NY Post readers discuss Letitia James’ potential prosecution for falsely listing a Virginia home as a principal residence.
Month: April 2025
As Harvard resists the Trump administration’s demands, its “defenders” claim “academic freedom is at stake,” but these defenders want “the status quo of having academic freedom for some but not for others,” thunders Commentary’s Seth Mandel.
Democrats could be making a risky gamble by zeroing in on Trump’s immigration policies, analysts told Newsweek.
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Dispatch 63: It’s the Data, Stupid

What is DOGE going to do with all the sensitive data they are exfiltrating (stealing) from the databases of the government (and some non-government) agencies they have infiltrated over the past two months, ostensibly to “audit” them, to “increase efficiency”? Is this hoovering up of data in fact the real purpose of DOGE? And if so, to what end? A recent development in the DOGE saga may eventually provide some answers.
Boston Marathon and city insist all are welcome. But some runners say politics will keep them home
Legal group sues Costa Rica alleging the rights of 81 children deported by Trump were violated [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now

New York City Mayor Eric Adams on Thursday dismissed as “baseless” a City Council lawsuit requesting a temporary restraining order (TRO) and a preliminary
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NY Internation Auto Show opens (VIDEO)
NY Internation Auto Show opens (VIDEO) Mid Hudson News

The Other Art Fair, presented by Saatchi Art, returns to Brooklyn for its 15th edition from May 8–11, transforming ZeroSpace in Gowanus into an immersive
With NYC restaurants increasingly going high-tech, one enterprising omakase restaurant is reverting back to the drawing board — by allowing customers to “dine in 2D.” Up is down and black is white at Shirokuro, the Big Apple’s first full-service “two-dimensional” restaurant in the East Village, which evokes eating inside a pop-up graphic novel.