Category: News
Daily Horoscope for December 26, 2025
General Daily Insight for December 26, 2025
Buckle up — it’s time to handle some unstable ground. This morning, the emotional Moon squares verbose Mercury, so words may clash and schedules wobble until we slow down and listen. By midday, perspective returns and cooperation feels easier, but there’s still no need to rush things. We can take our time, particularly during the conjunction between the Moon and Saturn at 7:41 PM EST. While we shouldn’t permanently wall ourselves off from any overly exuberant peers, a few temporary fences probably wouldn’t go amiss.
Aries
March 21 – April 19
Quiet moments give you surprising inner strength. The careful Moon merges with structured Saturn, empowering your 12th House of Reflection. If at all possible, set aside some time to be with yourself today — yes, that includes setting aside your phone for the duration. You could also cancel plans to go out, especially if you’ve been running yourself ragged lately. If worries surface, name them aloud, then box tasks into tomorrow so your mind stops chasing every unfinished detail. Protect your downtime!
Taurus
April 20 – May 20
Friendship can blanket your whole day with comfort and warmth. Your 11th House of Social Networks brightens as loving Luna coordinates with precise Saturn, making teamwork smooth and group plans surprisingly fruitful. You may suggest a simple potluck, because small coordination helps everyone feel included and keeps costs down for the whole team. Be sure to pace yourself. Planning can be exhausting — even if you’re just keeping the group chat up to date! Say yes to collaboration and watch shared efforts multiply joy.
Gemini
May 21 – June 20
Your inbox buzzes louder than your thoughts. The Moon fusses over trickster Mercury, activating your 10th House of Status and your 7th House of Partners. Someone’s request (most likely work-related) may scramble plans. If you’re confused, consider asking a trusted counterpart in your daily world. Their outside opinion could have surprising insight. Still unsure? Try writing down each step in order, then tackle the first task before peeking at the future ones. Firm structure is the best way to protect your time.
Cancer
June 21 – July 22
The bigger picture is coming into view. The appreciative Moon in your curious 9th house meets lucky Jupiter in your inspired sign today, boosting your ability to explore unique ideas. You could research a course or map out a trip. Along the way, talking about your plans could genuinely improve them, but don’t let anyone rush you or slow you down. Move at your own pace, trusting that the universe will send the right helpers at the right moment. Allow yourself to learn and grow!
Leo
July 23 – August 22
Secrets, meet the spotlight. This doesn’t have to be a bad thing — deep bonding is more possible when you share sensitive information, especially as the Moon meets Saturn in your 8th House of Sharing. If a shared account needs review, hold your ground. Fair agreements protect closeness and keep drama low. Your natural flair shines when you turn a tough topic into a heartfelt conversation. Someone may appreciate your courage more than you’d expect. Speak plainly, since honesty deepens true loyalty.
Virgo
August 23 – September 22
Clear agreements make relationships feel safer. The rooted Moon unites with authoritative Saturn in your 7th House of Connections, inviting thoughtful boundaries across your closest ties and key contracts. You may outline who does what and when for upcoming plans. Utilizing your words carefully can forge tension into clarity, since precision shows care rather than criticism. In all your relationships, acknowledge (even just to yourself) how much time and energy you will offer today, then notice who reciprocates. Those are the partnerships to nourish!
Libra
September 23 – October 22
There’s no need to leap out of bed this morning, but you shouldn’t laze around for hours, either. Your daily routine and communication style are both impacted by today’s square between the Moon and cerebral Mercury. Competing priorities may wrestle for attention! Bridge both by grouping quick replies into timed blocks, bracing yourself for any surprise duties. Remember, their lack of planning shouldn’t be your emergency. Still, cutting people some slack isn’t a crime. Prioritize one main task, allowing this focus to ease your stress.
Scorpio
October 23 – November 21
Scorpio, play opens a needed doorway today. Auspicious Jupiter receives an easy trine from Luna in your 5th House of Charm, letting you add a little extra sparkle to any ongoing projects. Share a playful story, paint a messy canvas, or plan a movie night with someone you love — anything to nurture joy in your heart. Though creative nerves could whisper doubts, remember: today, the journey of creation matters far more than what the results look like. Choose happiness on purpose!
Sagittarius
November 22 – December 21
Home plans may shift as messages keep coming. Your 4th House of Home and Family feels tugged as temperamental Moon squares mischievous Mercury, so competing impulses may challenge your patience. With Mercury in your 1st House of Self-Identity, you’re likely craving freedom to fly. Try talking about this with your family — they might actually understand. You could also share something you’ve learned recently that inspires patience by reminding everyone that you’re on the same team. Keep it light yet clear, and harmony should speedily return.
Capricorn
December 22 – January 19
Capricorn, your words land with quiet authority. Your 3rd House of Communication asks for structure, turning conversations serious so you can set clear boundaries on communications and nearby obligations. You may map a winter schedule, edit a resume or organize rides, while your steady tone earns respect across your circles. If emotions rise, pause to breathe and choose slower pacing, since patience protects your reputation and keeps projects aligned with your long-term aims. State your plan plainly, because clarity moves work forward.
Aquarius
January 20 – February 18
Practical ideas could click into place at any moment. Luna and Jupiter’s friendly trine opens doors in your 2nd House of Self-Worth, potentially simplifying choices about your income and skillset. You’re ready to negotiate rates with calm firmness, even as your dutiful 6th house tosses in extra chores. Track small wins through the day, because steady progress shows you can grow resources without strain and deepens the quiet independence you cherish. Value yourself fairly, and your confidence should draw fair offers.
Pisces
February 19 – March 20
Prepare yourself — it’s time to stand up and speak out with kindness. Identity meets responsibility as the intuitive Moon joins Saturn in your visionary sign. You may claim space by setting a clear timeline that favors self-respect. Whatever the role, your boundaries teach others how to treat you, at home and beyond. Adjust commitments if your energy dips. Even small changes protect your sensitive system and keep your gifts flowing where they matter most. Stand tall with care, and others should follow your lead.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/25/daily-horoscope-for-december-26-2025/
Ex-Netanyahu Aide Says 1st Post-Oct 7 Tasking From ‘Panicked’ PM Was Helping Him Dodge Responsibility
Ex-Netanyahu Aide Says 1st Post-Oct 7 Tasking From ‘Panicked’ PM Was Helping Him Dodge Responsibility
A former top aide to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says that, in the wake of the Oct 7 Hamas invasion on Israel, the first assignment he received from a “panicked” prime minister was figuring out how he could avoid being held responsible for an attack that was as humiliating for Netanyahu as it was devastating for the country. He also said Netanyahu was personally involved in orchestrating the leak of classified information to foreign media in a bid to dodge criticism over a failure to reach a ceasefire agreement.
The accusations from former Netanyahu spokesman Eli Feldstein came in an extensive interview with Israel’s Kan news network that aired Monday and Tuesday nights. While there were many communication needs in the wake of mass bloodshed that brought 1,200 deaths and saw hundreds taken captive, Feldstein said Netanyahu’s first priority was avoiding blame. Describing Netanyahu as appearing “panicked” at the time, Feldstein told Kan:
“He asked me, ‘What are they talking about in the news? Are they still talking about responsibility? He wanted me to think of something that could be said that would offset the media storm surrounding the question of whether the prime minister had taken responsibility or not…The first and biggest task that I had after October 7 was erasing the concept of [Netanyahu’s] responsibility from the public discourse.”
Further hammering the point, Feldstein said that close Netanyahu associates even advised Feldstein to ensure the word “responsibility” never appeared in statements that he was preparing. “They told me to take the word ‘responsibility’ out of the lexicon and formulate something without the word ‘responsibility’ … it won’t go in,” he said.
Eli Feldstein, who stands accused of operating as a Qatari agent while working as Netanyahu’s spokesman, reveals the one and only mission he ever got from the PM: Figure out how I can shirk responsibility for October 7. Do anything. This is just the promo for a long interview… pic.twitter.com/c7I7gmLQZ5
— UnXeptable (@UnxeptableD) December 22, 2025
His account is certain to strike a nerve in Israel, where Netanyahu has faced steady criticism for accepting responsibility for the massive security failure that took place under his government’s watch — and has also been accused of extending the war in Gaza so as to forestall a comprehensive, post-war inquiry, even if extending the war meant keeping hostages lives in peril.
Responding to the broadcast, the prime minister’s office was dismissive of what it called a “long series of mendacious and recycled allegations made by a man with clear personal interests who is trying to deflect responsibility from himself.” Feldstein has been charged with leaking classified information to the media in a bid to shield Netanyahu from criticism at a time when Gaza ceasefire negotiations had come to a halt.
In his Kan interview, Feldstein said Netanyahu was very much a part of that scheme: “In order to [publicize] such a document, the prime minister must be in the picture – from beginning to end..He is the one who ultimately was behind the leak.” He said Netanyahu is lying when he denies his own involvement.
Netanyahu recently hosted Sen. Lindsey Graham in Israel
Feldstein, who’d previously worked for far-right Netanyahu coalition member and current national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, was accused of planting bogus narratives that Hamas was scheming to smuggle Israeli hostages into Egypt, and that Hamas was prolonging negotiations in a form of psychological warfare on the Israeli people. At least one of the outlets that relied on Feldstein’s leaks — the Jewish Chronicle of London — went on to withdraw their report, with prominent columnists resigning over the scandal. Feldstein has also been accused of accepting money from Qatar as part of a foreign influence operation.
The leaked document was an internal Hamas communication that was supposed to reveal the group was insincere in reaching a compromise that would bring about a ceasefire. However, one of the recipients of the document, the German tabloid Bild, reportedly distorted the document’s content for the benefit of Netanyahu. In Tuesday’s second installment of the interview, Feldstein said that, after the misleading Bild story ran, Netanyahu adviser Jonathan Urich texted him and said, “The boss is thrilled.”
Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/25/2025 – 18:45
Lamar Jackson doubtful and Jordan Love questionable for Saturday’s Baltimore Ravens-Green Bay Packers game
GREEN BAY — Lamar Jackson is listed as doubtful for the Baltimore Ravens’ game against the Green Bay Packers on Saturday night as he continues to deal with a back injury that knocked him out of the game against the New England Patriots last weekend.
The two-time MVP quarterback hasn’t practiced this week after getting hurt in the second quarter of the Ravens’ 28-24 loss. Tyler Huntley, who went 9 of 10 for 65 yards against the Patriots, likely would start if Jackson is unavailable.
The Packers (9-5-1) have their own quarterback issues after Jordan Love left the Packers’ 22-16 overtime loss last weekend in Chicago because of a concussion. Love and backup quarterback Malik Willis are both listed as questionable for Saturday’s game against the Ravens (7-8).
Love practiced on a limited basis this week. Willis hurt his throwing shoulder against the Bears and was considered a limited practice participant Tuesday and Thursday. Willis didn’t practice Wednesday because of an illness.
The Packers also listed offensive tackle Zach Tom (back/knee), center Sean Rhyan (knee/illness), wide receiver Christian Watson (shoulder/illness), safety Evan Williams (knee) and cornerback/receiver Bo Melton (illness) as questionable. Tom and Williams didn’t play against the Bears.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/25/lamar-jackson-jordan-love-injury-report/
Treasury Targets Money Services Businesses In Crackdown On Cartel Money Flows
Treasury Targets Money Services Businesses In Crackdown On Cartel Money Flows
Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
The Treasury Department has announced a wide-scale enforcement operation targeting more than 100 money services businesses operating along the U.S.–Mexico border, as part of the Trump administration’s campaign to disrupt cartel money laundering through America’s financial system.
The operation, announced on Dec. 22 by the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), focuses on examining money services businesses, or MSBs, operating along the southwest border for potential noncompliance with rules meant to detect money laundering and disrupt illicit finance.
It’s part of the Trump administration’s ongoing efforts to combat cartels and other transnational criminal networks whose actions harm U.S. communities and threaten national security.
“At President Trump’s direction, the Treasury Department is utilizing all tools to stop terrorist cartels, drug traffickers, and human smugglers,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement.
“This sweeping operation will help root out potential cartel-related money laundering from the U.S. financial system.”
Money services businesses include non-bank financial providers such as currency exchanges, check-cashing firms, and money transmitters.
Treasury officials say those businesses face heightened exposure to illicit finance in border regions, where drug traffickers and smuggling networks seek to move proceeds in small, structured transactions designed to avoid detection.
The new data-driven operation—described by FinCEN as the “first-of-its kind”—was made possible by Treasury’s modernization efforts, including the use of advanced technology to transform fragmented financial information into investigative leads to fight financial crimes more effectively.
The agency said the operation is based on the analysis of more than 1 million currency transaction reports and roughly 87,000 suspicious activity reports submitted by financial institutions.
Using high-performance data processing, the agency is identifying potential compliance failures under the Bank Secrecy Act that could warrant civil penalties, injunctive actions, warning letters, or criminal referrals, it said.
The operation has already produced six notices of investigation, dozens of examination referrals to the IRS, and more than 50 compliance outreach letters, according to the agency.
The move marks an escalation in targeted enforcement of rules meant to combat financial crime, with FinCEN saying that advanced analytics are able generate “reliable decision-grade leads at scale” for regulators and law enforcement to act on.
The Trump administration has increasingly tied financial enforcement to national security, following President Donald Trump’s decision earlier this year to designate several major Mexico-based drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. That designation expanded the government’s authority to freeze assets and pursue sanctions linked to cartel financing.
Enforcement Follows Contested Border Reporting Rules
The latest enforcement sweep builds on a series of geographic targeting orders (GTO) issued earlier this year that lowered cash-transaction reporting thresholds for money service businesses in certain border areas.
In March, FinCEN imposed a temporary order requiring money service businesses in 30 ZIP codes in California and Texas to report cash transactions as small as $200, down from the long-standing $10,000 threshold under the Bank Secrecy Act. That move triggered lawsuits from border-area businesses, which argued the requirement was arbitrary, burdensome, and harmful to legitimate commerce.
In June, a federal judge in Texas granted a temporary restraining order shielding two El Paso-area businesses from enforcement, citing the rule’s geographic design and disproportionate compliance burden.
“The administrative record reflects that the government either failed to consider or offered an unsubstantiated conclusion on at least two important aspects of the problem: (1) there are simple measures that cartel members can take to render the Border GTO completely toothless, and (2) innocent businesses can be profoundly disadvantaged if they are located on the ‘wrong’ side of an El Paso street,” U.S. District Judge Leon Schydlower wrote in a June 24 ruling granting an injunction, which applied only to the plaintiffs and did not halt the policy nationwide.
The Trump administration later allowed the $200 threshold order to expire and replaced it with a modified GTO that raised the reporting floor to $1,000, expanded coverage to parts of Arizona, and extended filing deadlines to ease compliance pressures. That revised order remains in effect through March 2026.
“FinCEN is now issuing a new GTO to target illicit transactions, while mitigating burden on legitimate businesses,” the agency said on Sept. 8, adding that the reissued GTO “will continue to ensure law enforcement can deny individuals and entities associated with these groups access to the U.S. financial system.”
Some civil-liberties advocates and free-market groups have taken a dim view of what they describe as expanded warrantless financial surveillance introduced by the new rules.
“This takes a financial surveillance system that is already enormous and intrusive and burdensome, and it expands that system enormously,” Rob Johnson, senior attorney at the Institute for Justice, told The Epoch Times in an earlier interview.
Nicholas Anthony, a policy analyst at the Cato Institute’s Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives, said in a note that the $10,000 threshold for currency transaction reports is long overdue for reform. But he argued that it should be raised—not lowered—to account for inflation.
“Yet, instead, we are seeing a drastic increase in financial surveillance, making the problem even worse,” Anthony wrote.
“Whether it’s the mob or the cartel, organized crime is not an easy thing to deal with.
“However, this challenge does not mean Americans should have their rights stripped away in the pursuit of justice.”
The Treasury did not respond to an earlier request for comment on criticism of the GTO and its lowered reporting threshold. However, in response to one of the lawsuits, government attorneys argued that business-compliance-burden claims were “exaggerated” and that the rule is justified because money service businesses along the southwest border are “particularly vulnerable” to cartel-linked money-laundering abuses.
Kevin Stocklin contributed to this report.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/25/2025 – 18:00
What Is Wall Street’s Favorite Christmas Song
What Is Wall Street’s Favorite Christmas Song
Every year-end, there are heated debates about what is the “best …. of Christmas”, especially among those who work in finance.
Last year, Home Alone, Die Hard, and Love Actually topped the Christmas movie rankings as polled by the 2025 Deutsche Bank Global Markets Survey. This year, the bank returned to the even more contentious topic of favorite Christmas songs.
At a global level, the bank’s 2026 Year Ahead Global Markets Survey found that Wham! won again, while regionally, Mariah Carey took the crown in the US, Asia, and the Rest of the World with All I Want For Christmas is You. The full list is in the report.
For the record, Jim Reid – who compiled and published the survey – writes that his top three would have been Wham!, The Pogues, and Joni Mitchell’s River, a smooth progression from the tacky to the tasteful.
In his last note of the year, Reid also listed his favorite TV series, film, and album of 2025: we except it below (full report here)
1. Slow Horses – The best TV series in the world at the moment. Well, until Rivals comes back! I try to model my management technique on Jackson Lamb, if not my personal hygiene.
2. Dept Q – A bit like Slow Horses in that it involves a grumpy, rude police boss with a complicated past. He is of course a tortured genius and the show is gripping.
3. Blue Lights – A brilliant Northern Ireland police drama on its third series with no drop off in quality and heart.
4. Mobland – Helen Mirren and Piers Brosnan do terrible Irish accents in this trashy but fun mob drama. It proved a little light relief when we watched it as Liberation Day rolled through!
5. SAS Rogue Heroes – Dramatised true story about an incredible bunch of elite soldiers who seemingly played a big part in the outcome of WW
6. The White Lotus – I disliked series 1. Series 2 and now series 3 were great. Not at all like my holidays! Apart from the arguments.
7. Karen Pirie – A Scottish police heroine who doesn’t play by the rules but gets results.
8. The Newsreader – A homage to the 1980s. Clever Australian program that follows actual global news stories from the period with a fictitious news studio narrative in a period where TV hosts were the anchors of our lives.
9. The Studio – Comedies tend not to be very good but this is an exception. Self-deprecating look at the life of a Hollywood studio boss. Seth Rogan plays the character you’d expect him to play. Cringeworthily funny.
10. The Beast in Me – Clare Danes gives her usual tour de force and provides all the usual facial expressions to go along with it. A very tense psychological drama. I was a bit scared.
11. All Her Fault – Sarah Snook is the magnetic force in this drama about a missing 6 year old boy.
12. Black Doves – my wife is not a huge fan of Keira Knightley! So I watched while travelling. Enjoyable nonsense.
13. The Diplomat – more enjoyable nonsense I watched while travelling as my wife believed the first series was too absurd to continue with.
Reid’s favorite film of the year was “The Ballad of Wallis Island” which was “a life affirming, quirky movie, about a washed up folk pop star who gets booked to do a private gig on a small island at a house of a recluse who won the lottery and bought a place there. It’s very good.”
His favorite album was Florence and the Machine – Everybody Scream. A dramatic, orchestral, melodic, and confessional mini masterpiece
Finally, for those looking for some light Christmas reading (while escaping from kids or maybe in-laws), DB published its Ultimate Guide to Long-Term Investing (Available to pro subs) which is designed to help everyone put their long-term finances on the firmest footing, which should be a good New Year’s resolution.
More in the full 2026 Year Ahead Global Markets Survey
Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/25/2025 – 17:15
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/what-wall-streets-favorite-christmas-song
Naval Station Great Lakes sailors get taste of home at Arlington Heights school
On a not-so-white Christmas Day, 50 recruits from Naval Station Great Lakes walked into a roaring welcome at Christian Liberty Academy in Arlington Heights, a tradition embraced by the community for 13 years.
The sailors arrived in a yellow school bus escorted by police cars and veterans zipping ahead on motorcycles to the front steps of the school, where neighbors and volunteers on either side of the stairs held American flags up high, waving them ecstatically.
The annual celebration was once again hosted by Bob Stack and his wife, Linda. They lost their 20-year-old son, Marine Lance Cpl. James Stack, when he was killed in combat in Afghanistan on Nov. 10, 2010. Stack was a science teacher at Christian Liberty Academy for 24 years before retiring in June.
“Perhaps the most difficult thing you’ve ever done is (be) sequestered from the world, away from your families,” Stack said to the recruits sitting on chairs in front of the gymnasium stage. “Soon, you will have earned the title “United States Navy sailor,” a title for which you can be very proud of. As I look at you, fit and squared away in uniform, you remind me of my son. At his boot camp graduation a long time ago, I couldn’t have been prouder of him that day.”
Navy recruits and volunteers bow their heads in prayer before lunch, Dec. 25, 2025, at Christian Liberty Academy in Arlington Heights. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Thursday’s celebration started with doughnuts, fruit and coffee in the foyer, followed by a noon lunch in the school cafeteria, which was filled with food tables, bag-toss games, foosball and a sprawling table of red and green cookies, fudgy brownies, cakes and sodas. Stack said the spread was the ultimate “cheat day” for the self-disciplined troops. Then after an evening dinner, the recruits head to the bus and back to base.
For many of the recruits at the event Thursday, home is a long way from Naval Station Great Lakes, the Navy’s only boot camp and largest training installation, located on over 1,600 acres overlooking Lake Michigan.
At the station, they’re allotted four phone calls during the duration of boot camp, which lasts a little over eight weeks. For the current group, graduation is Jan. 8, and they haven’t seen their families since November. So in the spirit of Christmas cheer, organizers at Christian Liberty Academy arranged cellphones so recruits could not just hear their loved ones’ voices – but see them too.
“My fiance hasn’t seen me without facial hair and short hair. She does not like short hair – the clean shave, either. I’ve had a mustache the entire time we’ve been together,” laughed Michael Fredrickson, a 23-year-old recruit of Naval Station Great Lakes. Along with having to shave every single day, Navy recruits have a meticulously strict schedule that begins around 4 a.m.
Thursday’s Christmas event was freeing in that sense, Fredrickson said, noting that recruits rarely even slouch or walk around slurping coffee.
Fredrickson, who grew up in Florida, but was born in Wisconsin, said many recruits got to speak to family over the phone the day before – their third phone call of camp – so Thursday’s video call would be a total surprise for his fiance.
Amber Rens of Wisconsin, right, introduces her friend Rae Inting, of Florida, to her parents on the phone, Dec. 25, 2025, at Christian Liberty Academy in Arlington Heights. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Next to him, Edgar Garcia, 32, who was born and raised in the Chicago area, was about to call his mom. Though his family isn’t physically that far, Garcia said it feels even farther since they’re cut off from the world, news, social media – and sports.
“Our (division commander) told me about the Bears and how they’ve been dominating and that they beat the Packers in an overtime touchdown!” Garcia said. “I was like of course they’re good when I can’t watch any of the games.”
Sports woes aside, Garcia said enlisting in the Navy has changed his life and may have been an easier transition for him than it has been for some of the younger recruits, or the recruits who have small children at home. The first few days of boot camp were emotional for many, he said, as they adjusted to a new normal without cellphones and music and family.
For Georgia native Akierra Pedro, 28, enlisting in the Navy meant being away from her two daughters, who are 6 and 2.
“It’s really hard being away from them for Christmas, but my older one tells me she’s proud of me every time we get to talk – it’s really hard, but they are also my motivation to get to the end,” Pedro said.
She gets to see her daughters in two weeks at graduation. Then after an overnight stay at home, Pedro will begin “A school,” which is the specialized technical training sailors attend after boot camp to learn the specific job they qualify for. Pedro’s A school is in Mississippi, where she’ll specialize in computers.
After writing her name on the sign-up sheet for a phone and charger, Pedro video-called her daughters.
Stack said the organizers have partnered with Verizon Wireless for several years to provide recruits with a phone for the day.
A couple hours into the morning, almost every recruit was deep into conversation with loved ones or friends. Some walked and talked with their phones, some searched for a quiet spot, others sat shoulder to shoulder introducing their families to each other, and some just sunk into the bleachers, smiling gently at the screen.
Navy recruits talk to loved ones on the phone, Dec. 25, 2025, at Christian Liberty Academy in Arlington Heights. Recruits are not allowed unlimited phone calls on base but were allowed to use the phones for the day to talk to loved ones.(Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
Phones lay on a table before being given to Navy recruits to use for the day. Recruits are not allowed unlimited phone calls on base but were allowed to use the phones for the day to talk to loved ones. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
The organizers were short a few phones, so Tonya Aiello, a volunteer and staff member at Christian Liberty Academy, handed her own phone to one of the recruits to use for the day.
“When they first started, they would only get about 10 phones and there were so many troops, so my husband and I would just use our phones for them to use, too,” Aiello explained. “And then when we got our phones back, we’d go through and see where people were calling… Hawaii, Pennsylvania, Maryland – wherever. It was really fun. We’d be like, where did your phone call today?”
Aiello said the Christmas Day tradition has become something she looks forward to each year. It’s a way to offer recruits the feeling of home despite how far they are from it, she said.
It also offered them a taste of normalcy, said Naomi Soles, 21, a recruit from Jacksonville, Florida.
“Just seeing the outside world – being on the road even was exciting, we’ve been marching everywhere,” Soles laughed. “Two months doesn’t sound like a long time, but it felt like a long time.”
Soles said she was born and raised in Jacksonville and lived five minutes between both of her parents. Enlisting and being away was a big jump for her, she said. And after graduation, she’ll enroll at an A school in San Antonio, Texas, for a career as a Navy Hospital Corpsman, an enlisted medical specialist providing healthcare, emergency treatment, and preventative care for Navy and Marine personnel and families.
Navy recruits Cynthia Choong, of Florida, left, and Naomi Soles, of Maryland, talk to volunteer Tonya Aiello, of Arlington Heights, Dec. 25, 2025, at Christian Liberty Academy in Arlington Heights. It was the 13th year that the school hosted recruits from the Naval Station Great Lakes on Christmas. (Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune)
While in line to grab coffee and pastries, Soles was telling her friend, fellow recruit Cynthia Choong, 24, from Maryland, what Christmas typically looks like in Florida.
“Me and my mom usually make ornaments, like styrofoam balls and sequins, then we’ll open gifts,” Soles explained, happily. “All my family would be there eating good food. We usually do apple fritters in the morning. And then we have a back porch. It’s Florida, so it’s not this cold – we’d probably be sitting on the back porch and drinking coffee. It’d be a slow morning, but those are the best kind.”
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/25/naval-station-sailors-christmas/
Waste Of The Day: Superintendent Resigns, Nets Over $900K
Waste Of The Day: Superintendent Resigns, Nets Over $900K
Authored by Jeremy Portnoy via RealClearInvestigations,
Topline: A Long Island school district must pay its superintendent over $907,500 after he resigned without a public explanation this September, according to records obtained by Newsday through a Freedom of Information Law request.
Key facts: The Plainedge Union Free School District paid Edward Salina a $662,352 lump sum for 184 unused sick and personal days and 286.5 unused vacation days.
The district will also pay the remaining $245,185 of Salina’s salary for the 2025-26 school year. The salary is paid in bi-weekly installments, which will end if Salina takes a job at another school, Newsday reported.
Salina’s contract gave him 35 vacation days, 14 sick days and three personal days per year. Unused days were carried over to the next year with no limit.
Waste of the Day 12.23.25 Open the Books
He resigned abruptly on Sept. 12, two weeks into the current school year. The reason remains unknown. He had been superintendent since 2011, and his contract was set to expire in 2029.
“What is paid is basically contractual,” school board president Joseph Beyrouty told Newsday. “There’s nothing more to it than that.”
The school district is paying District Wise Search Consultants to lead the search for a new superintendent, according to Newsday. The dollar cost is unknown, but District Wise received $261,000 from several Long Island districts since 2020, including $23,000 each from four other Long Island school districts in 2023 for their superintendent searches, according to Open the Books’ data.
Interim Superintendent Carol Muscarella is earning $1,200 per day but will not hold the job permanently, according to Newsday.
“It’s just to basically keep the lights on and the employees paid. And I think she’s done a phenomenal job with that,” Beyrouty said. “As a matter of fact, I think she’s even gone above and beyond that and really helped tackle some issues that have come up along the way.”
Search all federal, state and local salaries and vendor spending with the world’s largest government spending database at OpenTheBooks.com.
Background: The Plainedge school district had a $50.6 million payroll in 2024, according to Open the Books’ database. Seven employees, including Salina, made more than $200,000. An additional 292 people made $100,000 or more.
Summary: It’s questionable whether any public employee should receive nearly $1 million in a single year, but paying one who is no longer working and gave no explanation for their departure is especially alarming.
The #WasteOfTheDay is brought to you by the forensic auditors at OpenTheBooks.com
Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/25/2025 – 16:30
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/waste-day-superintendent-resigns-nets-over-900k
Lies My Liberal Teacher Told Me About Christmas
Lies My Liberal Teacher Told Me About Christmas
It’s almost as much a Christmas tradition as eggnog and Rankin/Bass – The political left’s propaganda disparaging Noel appears like clockwork every December. The season inevitably triggers progressives into rantings and ravings about the “white supremacist” evils of western culture, Christianity and the need for a more “secular” or “multicultural” form of celebration. In other words, Christians aren’t allowed to have their own holidays.
Protected holidays are only reserved for cultures with spicy foods and child marriage.
And, if you went to a public school in the west in the past few decades you probably dealt with multiple liberal teachers who regaled you with their “profound insights” on the “true history” of western holiday traditions. The problem is, most of what these teachers tell their students is a lie based on generations of carefully crafted political narratives.
The disinformation campaigns against Christmas have been so effective in the past that there are even groups of Christians that actually believe the same nonsense and repeat it as if they have discovered some fantastic conspiratorial secrets that only “true Christians” know.
Let’s examine some of these lies and why they are historically inaccurate…
Lie #1: Christmas Is A Pagan Holiday?
Utterly false in every way, but many western students have heard this claim thousands of times over and AI chatbots continue to spread the fallacy today. The idea comes from the incorrect claim that Christmas is an artificial amalgamation of traditions stolen from pagan events like Saturnalia and the Roman Solis Festival as a way to convert the heathens centuries ago.
Saturnalia was held on Dec 17, not Dec 25, and focused on animal sacrifices and a loosening of moral rules. Christmas was started as a completely separate tradition with separate beliefs and a Christian message.
The Roman Solis Festival was created a century after Christians began celebrating December 25th as the birth of Christ. Surviving Roman records from Hyppolytus mention Christmas as early as 200AD. Hippolytus of Rome (c. 170–235 AD) is widely regarded by modern scholars as the earliest known Christian writer to effectively calculate the birth of Jesus as December 25th.
The earliest calendar record of the pagan Solis Festival was 354AD, over 150 years later. It was created by Roman Emperor Aurelian, who was a pagan hostile to the spread of Christianity. He sought to co-opt or compete with Christian celebrations, rather than Christians trying to co-opt paganism.
Lie #2: The Birth Date Of December 25th For Jesus Is Completely Made Up?
The date of December 25th for the birth of Jesus was a deduction from scripture, analyzed in conjunction with historical knowledge about those who worked in the temple.
St. Luke related the announcement of the birth of St. John the Baptist to his elderly parents, St. Zechariah and St. Elizabeth. St. Zechariah was a priest of the class of Abijah (Lk 1:5), the eighth class of 24 priestly classes (Neh 12:17). Each class served one week in the temple, twice a year. Josef Heinrich Friedlieb has established that the priestly class of Abijah would have been on duty during the second week of the Jewish month Tishri, the week of the Day of Atonement or in our calendar, between Sept. 22 and 30.
While on duty, the Archangel Gabriel informed Zechariah that he and Elizabeth would have a son (Lk 1:5-24). Thereupon, they conceived John, who after presumably 40 weeks in the womb would have been born at the end of June. For this reason, Christians celebrate the Nativity of St. John the Baptist June 24.
St. Luke also recorded how the Archangel Gabriel told Mary that Elizabeth was six months pregnant with John (Lk 1:36), which means the Annunciation occurred March 25. Nine months from March 25, or six months from June 24, renders the birth of Christ at Dec. 25 – Christmas.
Modern scholars support Hippolytus in his calculations of December 25th. Whether someone believes in the bible or not, the point remains that the date for Christmas was not pulled from thin air or adapted over time to “co-opt pagan traditions.”
Lie #3: Mary And Joseph Were “Illegal Immigrants”?
This false claim has resurfaced recently in the wake of mass deportations of illegals in the US, and it comes from people who apparently have no knowledge of biblical history.
Mary and Joseph fled Judea for Egypt at a time when both were controlled regions of the Roman Empire. Therefore, they did not immigrate, let alone immigrate illegally. They were both considered subjects of Rome and remained within the Roman Empire as they traveled.
Lie #4: St. Nicholas Was A Third Worlder?
In the process of woke activists trying to make everything black and brown, Santa Claus seems to be one of their favorite targets for race swapping. Leftists argue that St. Nicholas was born in Turkey, and thus, he must have been heavily melanated.
St. Nicholas was born in Turkey, but he was born to wealthy Greek parents in 270 AD in a Greek colony at a time when the Levant was controlled by the Roman Empire. The creation of Islam and the Muslim invasions did not happen for another 350 years, meaning, most of the region was fair skinned or “olive skinned”. By today’s woke diversity totem pole standards, St. Nicholas would be considered a white guy with a tan.
All records of Nicholas of Myra’s life show widespread reverence for his charity, which led to his eventual sainthood (granted 100 years after his death) and the celebration of his achievements for centuries.
Lie #5: Jesus Was Not A Real Historic Person?
Historic accounts say otherwise, including records from the Romans who saw Jesus as a reactionary enemy. Roman historian Tacitus (c. 116 AD) mentions “Christus” executed under Pilate, and Jewish historian Josephus (c. 93 AD) also refers to Jesus, both confirming Jesus’s existence and execution by Romans for followers who called him Messiah, thus supporting the record of events described in the Bible.
Lie #6: There Is No Leftist War On Christmas?
The greatest trick the devil ever played was convincing people that he doesn’t exist. Yes, there absolutely is a war on Christmas. One of the root foundations of Marxism/Communism is the crusade to erase religion as a competing ideological fount, and woke leftists are indeed communists. Karl Marx particularly despised Christianity and argued that:
“The social principles of Christianity preach cowardice, self-contempt, abasement, submission, humility, in a word all the qualities of the canaille (lower class people).”
Of course, Christianity doesn’t preach any of these things in the way Marx claimed, but communists see Christianity as an obstacle to their collectivist revolution because it preaches reverence to God above government and asserts that rights are inherent rather than being privileges granted by government. In other words, erasing Christianity is an important step in building a communist empire where the state becomes god.
The political left will argue that their incessant demands for more “secular” holiday celebrations are designed to make immigrants feel more included, but they don’t make similar demands for any other religious traditions. It is interesting that Christianity is the only religion that is consistently targeted and Christmas is the only religious celebration consistently forced to accommodate other belief systems.
Liberal teachers have been training children for decades to hate Christianity and to view Christmas as a sham. This is not the behavior of a political group at peace. It is the behavior of a psy-op, a war campaign to demoralize their enemies.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/25/2025 – 15:45
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/lies-my-liberal-teacher-told-me-about-christmas
The Evolution Of The Candy Cane
The Evolution Of The Candy Cane
Authored by Dean George via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
Candy canes have been associated with Christmas for centuries, but their origins and early history are shrouded in legend, folklore and fantasy.
The 2019 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade featured a candy cane float. Public Domain
The sweet and sticky candy first became associated with Christmas in Germany in the 17th century, though the name, color and flavor were markedly different from contemporary candy canes. Originally, they were called sugar sticks. They were pure white in color, had no peppermint flavor, and weren’t “J” shaped.
The popularity of sugar sticks eventually spread to other European countries like France and England. Because sugar was often unavailable, sugar sticks were often flavored with sweet essences from plants. Sugar sticks were handmade in small batches and given as seasonal gifts to children, family, and friends.
European immigrants coming to America in the 19th century brought their old-world recipes with them. Eventually, sugar sticks became part of this country’s Christmas celebrations.
European Folklore and Religious Symbolism
A common but unsubstantiated legend says that around 1670, a German choirmaster in Cologne gave children performing in Nativity reenactments sugar sticks to keep them quiet and attentive. A similar tale says that when some church members objected to children eating candy in church, the choirmaster commissioned a confectioner to shape the sugar sticks like shepherd’s crooks to symbolize the Biblical shepherds tending their flocks near Bethlehem, where Jesus was born.
Modern day legends attributed more to religious symbolism. Some tales say that when turned upside down, the candy crook is shaped like a “J” and stands for Jesus. Another tale implies the candied crook represents a shepherd’s crook and is symbolic of Jesus, the Good Shepherd.
One popular myth is that an Indiana candymaker crafted the Christmas candy cane to symbolize the birth, ministry, and death of Jesus Christ. The white color represents the purity of the Virgin Mary and Christ’s perfection. The thin red stripes denote Jesus’ scourging before he was crucified, and the large red stripe symbolizes the blood Christ shed on the cross. These anecdotes are intriguing but lack any historical documentation to prove their veracity.
More likely is the idea that German families used the hook in the original candy stick to facilitate using it as a Christmas ornament alongside fruit, nuts, candies, cookies, and paper decorations.
When Sugar Sticks Became Candy Canes
German-Swedish immigrant August Imgard is the first documented case in North America of using the sweet treat as a tree ornament. On Christmas Day, 1847 he introduced this interesting “twist” on sugar sticks when he decorated a blue spruce tree in Wooster, Ohio as part of his family’s Christmas celebration.
By the 1860s, the term “candy canes” was appearing in publications like Ballou’s Monthly Magazine. They were described as being hung up next to stockings. In 1871, German immigrant Claus Doscher founded Doscher’s Candies, America’s oldest candy cane maker, which was featured in American Essence magazine. Remarkably, the Doscher’s candy canes are still handmade.
Each candy cane at Doscher’s Candies is hooked by hand. Courtesy of Greg Clark
The candy cane’s famous red stripes and peppermint flavoring were believed to be added sometime around the turn of the 20th century, according to the National Confectioners Association.
In 1919, entrepreneur Bob McCormack founded the Famous Candy Company in Albany, Georgia. Within a few years, the company was producing thousands of handmade candy canes annually under the name Bob’s Candy Company (later changed to Bobs Candies). Later, in the 1950s, the Georgia company became the largest maker of candy canes and the first to wrap their candies in cellophane and mass distribute them.
In the 1950s, Gregory Keller, a Roman Catholic priest and McCormack’s brother-in-law, invented a machine that automated candy cane production, greatly reducing production time and labor costs. A patent request for the “Keller Machine” was submitted in 1957 and approved in 1960; it allowed Bobs Candies to produce millions of candy canes annually. Bobs candy canes are still made today, though the McCormack family sold the company to larger candy conglomerates in 2005.
Contemporary Candy Cane Options
The traditional red and white peppermint-flavored candy canes still dominate the market, but novel options in recent years have included fruit-based flavors and odder flavor choices for candies, like bacon, pickle and jalapeño. New textural options include chewy and liquid-filled canes with a juice-infused center.
Candy canes are now seen at other holidays also. There areheart-shaped candy canes for Valentine’s Day and orange and black candy canes at Halloween.
Traditionalists need not worry, though. The National Confectioners Association notes that 90 percent of candy canes are sold between Thanksgiving and Christmas; the second week of December is the biggest single week for candy cane sales annually; 1.76 billion candy canes are sold annually in the United States; candy canes are the number one-selling non-chocolate candy in December, and December 26th is National Candy Cane Day.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/25/2025 – 15:00
Northwest Indiana casinos report revenue uptick in August, decrease through November
The Northwest Indiana casinos had a rough three months with revenue declines reported in September, October and November. In August, the three casinos reported an increase in revenues year over year.
In August, the three casinos saw an increase in revenue from $73.8 million in 2024 to $77.2 million in 2025, largely because of a $7 million increase in revenue, year over year, at the Horseshoe casino.
In September, the three casinos reported revenues of $63.1 million, a decrease from $69 million in September 2024. In October, the three casinos reported revenues of $67.3 million, a decrease from $73.4 million in October 2024, according to the Indiana Gaming Commission’s monthly gaming reports.
In November, the three casinos reported $65.5 million in revenues, a decrease from $72.3 million in November 2024, according to the reports.
Matt Schuffert, president of Hard Rock Casino Northern Indiana, said he could only discuss the November report. November was “a tough month, primarily because of weather,” Schuffert said.
The Chicagoland area was impacted by a lake-effect snowstorm in early November and then a snowy Thanksgiving holiday weekend, Schuffert said. Typically, the Thanksgiving weekend is a strong revenue day, Schuffert said, but this year’s weather impacted the numbers.
“The entire Northwest Indiana market was down, year over year, in November. Certainly, weather played a huge reason why,” Schuffert said.
But Hard Rock still led the state in overall gaming revenue in November, Schuffert said.
Year to year, Horseshoe Hammond reported increases in August and September, while Hard Rock Northern Indiana and Ameristar Casino in East Chicago reported decreases. All three Northwest Indiana casinos reported decreases year to year in October and November.
In August, Hard Rock reported $36.2 million and Ameristar Casino reported $13.7 million. The previous August, Hard Rock reported $38.1 million and Ameristar Casino reported $15.1 million, according to the reports.
Horseshoe Hammond reported $27.3 million in August and $20.6 million in August 2024, according to the reports.
In September, Hard Rock reported $32.5 million and Ameristar Casino reported $11.4 million, according to the reports. The previous September, Hard Rock reported $37.4 million and Ameristar reported $12.6 million, according to the reports.
Horseshoe Hammond reported $19.2 million in September, and it reported $19 million in September 2024, according to the reports.
In October, the Hard Rock reported $35.9 million, Ameristar Casino reported $11.7 million and Horseshoe reported $19.7 million. The previous October, Hard Rock reported $38.9 million, Ameristar Casino reported $13.9 million and Horseshoe reported $20.6 million, according to the reports.
In November, the Hard Rock reported $34.6 million, Ameristar Casino reported $12.1 million and Horseshoe Hammond reported $18.8 million. The previous November, Hard Rock reported $37.3 million, Ameristar Casino reported $13.4 million and Horseshoe Hammond reported $21.6 million, according to the reports.
All three casinos reported decreases from August to September.
Horseshoe Hammond reported $27.3 million in August and $19.2 million in September, while Ameristar reported $13.7 million in August and $11.4 million in September. Hard Rock reported $36.2 million in August and $32.5 million in September, according to the reports.
All three casinos reported increases from September to October.
Hard Rock reported $32.5 million in September and $35.9 million in October, while Horseshoe Hammond reported $19.2 million in September and $19.7 million in October. Ameristar Casino reported $11.4 million in September and $11.7 million in October, according to the reports.
From October to November, Hard Rock and Horseshoe Hammond reported decreases, while Ameristar reported an increase.
Hard Rock reported $35.9 million in October and $34.6 million in November, and Horseshoe Hammond reported $19.7 million in October and $18.8 million in November. Ameristar reported $11.7 million in October and $12.1 million in November, according to the reports.
December should be a strong month, Schuffert said, especially with the weather warming up through the end of the month. The New Year’s Eve holiday will likely be a strong day, though it is on a Wednesday this year, he said.
Hard Rock saw a strong 2025, Schuffert said, with multiple gaming options and various entertainment options. In 2025, the casino started an expansion of the high-limit slot room and a VIP lounge, he said.
Looking ahead, Schuffert said he looks forward to completing the expansion project in the spring and working with the city of Gary and the state for the Lake County Convention Center project.
“At the end of the day, 2025 was pretty close to 2024, and we’re looking forward to just continuing to grow,” Schuffert said.
akukulka@post-trib.com













