Sunday, February 15, 2026

FCC Clears Bad Bunny Super Bowl Halftime Show — Investigation Finds No Violations as Controversy Shifts to Political Amplification

Randy Fine   /   Bad Bunny 


The Federal Communications Commission has officially cleared Bad Bunny’s 2026 Super Bowl halftime performance after investigating complaints from several Republican lawmakers who alleged the Puerto Rican artist aired explicit and indecent material during the broadcast.

After reviewing the performance, the FCC found no violations of federal broadcast standards. No fines. No sanctions. No indecency ruling.

The investigation, first reported by the New York Post, focused on three songs performed during the halftime show — “Tití Me Preguntó,” “Monaco,” and “Safaera.” While the original studio recordings contain explicit references to sexual acts and anatomy, the FCC determined those lyrics were removed, edited, or omitted entirely for the live Super Bowl broadcast on NBC.

In short, the explicit lines cited in public complaints were not performed on air.

Randy Fine Sparks Outrage

The controversy was ignited by Florida Republican Congressman Randy Fine known for his xenophobic and controversial statements, publicly condemned the performance as “disgusting” and “illegal.” In a letter to FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, Fine wrote that “The woke garbage we witnessed on Super Bowl Sunday needs to be INVESTIGATED and put to an END,” arguing that over 130 million viewers — including children — had been exposed to vulgar content.

Missouri Rep. Mark Alford raised similar concerns on Fox News, acknowledging he does not speak Spanish but claiming that troubling information about the lyrics had surfaced.

However, the FCC’s findings directly contradicted the claims that uncensored explicit content aired during the broadcast.

How the Explicit Lyrics Actually Spread

One of the more ironic twists in the controversy is how millions of Americans ultimately encountered the explicit lyrics in question.

According to widely circulated screenshots and reports, it was Congressman Fine himself that posted English translations of the explicit lyrics on his social media accounts after the halftime show. Those translations were drawn from the original recordings — not from what aired during the Super Bowl broadcast.

As outrage spread online, the translated lyrics were shared repeatedly across Facebook, X, and other platforms. Posts quoting the graphic language generated significant engagement, exposing large audiences to content that most viewers never heard during the live performance.

In effect, the explicit material that passed through network edits and FCC review without violation reached millions not through NBC’s broadcast — but through political amplification on social media thanks to Randy Fine.

Families watching the Super Bowl saw a network-edited performance that complied with federal standards. Online users, however, were exposed to graphic translations circulating in posts demanding accountability.

Critics argue this created a paradox: the very effort to condemn alleged indecency amplified it nationwide.

A Broader Double Standard?

Observers also pointed to what they see as inconsistency in political outrage. No comparable backlash emerged over Kid Rock lyrics referencing drinking, drugs, prostitution, and topless women during a recent Turning Point USA event promoted as “family friendly.”

Bad Bunny’s halftime show averaged 128.2 million viewers on NBC, drew over 69 million views on YouTube, and generated more than 4 billion social media impressions.

The FCC has stated it will not pursue further action unless new evidence emerges.

The episode highlights a modern media reality: controversies often spread less because of what airs on television and more because of how content is amplified online. In this case, federal regulators concluded the broadcast followed the rules.

Yet the explicit lyrics millions debated in the days that followed did not come from the Super Bowl stage — they circulated widely after the show, largely through posts intended to condemn them.

Sometimes outrage does more to distribute content than the original performance ever could.

The Reliance of the Traveller How Selective Quoting of Ancient Texts Is Used to Manufacture Islamophobia


An old medieval book from Shafi‘i sect of Sunni Islam is bring used as propaganda to slander all Muslims in all their respective sects.

ABOUT THE BOOK

The Reliance of the Traveller (Umdat al-Salik wa ‘Uddat al-Nasik)

What it is

  • classical Sunni Islamic legal manual (fiqh), written in the 14th century by Ahmad ibn Naqib al-Misri

  • Follows the Shafi‘i school of Islamic law

  • It is not the Qurannot Hadith, and not a universal Muslim rulebook

  • It was written for jurists and judges, not lay Muslims

Why it gets cited so often

  • It is one of the few medieval Islamic law texts certified as accurate by Al-Azhar (a major Sunni authority)

  • Critics quote it to argue that Sharia mandates harsh punishments

  • Supporters argue it reflects historical jurisprudence, not modern practice

What it actually represents

  • snapshot of medieval legal theory, similar to:

    • Medieval Canon Law in Christianity

    • Rabbinic legal debates in the Talmud

  • It reflects a time when religion and state were inseparable

  • Many rulings depend on:

    • A caliphate or Islamic state

    • Extremely high evidentiary standards

    • Judicial discretion that rarely existed in practice

What it does not represent

  • It does not represent:

    • How most Muslims live today

    • Law in secular Muslim-majority countries

    • American Muslims’ beliefs or legal systems

  • The majority of Muslims have never read it

  • Modern Islamic scholars often reject or contextualize large portions of it

Key historical reality
For 1,400 years, Islamic civilization:

  • Included multiple legal schools that disagreed with each other

  • Had long periods of religious pluralism

  • Allowed Jews and Christians to govern themselves internally

  • Also had periods of brutality — like every other pre-modern civilization

Using this book alone to define Islam today is like using the Spanish Inquisition manuals to define modern Christianity.



When Citizens Are Caught in Immigration Enforcement: Seven Cases Raising Constitutional Violations

 


Immigration and Customs Enforcement operates under federal authority to enforce immigration law. However a series of documented cases involving United States citizens has raised serious constitutional concerns about how that authority is exercised particularly under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments.

Below are seven cases in which American citizens were detained arrested or subjected to enforcement actions typically reserved for non citizens.

  1. Chongly Scott Thao Warrantless Home Entry

In Saint Paul Minnesota Chongly Scott Thao a United States citizen reported that federal immigration agents forced entry into his home without presenting a judicial warrant. He was detained at gunpoint and escorted outside while minimally clothed.

Legal advocates argued this action raised Fourth Amendment concerns which protect against unreasonable searches and seizures and generally require a judge issued warrant to enter a private home.

The central constitutional issue was whether ICE can rely on administrative warrants rather than judicial warrants for home entry.

  1. Peter Sean Brown Citizen Held for Deportation

Peter Sean Brown a natural born United States citizen in Florida was detained under immigration authority after a local sheriffs office cooperated with ICE. Despite being a citizen he was held as if subject to deportation.

A federal court later ruled that his detention violated his Fourth Amendment rights emphasizing that probable cause and proper verification of citizenship status are required before depriving someone of liberty.

  1. George Retes Veteran Held Without Charges

George Retes a United States citizen and Iraq War veteran was detained during a federal farm raid in California. He reported being held for several days without charges without meaningful access to legal counsel and without immediate ability to contact family.

The constitutional questions raised in his case involved Fourth Amendment protections governing lawful detention standards and Fifth Amendment due process rights which guarantee fairness before the government deprives someone of liberty.

  1. Julio Noriega Detained Despite Identification

In Chicago Julio Noriega a United States citizen was handcuffed and detained by ICE officers despite reportedly providing identification verifying his citizenship. He was held for several hours before being released.

This case raised questions about whether probable cause existed for detention and whether adequate verification steps were taken before restricting his freedom.

  1. Adrian Martinez Citizen Held for Days

Adrian Martinez a United States citizen in California reported being detained by ICE after intervening in a situation involving an elderly man. Despite showing identification he was held for approximately three days before release.

He later stated that charges were dropped. His case drew attention to potential violations of Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable seizure and due process guarantees if citizenship verification is delayed.

  1. Abel Orozco Ortega Mistaken Identity Arrest

Abel Orozco Ortega a United States citizen in Chicago was arrested when ICE agents allegedly confused him with his similarly named son.

Mistaken identity cases like this raise a core constitutional issue of whether enforcement officers exercised sufficient diligence before detaining someone and whether probable cause existed specific to that individual.

  1. Broader Pattern Citizens Detained During Sweeps

Investigative reporting has documented dozens of cases where United States citizens were temporarily detained during immigration enforcement sweeps while agents attempted to verify status.

While some were released quickly others were held for hours or days.

The constitutional concerns in these broader cases include suspicionless stops detention without individualized probable cause delays in verifying citizenship and access to legal counsel during detention.

The Constitutional Framework

The cases above center on three primary constitutional protections.

The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches and seizures and typically requires judicial warrants for home entry.

The Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause guarantees that no person citizen or not can be deprived of liberty without fair legal procedures.

Equal protection principles raise concerns when enforcement appears based on race ethnicity or mistaken identity without individualized evidence.



Russian Philosopher Alexander Dugin Cites Epstein Case in Broad Critique of Western Power

 


Russian political philosopher Alexander Dugin has drawn renewed attention after posting commentary linking the Jeffrey Epstein scandal to what he describes as a deeper moral and structural crisis within Western political and economic systems.

In recent remarks circulated online, Dugin argued that the Epstein case should not be viewed as an isolated criminal episode, but rather as evidence of what he characterizes as systemic elite impunity in Western societies. According to Dugin, Epstein’s ability to operate for years among influential figures in finance, politics, and academia reflects broader failures of accountability in liberal democracies.

Dugin has long been known for his criticism of Western liberalism and for promoting a “multipolar” world order in which Western political and cultural dominance is reduced. In this context, he framed the Epstein revelations as reinforcing his long-standing argument that Western institutions claim moral authority abroad while failing to police abuses within their own elite circles.

“The Epstein affair exposes contradictions between the West’s rhetoric and its internal realities,” Dugin wrote, asserting that powerful individuals often evade consequences while ordinary citizens face stricter enforcement of law and social norms.

A Broader Civilizational Argument

Dugin’s comments situate Epstein within a wider critique of what he sees as imperial hypocrisy. He argues that Western governments frequently invoke human rights and rule of law to justify foreign policy interventions, sanctions, or political pressure, while allegedly shielding influential actors at home from scrutiny.

He further contends that scandals involving elite misconduct undermine Western claims to universal moral leadership, particularly in the Global South, where skepticism toward Western institutions has been growing.

Critics of Dugin note that his arguments often rely on sweeping civilizational narratives and that his conclusions extend far beyond what available evidence can support. Scholars and analysts caution that while the Epstein case exposed serious failures by law enforcement and oversight bodies, it does not in itself substantiate claims of a coordinated or uniform moral collapse across Western societies.

Reaction and Context

Dugin’s remarks have circulated widely online, drawing mixed reactions. Supporters say his critique resonates with public frustration over perceived double standards and the lack of accountability for wealthy or well-connected figures. Detractors argue that his framing risks oversimplifying complex legal and institutional failures and may contribute to distrust in democratic systems.

Legal experts emphasize that investigations into Epstein and related figures remain ongoing and that responsibility for failures spans multiple institutions over several decades. They caution against conflating systemic shortcomings with claims about entire political or cultural traditions.

Continuing Debate

The Epstein case continues to fuel international debate over elite accountability, prosecutorial discretion, and the influence of wealth and power on justice systems. Dugin’s intervention adds a geopolitical and philosophical dimension to that discussion, reflecting how the scandal has been absorbed into broader critiques of Western influence in global affairs.

Whether viewed as ideological polemic or political commentary, Dugin’s statements underscore how a criminal case rooted in the United States has become a symbol in wider debates about power, legitimacy, and moral authority in the modern world.




Arrested at the Interview: How Immigration Enforcement Turned a Legal Process Into a Trap

 

Las Vegas, Nevada — What was supposed to be the final step toward legal stability instead became a handcuff moment that has reignited outrage over the tactics of U.S. immigration enforcement.

A U.S. Marine veteran is now pleading publicly for the release of his wife after Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested her inside a long-awaited green card interview—a move critics say weaponizes the immigration system against families who follow the rules.

A Five-Year Wait Ends in Detention

Diana Butnarciuc, who legally entered the United States from Moldova in 2008, arrived at a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services interview in Las Vegas believing she was finally nearing lawful permanent residency. Instead, ICE officers entered the interview and took her into custody, transferring her to the Henderson Detention Center.

Her husband, Patrick Baja, a Marine veteran, said the couple had waited five years for the appointment. What they received was not due process—but detention.

“This wasn’t a traffic stop or a border encounter,” Baja said. “This was a government appointment we were told to attend.”

Legal Compliance, Punished

Butnarciuc previously applied for political asylum, which was denied in 2018, resulting in a removal order. Like many immigrants advised by counsel, she later pursued a lawful path through marriage to a U.S. citizen. In 2020, Baja filed an I-130 petition—a required and legitimate step toward permanent residency.

Her attorney, Darren Heyman, says she has no criminal record, has never been jailed, and complied with every instruction from immigration authorities.

Yet ICE acted not as a neutral enforcer of the law, but as an ambush unit—waiting until she appeared voluntarily at a federal office before arresting her.

Enforcement or Entrapment?

Civil rights advocates argue that this case exposes a deeper problem: immigration enforcement that discourages compliance by turning legal processes into traps.

“If showing up to your interview gets you detained, what incentive does anyone have to follow the law?” one advocate asked.

ICE’s decision to arrest Butnarciuc during a USCIS interview blurs the line between civil immigration enforcement and punitive policing. It sends a chilling message to immigrant families: cooperate, and you risk detention anyway.

A Family in Limbo

Heyman says he will seek bond and challenge the removal order once the green card process resumes. But for now, a U.S. citizen veteran is separated from his wife, and a family that followed the system is paying the price.

The case underscores the growing uncertainty facing immigrant families—even those with legal counsel, clean records, and pending petitions—under an enforcement-first approach that prioritizes arrests over resolution.

A System on Trial

This is not just a story about one family. It is a warning about an immigration system increasingly defined by fear, unpredictability, and punitive tactics—where legality offers no protection, and compliance can become a liability.

For critics, the question is no longer whether immigration laws should be enforced, but how—and whether enforcement has lost sight of fairness, proportionality, and basic humanity.

As Baja continues to fight for his wife’s release, the system that promised order and justice now stands accused of something else entirely: turning hope into a setup, and due process into a door that closes the moment you walk through it.

Trump’s Second-Term Debt Surge: A Fiscal Indictment, Not a Footnote



President Donald Trump returned to the White House promising discipline, efficiency, and a dramatic reversal of America’s debt trajectory. One year later, the numbers tell a very different story—and they are not subtle.

According to nonpartisan watchdog calculations, the United States national debt increased by approximately $2.25 trillion during Trump’s first year back in office. Over calendar year 2025 alone, the increase was even larger—about $2.29 trillion—pushing total national debt to roughly $38.4 trillion by early January 2026.

That is not a marginal overshoot. It is an acceleration.

Despite aggressive rhetoric about cost-cutting, “efficiency,” and DOGE-era hype surrounding debt control, Washington added debt at a rate of nearly $72,000 per second over the past year. The spike between August and October—when the debt jumped from $37 trillion to $38 trillion in just two months—marked the fastest pace of borrowing outside the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation.

This matters because it directly contradicts the administration’s central economic claim: that Trump’s return would stabilize the nation’s balance sheet.

Modest Deficit Optics, Massive Debt Reality

Defenders of the administration point to a narrow technicality: the federal deficit for fiscal year 2025 came in at roughly $1.78 trillion, slightly below FY 2024’s $1.82 trillion. But this modest decline masks the larger reality. Debt continued to explode because borrowing remains structurally baked into federal operations, and interest costs are now compounding the damage.

In other words, the deficit did not meaningfully shrink—the debt simply grew faster.

Over the last quarter-century, only one president rivals Trump’s debt record: Trump himself. He holds the all-time record for national debt growth in a single year—nearly $4.6 trillion in 2020—and now owns another top-tier debt year outside of any declared emergency.

Together, Trump and President Joe Biden account for the five highest debt-incurring years in modern U.S. history. But Trump’s second-term numbers strip away the pandemic defense. This is peacetime borrowing on autopilot.

Interest Costs: The Silent Budget Killer

The most damning consequence of this surge is not abstract—it is contractual.

Net interest on the national debt reached $970 billion in fiscal year 2025. When adjusted for public debt accounting, the Congressional Budget Office confirmed that interest costs exceeded $1 trillion for the first time ever. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget projects interest payments at or above that level indefinitely.

That means the United States now spends more servicing old debt than it does on many core government functions—and does so before funding a single new priority.

Every additional trillion borrowed deepens this trap.

Tariffs, Myths, and Vanishing Math

Trump has argued that tariffs will close the gap. Treasury data show tariffs may generate $300–$400 billion per year, a notable increase—but still a fraction of annual interest costs and an even smaller slice of total federal spending.

Even worse, when the administration retreated from earlier tariff threats, the CBO calculated that $800 billion in projected deficit reduction simply disappeared.

At the same time, the White House has floated a proposal to distribute a $2,000 annual “dividend” to every American using tariff revenue—an idea analysts estimate could cost $600 billion per year, further widening deficits unless fully offset. No credible offset has been identified.

This is not fiscal strategy. It is arithmetic denial.

Markets Are Noticing

Bond markets are already responding. As Treasury auctions flood the market week after week, yields on long-term U.S. debt have risen, reflecting investor unease over volume, sustainability, and political paralysis.

Major banks, including Deutsche Bank, have openly described America’s debt burden as an “Achilles’ heel.” Not a talking point. A vulnerability.

The danger is not imminent collapse—but exposure. High debt limits flexibility in future crises, raises borrowing costs, weakens the dollar’s dominance, and magnifies the impact of geopolitical shocks.

Promises vs. Outcomes

Trump once pledged to eliminate the national debt over time. A decade later, after his return to power, it has reached record highs and is accelerating again—this time without the excuse of a global shutdown.

Polling shows 82% of Americans believe the debt is a serious problem. What remains unresolved is whether Washington—and this administration in particular—is willing to confront it honestly.

Because the question is no longer whether the debt is growing too fast.

The question is how long the world’s largest economy can outrun the consequences of pretending it isn’t.


Saturday, February 14, 2026

Late President Jimmy Carter Tried To Warn Us About AIPAC



Jimmy Carter, AIPAC, and the Question of Peace in the Middle East

Former President Jimmy Carter was never a fringe voice on Middle East peace. As the architect of the Camp David Accords, the only lasting peace agreement between Israel and an Arab neighbor, Carter spoke from direct experience. That is precisely why his later criticism of AIPAC (the American Israel Public Affairs Committee) carried weight—and controversy.

Carter’s central argument was simple but unsettling to Washington insiders: AIPAC does not function as a pro-peace organization. Instead, he argued, it exists to advance the policy preferences of the Israeli government of the moment—regardless of whether those policies promote peace, occupation, or expansion.

“Not a Peace Lobby”




Carter was explicit in interviews and writings that AIPAC’s mission is not to pressure Israel toward compromise. In his view, the organization works to ensure unconditional U.S. political, military, and financial support for Israel, even when Israeli government actions undermine negotiations or violate international norms.

As Carter put it in substance—not as a slogan—AIPAC supports what Israel wants, not what peace requires.

This distinction mattered deeply to him. Carter believed that real peace required:

  • An end to settlement expansion in occupied territories

  • Respect for Palestinian self-determination

  • Honest U.S. mediation rather than automatic alignment

He argued that AIPAC actively punished U.S. lawmakers who questioned these positions, creating a political environment where criticism of Israeli policy was treated as disloyalty rather than legitimate debate.

Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid

Carter’s most sustained critique came in his 2006 book, Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid. While the title drew intense backlash, the substance of the book focused on how U.S. domestic politics—particularly lobbying pressure—prevent American leaders from acting as honest brokers.

Carter argued that:

  • U.S. presidents and members of Congress privately acknowledge the damage caused by settlements

  • Publicly, however, they remain silent out of fear of political retaliation

  • AIPAC plays a central role in enforcing that silence

He stressed that criticizing Israeli government policy is not antisemitic, nor is it anti-Israel. Rather, he framed it as pro-peace and pro-international law.

A Veteran Diplomat’s Warning

What makes Carter’s critique unique is not its rhetoric, but its source. This was not an activist or academic outsider. This was:

  • A former U.S. president

  • A Nobel Peace Prize laureate

  • A man who personally negotiated peace in the region

Carter warned that blind support for any government—without accountability—ultimately harms both Israelis and Palestinians, locking both into a cycle of violence and instability.

He believed that peace required leverage, honesty, and courage—qualities he felt were undermined when U.S. policy became captive to domestic political pressure rather than long-term strategic and moral interests.

Why Carter’s Words Still Matter

Decades later, Carter’s critique remains relevant. Debate over AIPAC’s influence has entered the mainstream, but the underlying issue he raised persists: Can the United States pursue peace if it is unwilling to challenge policies that perpetuate conflict?

Jimmy Carter’s answer was clear.
Without independence, there can be no honest mediation.
Without honesty, there can be no peace.

And without the courage to question powerful interests, even a superpower becomes constrained—not by foreign governments, but by its own political fear.

Carter in his own words