Category Archives: social

Madhuri Dixit’s Canada show organisers clarify delay caused by miscommunication from her team: “This delay was entirely beyond the control of True Sound Live Ltd”

A day after Madhuri Dixit faced backlash for allegedly arriving three hours late to a live event in Canada, the organisers of the show, True Sound Live Ltd., issued a statement clarifying the reason behind the delay.

The event, titled *Madhuri Dixit: The Golden Girl of Bollywood*, took place on November 2 at Toronto’s Great Canadian Casino Resort.

**Madhuri Dixit’s Canada Show Organisers Clarify Delay Caused by Miscommunication from Her Team**
According to the organisers, the delay was caused due to miscommunication from the actress’s own management team. The company stated that Madhuri was “misinformed” about her call time, leading to confusion and frustration among attendees who had been waiting for her performance.

The clarification came after social media users criticised both the organisers and Madhuri for the delay and lack of transparency about the event format.

Labeling the controversy as “misleading social media commentary,” the organisers issued the following statement:

> “We at True Sound Live Ltd. would like to clarify the facts regarding the recent *Madhuri Dixit: The Golden Girl of Bollywood* show held in Toronto, following misleading social media commentary. The event commenced on time with a high-energy opening act featuring exceptional singers from Indian Idol, exactly as scheduled.”

They further explained:

> “The show’s format, as communicated to Madhuri Dixit’s management, included a Q&A session at 8:30 PM followed by Madhuri’s 60-minute performance segment. However, despite our production team’s readiness and continuous communication throughout the evening, Madhuri Dixit’s own management team misinformed her about the call time, resulting in her late arrival around 10 PM. This delay was entirely beyond the control of True Sound Live Ltd.”

The organisers also blamed “certain backstage individuals” for creating further confusion during the event.

> “We also want to clarify that certain backstage individuals, including Shreya Gupta, were preoccupied with personal video recordings instead of supporting the artist’s timely coordination, which further added to the confusion. Attached videos clearly show Madhuri Dixit’s on-stage presence and performance, and we invite the public to view the footage and judge objectively,” the statement added.

A video shared by a user named Parwaiz Dhanani showed Madhuri dancing to her popular number *Mera Piya Ghar Aaya* from the 1995 film *Yaraana*.

However, criticism continued online as several attendees accused the organisers of poor communication.

One person wrote:

> “Everyone please report the organizers to Consumer Protection Ontario. I just got off the phone, and this falls under ‘Misrepresentation.’ It’s illegal for a business or individual to give you false information about themselves or the product or service they offer.”

Another attendee expressed disappointment:

> “I am glad I saw her, but I left at 11:05 PM as I had work the next day. I honestly don’t know if it was the organizers or her who decided she would come at 10 PM. On my ticket, it said the start time was 7:30 PM. It did not mention any pre-shows. I expected it to be a chat with some singing and dancing. It just started way too late and disrespected the audience’s time.”

**Also Read:**
*Truth behind Tezaab: How Boney Kapoor and N. Chandra built the Anil Kapoor-Madhuri Dixit classic*

*BOLLYWOOD NEWS LIVE UPDATES*
https://www.bollywoodhungama.com/news/bollywood/madhuri-dixits-canada-show-organisers-clarify-delay-caused-miscommunication-team-delay-entirely-beyond-control-true-sound-live-ltd/

25 Freshest and Funniest Feline Funnies to Fill Your Week With Fluffy Fabulousness

Sunday morning. Time to take a deep breath. You have a day off, finally. Finally, a break. Some time to rest, to chill, to do the things that we love to do.

Sundays are important not only because we can finally rest after a long week, but also because we can spend our time being *purrductive* in the ways that we actually want to be. It means filling our days with wholesomeness, pawsitivity, fluffy fabulousness, and of course, funny cat memes.

Listen, scrolling through hilarious cat memes really is one of the most productive things that you can do for your mental health. Why? Because it makes you smile. Because whatever you were thinking about and worrying about before, you no longer are. Your brain blanks.

Cat memes are pure. No negativity, no drama, no nothing. When you’re scrolling through these memes, your mind is filled with nothing but that purity and goodness.

And if that is not the *purrfect* way to spend your time productively, then we don’t know what is.
https://cheezburger.com/42867205/25-freshest-and-funniest-feline-funnies-to-fill-your-week-with-fluffy-fabulousness

Roanoke educator recalls students who broke racial barriers in 1960s

“Better late than never,” Dolores Johns said, emphasizing the importance of recognizing her students who played a significant role in integrating Roanoke’s retail stores during the 1960s.

She expressed that their courageous efforts should be acknowledged and remembered, highlighting their contribution to the progress within the community. Their actions helped pave the way for greater equality and inclusion in Roanoke’s retail sector, marking an important chapter in the city’s history.
https://roanoke.com/news/local/education/k-12/article_7cb490dd-ddc2-4a79-a177-be1b649c46ae.html

Trump Officials Pledge to ‘Protect Unborn Life at All Stages’

Trump Administration Officials Reaffirm Commitment to Protect Unborn Life at Geneva Consensus Declaration Anniversary

At the five-year anniversary event of the Geneva Consensus Declaration, a coalition of 40 nations affirming that there is no international right to abortion, Trump administration officials reiterated their dedication to “protect unborn life at all stages.” The declaration aims to expand health and well-being for women while protecting the sovereign right of nations to support health, life, and family through national policy and legislation.

The Institute of Women’s Health hosted members of Congress, Trump administration officials, and global leaders to celebrate the milestone. A letter from President Donald Trump was read during the event, in which he pledged to “never waver in protecting the sanctity of every human life.”

“My administration is steadfastly devoted to restoring a culture that values the inherent dignity of every child and to upholding the eternal truth that every person is created in the holy image and likeness of God, with infinite worth and boundless potential,” President Trump wrote.

Jim O’Neill, Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services, expressed pride in the Trump administration’s decision to rejoin the Geneva Consensus Declaration in January after the Biden administration’s departure from the coalition of pro-life countries.

“The denial of fundamental truths can destroy nations from within,” O’Neill said. “At the root of the evils we face—murder in the womb, the blurring of lines between sexes, and radical social agendas—is a hatred of nature as it was designed for life, the way it was meant to be lived. This ideology does not just deny biology. It declares war against it.”

O’Neill emphasized the administration’s commitment to putting the declaration’s principles into action to protect life at all stages. “President Trump reinstituted the Mexico City Policy. Taxpayers will not be forced to fund entities that provide or promote abortion as foreign family planning,” he stated.

He added, “We’ve removed transgender flags from all federal buildings. Only one flag flies above our embassies, and that is the American flag. We’ve ended taxpayer funding for the mutilation of children and radical indoctrination. Children should not be subjected to life-altering, irreversible damage and sex-trait modification.”

O’Neill promised that the Trump administration will continue advancing the Geneva Consensus Declaration’s principles on the global stage.

“Taxpayer-funded organizations and bureaucrats have sadly long undermined sovereign nations by imposing radical social agendas around the world. The era of taxpayer-funded neocolonialist promotion of leftist ideologies has come to an end, and our work is just beginning,” he said.

Deputy Secretary of State Chris Landau highlighted the State Department’s top priority of recognizing national sovereignty.

“I think it’s so important for us all to recognize that the international community has no right to tell anyone of our country what our policy should be on these issues of family and women’s health,” Landau said. “Each nation-state has the right to determine, within its own borders, the policy it decides to pursue on social and cultural issues, like those affecting the family.”

Landau expressed solidarity with the Geneva Consensus Declaration’s “focus on women’s health and its commitment to families as the core of our communities and our countries.”

“We’re created in the image of God. We have families. Families build out into communities, into nations, and ultimately the world. And so, the family is ultimately the manifestation of God’s grace,” he explained. “I think it’s so important that we are all recognizing the importance of the family. This is something, frankly, that declining birth rates in so many parts of the world pose a huge problem facing humankind, and so I respect and welcome focus on these issues.”

Committed to restoring the principle of national sovereignty as central to international relations, Landau said, “Just as President Trump says he wants to make America great again, he expects the leaders of your countries to want to make your countries great again—whether it be Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Iraq, Cameroon, Egypt, or Paraguay.”

Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), a staunch pro-life advocate, expressed gratitude for the Trump administration’s respect for life in the womb.

“The Geneva Consensus Declaration, in my opinion, is an engraved invitation to each and every one of us to seriously recommit and rededicate ourselves to the best of our ability in our home countries, as well as in the international forum,” Smith said.

Smith also urged the Trump administration to intensify efforts to investigate the abortion pill and its negative side effects experienced by many women.

“In the developing world, when a woman starts hemorrhaging, it’s often a death sentence, and she’ll die quietly and horribly in her town or in her hamlet, and nobody will know,” he explained. “There’ll be no statistical gathering for these horrible effects, and that woman will die. I’m very concerned about how everyone looks the other way on the international stage about the abortion pill.”

Addressing United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, Smith questioned, “Do you know how the pill works? It starves the baby to death. You and I, Mr. Secretary-General, worked on global hunger. I believe deeply in mitigating world hunger, and yet we have a situation where we’re causing hunger to the point of starvation.”

The event underscored the Trump administration’s dedication to reaffirming national sovereignty, protecting life at all stages, supporting families, and opposing international imposition of social agendas that contradict these values.
https://www.dailysignal.com/2025/10/25/trump-admin-congress-celebrate-five-years-declaration-establishing-global-right-life/

Kim Davis seeks Supreme Court review in challenge to marriage equality

**U.S. Supreme Court Considers Kim Davis’s Challenge to Same-Sex Marriage, While Conversion Therapy Case Sparks National Debate**

The U.S. Supreme Court is set to consider whether to hear Kim Davis’s latest challenge to same-sex marriage—a case that, if accepted, could have major implications for LGBTQ rights in the United States.

Kim Davis, the former county clerk for Rowan County, Kentucky, made national headlines in 2015 when she defied federal court orders by refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples and later, to any couples at all. Davis, a Pentecostal Christian, said that signing same-sex marriage licenses would violate her religious beliefs, claiming protection under the First Amendment.

When questioned at the time, Davis told reporters she was acting “under God’s authority” and suggested couples could obtain licenses in other counties. Her refusal came just weeks after the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in *Obergefell v. Hodges*, which guaranteed same-sex couples the constitutional right to marry under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment.

One of the couples who sought a license from Davis, April Miller and Karen Roberts, filed a federal lawsuit (*Miller v. Davis*) challenging her actions. Around the same time, another couple, David Moore and David Ermold, also sued after Davis again refused to issue them a license despite a court order directing her to do so.

In Kentucky, marriage licenses bore the county clerk’s name and title—something Davis argued forced her to personally endorse a practice she found morally objectionable. It wasn’t until the state legislature changed the law in 2016, removing clerks’ names from marriage licenses, that Davis and her deputies resumed issuing them.

In 2023, a federal jury awarded Moore and Ermold $50,000 each in damages for Davis’s repeated refusals. Davis appealed the decision, but the 6th U.S. Court of Appeals upheld the verdict earlier this year. The court ruled that Davis’s actions were not protected by the First Amendment because she was acting in her official capacity as a government official, not as a private citizen.

“The Bill of Rights would serve little purpose if it could be freely ignored whenever an official’s conscience so dictates,” the court wrote, emphasizing that personal religious opposition cannot be translated into public policy.

Davis has now asked the Supreme Court to take up her case. Her petition, filed in August, argues that *Obergefell* “has no basis in the Constitution” and should be reconsidered. The justices are scheduled to review her petition in a private conference on November 7, where they will decide whether to grant the case a full hearing.

Whether the court will take the case depends on whether at least four justices vote to hear it. Even if there are four votes to grant review, legal observers note that the justices would likely avoid taking up the case unless they are confident there is a fifth vote to overturn *Obergefell*.

Mathew Staver, Davis’s attorney, told *Newsweek* that *Obergefell* “has no basis in the Constitution” and could be overturned “without affecting any other cases.” Legal experts, however, see such an outcome as unlikely.

According to SCOTUSblog, while the case raises important questions about religious liberty and government authority, it centers on Davis’s personal liability rather than a direct challenge to the constitutionality of same-sex marriage itself. Still, the case has reignited debate over the balance between religious freedom and LGBTQ rights—and whether the Supreme Court’s conservative majority might be open to revisiting one of its most significant civil rights decisions of the 21st century.

### Conversion Therapy Case Ignites Passion as Supreme Court Hears Arguments

As the United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments in *Chiles v. Salazar* last week—a case that could overturn bans on conversion therapy in more than 20 states and the District of Columbia—a group of conversion therapy survivors gathered in Washington, D.C., to support one another and ensure their experiences are not ignored.

Members of the Conversion Therapy Survivor Network (CTSN), a nonprofit providing a safe, non-therapeutic space for survivors nationwide, began their day on the steps of the Supreme Court. The small but dedicated group of protesters held signs, waved Pride flags, and shared stories of survival. They were joined by representatives from the Born Perfect Campaign, the Human Rights Campaign, and The Trevor Project—the LGBTQ suicide prevention nonprofit that has worked to save queer lives since 1998.

The case centers on whether parents have the constitutional right to subject their children to conversion therapy under the First Amendment’s protection of religious freedom. Dozens of states have banned the practice, citing overwhelming evidence that it does not change sexuality or gender identity and often leads to long-term psychological harm.

Survivors of conversion therapy are at significantly higher risk of depression, anxiety, and suicide, according to every major U.S. medical association—including the American Psychiatric Association, the American Psychological Association, and the American Medical Association—all of which have disavowed the practice.

Kaley Chiles, a Christian therapist from Colorado, brought the case after arguing that Colorado’s 2019 law banning conversion therapy for minors violates her First Amendment rights. Chiles, who offers what she describes as “religiously informed care,” contends that the law restricts her ability to counsel clients in accordance with “biblical understandings of sexuality and gender.”

During oral arguments, the Supreme Court’s conservative majority appeared sympathetic to her claim that the law constitutes “viewpoint discrimination.” Justice Samuel Alito went so far as to say the ban represented “blatant viewpoint discrimination,” signaling that the court may be willing to expand First Amendment protections to cover conversion therapy.

For survivors gathered just blocks away, that prospect was devastating.

Following the hearing, CTSN held a vigil and celebration at As You Are, an LGBTQ bar and café in Southeast D.C. that has become a haven for the queer community. On the bar’s second floor, posters from the protest were propped against the wall—bearing messages such as “I refuse to hate myself for your comfort” and “Conversion therapy hurts kids, hurts families, hurts faith”—as two phones livestreamed survivors’ stories on TikTok.

The testimonies were both wrenching and cathartic. The group began with a moment of silence for those who did not survive their experiences with conversion therapy, setting the tone for the urgent need to end the practice.

Tears welled in the audience and among speakers as they shared how conversion therapy had scarred—and in some cases nearly destroyed—their lives.

“Since when is the freedom of religion more important than ‘do no harm?’” one survivor asked, encapsulating the frustration that ran through the room.

Curtis Lopez-Galloway, founder and president of CTSN, emphasized that the only way to end conversion therapy is through awareness. “The one way we’re going to defeat conversion therapy is by education,” he said before sharing his own story. “The more people that know about the harms, the less likely they are to take their children—or themselves—into it.”

Their commitment to breaking the cycle of harm echoed throughout the afternoon. Survivors from across the LGBTQ spectrum—gay, trans, and asexual—shared their experiences of rejection, isolation, and recovery.

Cairn, who once trained as a youth minister, recalled how their church’s teachings were weaponized against them. “We prayed for the gay to go away,” they said. “The Bible was used as a weapon to make me submissive to the normal gender roles I was destined to fill.”

They remembered being instructed on how to “walk like a lady” to suppress their masculinity. “I was advised how to walk like a lady because I have swagger. I still do,” Cairn added with a small smile, drawing laughter and applause from the crowd.

But the damage ran deep. “That year in Bible school ended my career as a youth minister—but it also ended my personal faith in God,” Cairn said. “When you are told repeatedly that you’re going to hell if you choose this lifestyle, it starts to take a toll on you.”

Years later, they found affirming pastors and began rebuilding their life. “After 35 years,” Cairn said, “I started to live my life unashamed.”

Other speakers shared stories of lives fragmented by fear.

“I lost 20 years of my life,” said Gwen Brossard, a queer and nonbinary person living in California. “It’s hard to settle with the enormity of the grief.”

“The inner conflict and continual effort of examining my attractions while trying to counter them left me emotionally and physically exhausted,” she said. “The therapy radically altered the trajectory of my life. I felt adrift, severed from my previous sense of meaning and belonging.”

For Al Linkskoog, a gay man who subjected himself to the practice due to the insurmountable pressure he felt from societal rejection, conversion therapy’s toll was both spiritual and psychological. “They told me I was broken,” he said. “It’s an interesting, although bogus, way of trying to solve a problem—decide what the problem is before even meeting the person.”

“Being called broken is a dismal diagnosis. It means you’re already in pieces,” he continued. “Every prayer, every determination to change—nothing changed. All the years of trying to change were unnecessary. I was perfectly fine as I was.”

Years later, he said, he finally found peace. “No more need for closets. I have full run of the mansion. So now I can truly say: I am not broken.”

Sarah, who identifies as asexual, reminded the audience that conversion therapy does not only target gay and trans people. “Asexuality is sometimes called the invisible sexuality,” she said. “Many ace folks encounter professionals who believe their lack of attraction is a problem to fix instead of a neutral fact of their identity.”

She challenged assumptions about what love and intimacy should look like. “Our existence doesn’t just challenge compulsory heterosexuality—it questions compulsive sexuality,” Sarah said. “We are here. We are queer. We aren’t going anywhere. We don’t need to be fixed—only to love the way we love and be loved for who we are.”

One of the most harrowing stories of the night was from Caleb Bailar, a transgender man from England who was not in attendance but whose story was read by Samuel Nieves, board director for CTSN.

“My phone was taken away, my messages read daily. I was told I was being misled and was too young to know what I wanted from life,” he recalled.

He described a form of punishment his mother practiced called “kid hell”—a conversion therapy method derived from a manual circulated among anti-trans groups.

“My kid hell was to have no time truly alone,” he said. “I could not use the phone, computer, or journal in private. Whenever I would hyperventilate and scream and beg for it to be over, my mom would hold me and tell me this was for my own good.”

“Every time I expressed myself or was interpreted correctly, I would flinch and brace for punishment,” Nieves read. “Once, she threatened to unalive herself if I got a mastectomy. I found out my experience could be considered conversion torture—the horror I had endured was a map. I can joke about it now,” he added quietly. “The pain is real, but so is the healing,” said one organizer after the stories were shared. “We can’t let the Court forget that.”

For those in attendance, the message was clear: Their survival is their protest.

### Supreme Court Hears *Chiles v. Salazar* Case on Conversion Therapy Ban

The Supreme Court heard arguments on Tuesday in the case of *Chiles v. Salazar*, which could reverse conversion therapy bans across the United States. Kaley Chiles, a Christian therapist from Colorado, works as a counselor specializing in serving clients who often seek “religiously informed care” that aligns with traditional biblical understandings of sexuality and gender.

She has argued that a 2019 Colorado law, HB19-1129—also known as the “Prohibit Conversion Therapy for a Minor Act”—violates her First Amendment rights. The act serves as a regulatory law in the state and was put in place to prevent potential harm that numerous studies by health associations across the country have shown this particular form of “therapy” can cause.

From an increased risk of suicide to being comparable to torture by the United Nations, 23 other states, as well as the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, have passed laws restricting the practice.

Chiles brought forward a pre-enforcement lawsuit against the state, arguing that the law has caused a chilling effect on her ability to provide her “faith-informed” services to clients with religious preferences—often religious parents—and has made her stop any discussions that could be related to sexuality or gender identity. She argues this violates her right to the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.

A majority of the justices appeared sympathetic to Chiles’s argument that the conversion therapy ban limits her religious rights on the basis of viewpoint, indicating it may infringe on free speech. Justice Samuel Alito went as far as to say that the law was “blatant viewpoint discrimination.”

Other members of the Court, however, raised questions regarding Chiles’s standing, or the right to challenge the law, as the ban was not explicitly enforced, nor was Chiles charged with anything.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted the lack of enforcement undermines the idea of an “imminent threat,” while Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson suggested the law’s regulation of professional conduct falls within a state’s traditional authority to oversee medical practices.

Several justices, notably Amy Coney Barrett, seemed to think this case should be sent back down to a lower court for further examination under a stricter constitutional standard.

Justice Elena Kagan pressed the need for scientific evidence, saying, “You need to have studies, not just intuitions that harm exists. You need a scientific showing of causation rather than rely on your intuitions that this causes harm.”

Justice Brown Jackson expressed skepticism over the First Amendment framing, noting the similarity between Chiles and other medical professionals with the same goals but different methods.

Justice Alito raised concerns about politicization within medicine, asking, “Have there been times when the medical consensus has been politicized, has been taken over by ideology?”

Justice Coney Barrett questioned how far a state’s authority should go in cases of medical disagreement, asking whether states can pick sides when there are competing medical views.

James A. Campbell, who represented Chiles, argued that not only is Chiles’s speech being censored, but by not allowing her to provide this type of “therapy,” the government is causing harm to families seeking such treatment.

“There is irreparable harm going on right now. Ms. Chiles is being silenced. The kids and the families who want help are being left without any support,” Campbell told the justices. “This is an ongoing active dialogue where she’s helping them to explore their goals, and that absolutely has to be protected by the First Amendment.”

Shannon W. Stevenson, Colorado Solicitor General, argued on behalf of the state that an overwhelming amount of medical advice cites this type of “therapy” as harmful and that medical restrictions do not allow doctors to give patients incorrect information just because it goes against their religious beliefs.

“The medical consensus has been around for a very long time. Those types of statutes govern medical professionals, and no one has ever suggested that a doctor has a First Amendment defense to say the wrong advice to their patient,” Stevenson said. “The harms from conversion therapy come from when you tell a young person they can change this innate thing about themselves. They try and fail, and then they have shame and they’re miserable.”

Kelley Robinson, president of the Human Rights Campaign—America’s largest LGBTQ civil rights organization—issued a statement following the court’s arguments:

“Today’s oral arguments made clear that, as Colorado’s solicitor general stated, history, precedent, and commonsense must allow states to hold licensed providers accountable to the recommendations of every mainstream medical and mental health association in this country. The Supreme Court must uphold the constitutionality of these legal restrictions and stand strongly between our children and these abusive practices.”

While it may be months before a decision on this case is brought forward, the ruling—expected by summer—could have sweeping implications for whether states are allowed to regulate conversion therapy as a form of medical treatment, or if they infringe on First Amendment rights.

*The outcomes of these cases will have profound effects on the legal landscape surrounding LGBTQ rights, religious freedom, and the regulation of medical and psychological practices in the United States.*
https://www.washingtonblade.com/2025/10/24/kim-davis-seeks-supreme-court-review-in-challenge-to-marriage-equality/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=kim-davis-seeks-supreme-court-review-in-challenge-to-marriage-equality

“She didn’t deserve that hug”: Internet outraged as fan spotted at j-hope’s concert criticizes BTS for alleged low donations, names them as PR stunts

On Thursday, October 23, a fan named Chyna, who was seen receiving a hug from BTS’ j-hope during his Los Angeles concert as part of his HOPE ON THE STAGE World Tour, was called out for criticizing the event.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/us/k-pop/news-she-deserve-hug-internet-outraged-fan-spotted-j-hope-s-concert-criticizes-bts-alleged-low-donations-names-pr-stunts

“You can hate me all you want”: Valkyrae responds to those calling her out for ‘playing games during a genocide’

Twitch and YouTube star Rachell “Valkyrae” has responded to criticism accusing her of “playing games during a genocide” by revealing her plans to donate money to Gaza and other regions in need. She emphasized that people “can hate her all they want” but encouraged them to contribute to the causes as well.

During a livestream on October 23, 2025, before beginning to play *Digimon Story: Time Stranger*, Valkyrae’s attention was drawn to a viewer comment criticizing her. The viewer wrote: “Kinda horrible to be playing games during a genocide.”

In response, the co-owner of 100 Thieves shared her intention to make donations to Gaza, Congo, and another region or organization that requires monetary aid. She also encouraged others to donate alongside her, saying:

> “Well, I’m doing a fat donation to not just Gaza, but to other places in the world that need it as well. I think it’s going to be next week. I hope that you participate in donating. Please, donate to the cause as well when I post about it. So, yeah, I’m thinking Gaza, Congo, and. I was thinking of one other organization. Do three of them. So, you can hate me all you want. That’s fine. But you can donate to the cause as well.”

Valkyrae later added:

> “Sudan? Okay. Yeah. I wanted to do, like, three different places that can… but, I’m trying to also find the best source to donate to. Like, the best link. You know? So, yeah, you know, it is horrible. It is horrible. There is horrible stuff going on, but I can at least do my part. What about you? What about you?”

### Valkyrae Expresses Excitement to Use Her Platform for Philanthropy

Following the confrontation, Valkyrae expressed enthusiasm about leveraging her platform more frequently for charitable efforts:

> “Yeah, I’m excited to use my platform more. I think I need to. I have in the past. But I think I need to do it more often. And I’m excited to. I’m excited. And that’s all thanks to streaming. So, yeah. Here we go!”

### In Other Streamer News

Blaire “QTCinderella” recently commented that she “doesn’t really care about being married” to Ludwig, adding that “he wants kids, and she doesn’t.”

**About the Author**
Aarnesh Shrivastava is an esports analyst who covers the streaming industry. He holds a bachelor’s degree in science with a multi-domain specialization in IT. A Soulsborne enthusiast, Aarnesh enjoys playing competitive multiplayer games like *League of Legends* in his spare time, as well as writing and producing music.

*Edited by Aarnesh Shrivastava.*
https://www.sportskeeda.com/us/streamers/news-you-can-hate-want-valkyrae-responds-calling-playing-games-genocide

‘History literally being demolished’: Ex-Melania staffer bemoans Trump’s new pet project

A former staffer for the First Lady criticized President Donald Trump on Thursday for demolishing the East Wing of the White House to make way for a grandiose ballroom.

Stephanie Grisham, who served as chief of staff to First Lady Melania Trump during the first Trump administration, told The New York Times that seeing the East Wing in rubble was like watching “history literally being demolished in front of our eyes.”

Grisham is the latest in a series of former White House staffers to denounce the project. “It was such a breath of fresh air from the West Wing,” she said. “I hate to see that kind of history literally being demolished in front of our eyes.”

Several critics have expressed concern over Trump’s decision to pursue the ballroom construction amid a government shutdown and an uncertain economy. Other former staffers speaking with The New York Times described the project as destroying the “living history” of the building.

“There was never a day I didn’t catch my breath walking into the East Wing,” Laura Schwartz, White House director of events during the Clinton administration, told the outlet. “That’s what makes the loss to me so painful. It’s not just a building. It’s the living history.”
https://www.rawstory.com/web-push-notification/melania-trump/

NYC sidewalk shed that earned ‘worst’ award taken down after nearly 20 years – and locals are throwing a ‘party’

The owner of an Upper West Side apartment building finally removed its longtime sidewalk shed Monday after nearly two decades, and neighbors are shedding no tears.

The infamous green blight at 51 West 86th St. was even awarded the title of the Worst Sidewalk Shed on the West Side at Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal and Assemblymember Micah Lasher’s inaugural “Sheddie Awards” this spring.

“It’s been up for a very long time, so the building’s very excited,” resident Omet Hit told The Post. The 31-year-old tech worker added, “There’s so much of it,” referring to the scaffolding that covers much of the Upper West Side. “Then it’s like a whole new world when it’s finally gone.”

“Now it’s so exciting. It’s so beautiful, it’s so open,” Hit said. “It’s like a new breath of fresh air. We had champagne already… but I think there’s going to be a party.”

“We’re organizing a big party,” confirmed another building resident who declined to share her name. “It’s a disease in this city—scaffolding—and there’s more of it there [across the street]; ours was up the longest.”

An 11-year resident of the building added, “I was actually gone for the Jewish holidays for a full month, and I had to come around again because I just didn’t recognize the building. It’s great. I think everybody’s going to be happier, and it’s nice and clean.”

The scaffolding and netting that had covered the area since 2020 came down four months ago, the West Side Rag first reported. The building’s notorious shed was erected in 2006. It is owned by Weinreb Management, which did not return a request for comment on Thursday.

In 2022, Weinreb Management was sued by the city for hundreds of building violations, including fire safety issues and “failing to correct hazardous facade defects,” following a tragic fire at another Weinreb-owned building in the Bronx that killed 17 residents.

According to the lawsuit, “Defendants have displayed a pattern of failing to correct hazardous façade defects at their buildings: rather than taking corrective action, Defendants have allowed their buildings to deteriorate to the point where they pose an imminent threat to the health and safety of the tenants and the public.”

The 51 West 86th St. building was issued two violations cited in the 2022 lawsuit, including faulty sprinklers and alarm systems, as well as missing fire extinguishers.

This litigation was part of the city’s Long Standing Sheds program, which sought to compel owner Jacob Weinreb “to make needed repairs across 11 of their buildings, several of which had long-standing sidewalk sheds,” a Department of Buildings (DOB) representative told The Post.

Weinreb Management has been “making progress on these repairs and have already resolved hundreds of open violations across their portfolio of buildings,” the DOB confirmed, including the façade repairs finally made to 51 West 86th St.

“Through an affirmative litigation case brought by our partners at the Law Department, we were able to compel the owners of this property to finally make needed façade repairs and return the valuable sidewalk space in front of the building back to the public,” said Buildings Commissioner Jimmy Oddo.

Longtime resident Ellen expressed mixed emotions: “Everybody’s so happy, and everybody is so mad that it took this long. I’m very grateful that the city sued because that’s what really got things going… and after that, I think Weinreb Management company had no choice but to respond, obviously, and they did. I hope it’s a model.”

The oldest current sidewalk sheds in New York City date back to 2010 and can be found at a pair of apartment buildings in Yorkville and the East Village, according to a Post analysis of Buildings records. They are part of 10 buildings across the city that still have scaffolding at least a decade old.

“It’s [scaffolding] clearly out of hand,” added the unnamed 11-year resident of 51 West 86th St. “The city’s beautiful, and I hope we can see more of it.”
https://nypost.com/2025/10/23/us-news/nyc-sidewalk-shed-that-earned-worst-award-taken-down-after-nearly-20-years-and-locals-are-throwing-a-party/

‘Their own voters are pissed’: Lawmaker says GOP left with ‘no choice’ but to attack Trump

A throughline is reportedly developing in the reaction of Republican lawmakers to the controversies piling up around President Donald Trump.

The president and his legal team have reportedly asked the Department of Justice for $230 million to settle damage claims related to his past federal prosecutions. However, House Speaker Mike Johnson responded firmly, saying, “Never happen again, and for that, there needs to be accountability.”

Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) conceded that he had “optics concerns” about Trump’s move. Meanwhile, Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) stated, “I decide based on what I hear from my constituents.” Lummis was among many GOP lawmakers who claimed they “never heard about” Trump’s demand for $230 million from their constituents.

Senator Ted Budd (R-NC) indicated that he and other Republicans “look through the lenses of our state” — in his case, focusing on hurricane recovery in western North Carolina — before criticizing the president. “I want to make sure that those he’s appointed to his cabinet are actually doing that,” Budd added.

On the other hand, Democrats told MSNBC that their Republican colleagues are primarily afraid of going against Trump. Representative Jared Huffman (D-CA) explained, “Trump’s wrath if they cross him badly, and their own voters who are rightfully pissed off right now over the Argentina bailout. That’s why they’re mostly silent, and when they do speak out, it’s on something like Argentina where their base is leaving them no choice, and where Trump probably won’t end their careers over just this one thing.”
https://www.rawstory.com/donald-trump-corruption-2674225593/