and 11 tackles for loss. Miami also had three takeaways: two interceptions including a pick-six by Keionte Scott, and a fumble recovery.

“At the end of the day, if the opponent doesn’t score, they don’t win,” defensive end Akheem Mesidor said. “That’s the mindset.”

The one blemish on the defense’s record was the run defense. Syracuse rushed for 161 yards, or 214 yards when adjusted for sack yardage. It was UM’s worst performance against the run this season.

### 4. Penalties Cleaned Up

The Hurricanes have battled penalty issues all season, but fouls were not a big problem during this game. Miami finished with five penalties for 54 yards, which, while not excellent, was better than the eight penalties for more than 60 yards they were averaging entering the game.

“I think when all three facets of the game—special teams, defense, offense—are working hand in hand, it creates those types of clean games,” Beck said. “You eliminate the penalties, you eliminate the turnovers, and usually you have efficient plays that move in a positive direction, which ultimately leads to wins.”

Importantly, the offensive line cleaned up its penalties. That unit did not have a single penalty called against it Saturday after committing five pre-snap penalties in the loss to SMU.

### 5. Akheem Mesidor Dominates

UM defensive end Rueben Bain Jr. has earned much attention for his excellent season, and rightfully so. But Bain’s counterpart on the opposite end of the defensive line deserves just as much recognition. Mesidor has been outstanding this season, and he had one of his best games as a Hurricane.

Mesidor finished with five tackles, a team-leading 3.5 tackles for loss, and 1.5 sacks. Pro Football Focus gave Mesidor a team-best defensive grade of 87 for this game. His season defensive grade is 90.3, ranking 19th nationally among defensive players with 200 or more snaps.

“As a defensive lineman, the best thing for me is getting sacks,” Mesidor said. “So to be able to do that and then have defensive line coach Jason Taylor come out and celebrate with me is amazing.”

The Hurricanes showcased resilience and growth in their win over Syracuse. If they build on these performances, especially enhancing their offensive starts and shoring up run defense, Miami’s playoff hopes remain very much alive.
https://www.orlandosentinel.com/2025/11/09/five-things-we-learned-in-miami-hurricanes-needed-win-over-syracuse/

How to Watch Ravens vs Vikings: Live Stream NFL, TV Channel

Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens face off against Justin Jefferson and the Minnesota Vikings in Week 10 of the NFL season. The game takes place on Sunday, November 9, 2025, at U.S. Bank Stadium.

**How to Watch Ravens vs. Vikings**
– **When:** Sunday, November 9, 2025
– **Time:** 1:00 PM ET
– **TV Channel:** FOX
– **Live Stream:** Fubo (try for free)

The Ravens arrive with a 3-5 record, averaging 25.3 points and 183.0 passing yards per game. On the ground, they are strong, rushing for an average of 135.5 yards per game, ranking 6th in the league. Quarterback Lamar Jackson has thrown for 1,073 yards with 14 touchdowns and only one interception so far this season. Running back Derrick Henry has been a powerhouse, accumulating 629 rushing yards and six touchdowns. Wide receiver Zay Flowers has contributed significantly with 550 receiving yards through eight games. With Jackson back full-time in the lineup, the Ravens are in a much better position to stack up wins.

On the other side, the Minnesota Vikings enter this matchup with a 4-4 record. They average 22.8 points, 191.9 passing yards, and 99.9 rushing yards per game. Wide receiver Justin Jefferson has caught 47 passes for 649 yards and two touchdowns. Rookie quarterback J.J. McCarthy has seen limited action, throwing for 444 yards, four touchdowns, and four interceptions this season.

Defensively, the Vikings have been solid against the pass, allowing just 194.5 yards per game. However, they have given up 122.3 rushing yards per game and allow 23.3 points on average.

This promises to be an exciting NFL matchup that you won’t want to miss! Make sure to tune in and catch all the action live.

**Live Stream Ravens vs. Vikings with Fubo:**
Start your free trial today! Fubo offers a free trial, allowing you to watch the NFL on local CBS and FOX broadcasts every Sunday. You can also live stream NFL RedZone and access football coverage all season long on NBC, CBS, FOX, ESPN, NFL Network, and more. Regional restrictions may apply.

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https://www.newsweek.com/how-to-watch-ravens-vs-vikings-live-stream-nfl-tv-channel-11017454

The impossibility of perfect fairness in transaction ordering

For decades, research in distributed systems, especially in Byzantine consensus and state machine replication (SMR), has focused on two main goals: consistency and liveness. Consistency means all nodes agree on the same sequence of transactions, while liveness ensures the system continues to add new ones.

Still, these properties do not stop bad actors from changing the order of transactions after they are received. In public blockchains, that gap in traditional consensus guarantees has become a serious problem. Validators, block builders, or sequencers can exploit their privileged role in block ordering for financial gain—a practice known as maximal extractable value (MEV).

This manipulation includes profitable frontrunning, backrunning, and sandwiching of transactions. Because transaction execution order determines validity or profitability in DeFi applications, the integrity of transaction ordering is vital for maintaining fairness and trust.

## Introducing Transaction Order-Fairness

To address this critical security gap, **transaction order-fairness** has been proposed as a third essential consensus property. Fair-ordering protocols ensure that the final order of transactions depends on external, objective factors, such as arrival times (or receiving order), and is resistant to adversarial reordering.

By limiting how much power a block proposer has to reorder transactions, these protocols move blockchains closer to being transparent, predictable, and MEV-resistant.

## The Condorcet Paradox and the Impossibility of Ideal Fairness

The most intuitive and strongest notion of fairness is **Receive-Order-Fairness (ROF)**. Informally defined as “first received, first output,” ROF dictates that if a sufficient number of transactions (tx) arrive at a majority of nodes earlier than another transaction (tx′), then the system should order tx before tx′ for execution.

However, achieving this universally accepted “order fairness” is fundamentally impossible unless all nodes can communicate instantaneously (i.e., operating in an instantly synchronous external network). This impossibility arises from a surprising connection to social choice theory, specifically the **Condorcet paradox**.

The Condorcet paradox illustrates how, even when every individual node maintains a transitive internal ordering of transactions, the collective preference across the system can result in non-transitive cycles. For example:

– A majority of nodes receive transaction A before B,
– A majority receive B before C,
– A majority receive C before A.

Hence, the three majority preferences form a loop (A → B → C → A). This means that no single consistent ordering of transactions A, B, and C can satisfy all majority preferences simultaneously.

This paradox demonstrates why perfectly achieving Receive-Order-Fairness is impossible in asynchronous networks or even in synchronous networks with long external network delays.

## Hedera Hashgraph and the Flaw of Median Timestamping

Hedera, which employs the Hashgraph consensus algorithm, seeks to approximate a strong notion of receive-order fairness (ROF). It assigns each transaction a final timestamp, computed as the median of all nodes’ local timestamps for that transaction.

However, this approach is inherently prone to manipulation. A single adversarial node can deliberately distort its local timestamps and invert the final ordering of two transactions, even when all honest participants received them in the correct order.

**Example:**

Consider five consensus nodes (A, B, C, D, and E) where Node E acts maliciously. Two transactions, tx₁ and tx₂, are broadcast to the network. All honest nodes receive tx₁ before tx₂, so the expected final order should be tx₁ → tx₂.

But adversary Node E assigns:

– tx₁ a later timestamp (3)
– tx₂ an earlier timestamp (2)

to skew the median.

When the protocol computes medians:

– For tx₁, timestamps are (1, 1, 4, 4, 3) → median is 3
– For tx₂, timestamps are (2, 2, 5, 5, 2) → median is 2

Because the final timestamp of tx₁ (3) is greater than that of tx₂ (2), the protocol outputs tx₂ → tx₁, reversing the true order observed by all honest nodes.

This example shows a critical flaw: the median function, although seemingly neutral, can be exploited by even a single dishonest participant to bias the final transaction order.

As a result, Hashgraph’s often-touted “fair timestamping” offers only a surprisingly weak notion of fairness. It fails to guarantee receive-order fairness and depends on a permissioned validator set rather than on cryptographic guarantees.

## Achieving Practical Fairness Guarantees

To circumvent the theoretical impossibility revealed by Condorcet, practical fair-ordering schemes must relax the fairness definition.

The **Aequitas** protocols introduced the criterion of **Block-Order-Fairness (BOF)**, or batch-order-fairness.

BOF dictates that if sufficiently many nodes receive a transaction tx before another transaction tx′, then tx must be delivered in a block *before or at the same time* as tx′. That is, no honest node can deliver tx′ in a block after tx. This relaxes ROF’s strict requirement of “must be delivered before” to “must be delivered no later than.”

### Practical Example of BOF

Consider three consensus nodes (A, B, and C) and three transactions: tx₁, tx₂, and tx₃.

A transaction is considered “received earlier” if at least two of the three nodes (a majority) observe it first. Applying majority voting to determine the global order:

– tx₁ → tx₂ (agreed by A and C)
– tx₂ → tx₃ (agreed by A and B)
– tx₃ → tx₁ (agreed by B and C)

These preferences create a loop: tx₁ → tx₂ → tx₃ → tx₁, which means strict ROF is impossible.

**BOF resolves this by grouping all conflicting transactions into the same batch or block instead of forcing one to come before another.** The protocol outputs:

> Block B₁ = {tx₁, tx₂, tx₃}

From the protocol’s perspective, all three transactions happen simultaneously. Inside the block, a deterministic tie-breaker (such as a hash value) decides the exact execution order.

This approach ensures fairness for every pair of transactions and maintains a consistent final transaction log where each transaction is processed no later than the ones preceding it.

Importantly, BOF does **not** result in partial ordering. Every node still agrees on a single, linear sequence of transactions. Transactions inside each block remain arranged in a fixed execution order.

When no conflicts occur, the protocol achieves the stronger ROF property.

## Limitations of Aequitas and the Introduction of Themis

While Aequitas successfully achieves BOF, it faces significant challenges:

– Very high communication complexity.
– Guarantees only **weak liveness**, meaning a transaction’s delivery is guaranteed only after completing the entire Condorcet cycle it belongs to. This could cause arbitrary delays if cycles chain together.

To improve upon this, the **Themis** protocol was introduced, enforcing the same strong BOF property but with improved communication efficiency.

Themis uses three key techniques:

1. **Batch Unspooling**
2. **Deferred Ordering**
3. **Stronger Intra-Batch Guarantees**

### Themis Protocol in Action

In its standard form, Themis requires each participant to exchange messages with most nodes, causing communication cost to grow quadratically with network size.

However, in **SNARK-Themis**, nodes use succinct cryptographic proofs to verify fairness without direct communication with every other participant. This optimization reduces communication complexity to linear growth, enabling scalability in large networks.

**Example:**

Five nodes (A-E) receive transactions tx₁, tx₂, and tx₃ with differing local orders due to network latency, forming a Condorcet cycle.

Instead of waiting for the cycle to resolve completely, Themis:

– Identifies all transactions in the cycle as a **strongly connected component (SCC)**
– Outputs them as a batch-in-progress:

> Batch B₁ = {tx₁, tx₂, tx₃}

By doing this, Themis keeps the system live and avoids stalling by allowing continued processing of new transactions while finalizing internal batch order.

## Summary: The Evolution of Fairness in Distributed Systems

The concept of perfect fairness in transaction ordering may seem straightforward: whoever’s transaction reaches the network first should be processed first.

However, as the Condorcet paradox illustrates, this ideal cannot hold in real distributed systems. Nodes experience different transaction orders, and conflicting views prevent any protocol from always producing a universally “correct” sequence without compromise.

Hedera’s Hashgraph attempts to approximate this ideal via median timestamps but relies more on trust than proof. A single dishonest participant can skew the median and flip transaction order, showing that “fair timestamping” is not truly fair.

Protocols like Aequitas and Themis move the discussion forward by acknowledging what is achievable. Instead of chasing the impossible, they redefine fairness to preserve order integrity under real network constraints.

This evolution draws a clear line between perceived fairness and provable fairness. True transaction-order integrity in decentralized systems must rely not on reputation, validator trust, or permissioned control, but on cryptographic verification embedded within the protocol itself.

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