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Improbable win puts Chicago Bears in control of the NFC North: Brad Biggs’ 10 thoughts on Week 16

The most improbable of wild, late rallies in a season full of them has given the Chicago Bears firm control of the NFC North and put them on the verge of clinching a playoff berth.

10 thoughts after DJ Moore ran under a 46-yard bomb from Caleb Williams — the ball cutting some strong crosswinds — for a walk-off touchdown in a 22-16 overtime victory over the Green Bay Packers on Saturday night at Soldier Field, a play that sent the crowd of 60,152 into hysteria.

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1. So much had to go right in the closing minutes for the Bears to even be there, hanging around with a shot to exact revenge on the Packers for a loss two weeks earlier at Lambeau Field.

Bears coach Ben Johnson celebrates the win with wide receiver DJ Moore after his game-winning catch in overtime to defeat the Green Bay Packers on Dec. 20, 2025, at Soldier Field. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

That was one of the rare games — with a chance at the end when Keisean Nixon intercepted Caleb Williams in the end zone with 22 seconds remaining — in which the Bears came up short this season.

The Bears have been so good making their own breaks and capitalizing late in games all season. Las Vegas, Washington, Cincinnati, Minnesota and against the New York Giants. Five wins after trailing with two minutes to play. But those are all lower-tier opponents. This was the Packers, the team that had won 26 of the last 31 meetings between the rivals, including 28-21 on Dec. 7 in Green Bay.

No one knew what to expect from the Packers, who were reeling after a brutal loss six days prior in Denver. Edge rusher Micah Parsons, the player the Bears designed their game plan around for the first meeting, suffered a season-ending torn ACL. Safety Evan Williams and right tackle Zach Tom both suffered knee injuries that kept them out of this game.

The Bears were dealing with their own issues as two of their top three receivers — Rome Odunze and Luther Burden III — were sidelined. It looked like the kind of game the Bears might try to control on the ground and own the time of possession while keeping the ball away from Jordan Love.

The Packers flipped the script, though. They came out with a physical edge and took command early, controlling game flow and having chance and chance again to almost put the game away even after Love left with a concussion in the second quarter following a hit to the head by defensive end Austin Booker.

The Packers weren’t just 0-for-5 in the red zone, they were 0-for-5 in the low red zone — 10-yard line and in. They turned the ball over on downs. Cornerback Nahshon Wright ripped the ball out of the grip of running back Josh Jacobs at the 2-yard line, and there were three chip-shot field goals for Brandon McManus.

It wasn’t a banner day for Dennis Allen’s defense, but the Bears made the Packers trade touchdowns for field goals, allowing them to hang around just enough for … a wild series at the end.

A 43-yard field goal from Cairo Santos with 1:59 remaining.
An onside kick recovery — that went right off the Packers’ Romeo Doubs, the guy they wanted to field the ball.
Williams’ fourth-down touchdown pass to Jahdae Walker in the face of an all-out blitz.
A fumble recovery on a botched fourth-down play by the Packers in overtime.
A jaw-dropping throw from Williams to end the game as he sidestepped linebacker Quay Walker and still launched the pass.

“This is a special group,” coach Ben Johnson said. “I felt that early in the season. You get with some of those wins, the Raiders game and the Washington game, and you start feeling it, the belief coming. It’s rare. It really is. I can’t say enough good things about the people in this building.”

How rare was the win? The Packers did not punt. The last time the Bears didn’t force the opponent to punt and won the game was Nov. 25, 1945, when they beat the Pittsburgh Steelers 28-7 at Wrigley Field. It happens to be the second time in two months it has happened to the Packers, who also didn’t punt in a 16-13 loss to the Carolina Panthers on Nov. 2 at Lambeau Field.

A Christmas wish was fulfilled for a fan attending their first game, here in the third quarter between the Chicago Bears and the Green Bay Packers, at Soldier Field in Chicago on Dec. 20, 2025. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

Every once in a while, teams put together seasons like this that are defined by special wins, the kind that bond a locker room and bring coaches and players closer together. Confidence and belief truly can make an impact on a team when things are rolling, and that’s sure the case with the Bears, who improved to 11-4.

They would clinch a playoff berth Sunday if the Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Detroit Lions at Ford Field or if the game ends in a tie. The Bears are 1½ games ahead of the Packers (9-5-1) in the division. Goals that seemed far-fetched to pretty much everyone outside the building are just about within reach.

And this will perhaps be remembered as the most dramatic victory of the season because of how it ended — and, of course, because it was against the Packers.

“It feels like since I’ve been here, for the last five years, everything has gone wrong,” tight end Cole Kmet said. “You’re bound to get at least one thing going right. Good to get the onside kick and then we took advantage of it from there. I would love to see the probability of us winning that game.”

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More like the improbability of winning the game. According to NFL’s NextGen Stats, the Bears’ chances were at 0.5% before the onside-kick recovery.

“A game that will be remembered forever,” Kmet said. “It was a special game to play in. It was awesome.”

It’s possible the Bears could clinch the NFC North as early as next weekend. They weren’t fixated on that at all in the locker room. It has been quite a journey for Johnson and his staff. Imagine how general manager Ryan Poles feels.

His proclamation from the introductory news conference four years ago — “We’re gonna take the North and never give it back ” — has been a punchline at times. Now the Bears are close to taking it and they have 11 victories, which is four fewer than the organization accumulated in Poles’ first three seasons combined.

“Ryan’s done a great job bringing this collection of people together,” Johnson said. “They’re mentally tough. They’re physically tough. I know we’re going to fight you for 60 minutes and a game like that, even though the odds are against us there that late, we’re going to keep on swinging and make some plays when we needed to.”

There’s plenty from this effort that has to be cleaned up. It has to be a little concerning they couldn’t take control of the game sooner with Malik Willis having to replace Love. The offense didn’t get sparked until late. The pass rush is not at the level anyone desires. It’s hard to imagine the Bears pulling this off if Parsons had played.

But that’s the kind of year it has been, and the Bears owe no apologies.

“It’s just going 1-0 each week,” cornerback Jaylon Johnson said. “Whatever that looks like. if it’s in a dramatic fashion like this, we have the right guys in the building to get it done. We know that we don’t want to win like that all of the time.”

2. Depending on the perspective, the Bears won this game with their red-zone defense — or the Packers blew it repeatedly as they neared the goal line.

Packers quarterback Malik Willis slides on a run play in the fourth quarter of a game against the Bears at Soldier Field on Dec. 20, 2025. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

The Bears have no shot for heroics at the end if the Packers would have punched the ball in on one of those trips. Their first four possessions (not including a kneel-down just before halftime) reached the low red zone. Then they made a fifth trip into the red zone, and not a single one resulted in a touchdown.

The Packers ran 19 plays inside the red zone. That’s a wild amount. They ran 70 offensive plays, so 27% of their snaps came in the red zone. As much success as they had moving the ball downfield, they just couldn’t find the end zone.

“We pride ourselves at being good in the red zone,” nose tackle Andrew Billings said. “We said, ‘They ain’t gonna win this game kicking field goals.’ If they were going to let us hang around, we were going to get ’em. We did.”

The Packers’ lone touchdown came at the end of the third quarter when Romeo Doubs shook C.J. Gardner-Johnson at the line of scrimmage. Once Doubs got past him, there was no catching up for Gardner-Johnson, who pulled up after reaching the end zone with what the team announced was a knee injury.

Give Gardner-Johnson credit. He had close coverage on Christian Watson on the first red-zone visit, when Jordan Love’s throw on fourth-and-1 from the Bears 7-yard line was incomplete. Watson was running an out-route at the goal line and Gardner-Johnson was right with him.

Middle linebacker T.J. Edwards had good coverage on Watson on the next red-zone trip. The Packers ran a Cover-2 beater, and Edwards did a nice job with his body position as Love looked for Watson in the back of the end zone.

The biggest red-zone play happened early in the third quarter after Cairo Santos’ 46-yard field goal drew the Bears within 6-3. The Bears didn’t get the stop they needed. The Packers went straight downfield with Willis looking poised for a backup and mixing in some zone read. It was first-and-goal from the 4 when Josh Jacobs was trying to move the pile, and defensive end Dominique Robinson got ahold of Jacobs. Cornerback Nahshon Wright came in from the side to rip the ball out, sort of like he did in Philadelphia against Jalen Hurts on the Eagles’ “Tush Push.” Tremaine Edmunds recovered the fumble, and the Packers were turned away again.

“I definitely was holding Jacobs when Nahshon got to him,” Robinson said. “That’s his specialty now too. He’s turned into a monster. You hold him up and Nahshon comes around, he’s going to get that ball out.

“We were told before the game if we could hold them to threes, we were going to win this game.”

Bears cornerback Jaylon Johnson (1) and middle linebacker Tremaine Edmunds (49) celebrate after Edmunds recovered a fumble in the third quarter of a game against the Packers at Soldier Field on Dec. 20, 2025. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

On a final red-zone trip, the Packers were forced to settle for a field goal. Malik Willis didn’t try throwing the ball into the end zone at the end. Maybe he was coached to be conservative there. The field goal gave the Packers a 10-point lead they should have been able to hold. But the Bears can be stingy in the red zone, especially with Edmunds back on the field.

Consider opponents were converting 33.7% of third downs with Edmunds in the lineup and then 46.2% over the last four weeks when he was sidelined — and that includes a lousy 4-for-14 by the bad Browns offense last week. Edmunds’ skills that help the defense on third down are highlighted in the red zone as well. He’s a barn door in coverage. He’s big and long and it’s hard to throw around him. Plus, he can run.

“We feel we’re always going to be a good defense in the red zone,” Edmunds said. “It just so happened we did a good job tonight.”

There’s plenty that needs to be better. The Bears can’t count on the next opponent being that bad in the red zone. Take out the kneel-downs at the end of the second quarter and the one-play possession (sack) at the end of the fourth quarter, and the Packers’ possessions netted 46, 70, 91, 62, 64, 53 and 43 yards. That’s moving the ball.

“That certainly is problematic,” Packers coach Matt LaFleur said. “That’s two games in a row, I want to say, that we haven’t been very good down there. So we’ve got to look at what we’re asking our guys to do and how we can go out there and execute a little bit better.”

3. Sometimes plays in the game look just about how they do on the practice field.

The game-winning touchdown pass was one of those plays, but the Bears were not dealing with the same kind of wind when they repped it Thursday afternoon at Halas Hall. That’s what had Cole Kmet, one of three tight ends on the field for play, still beaming more than a half hour after the game.

“Felt like it hung up there forever,” said Kmet, who was pass blocking along with Durham Smythe. “I don’t know if there’s anybody else in the league that can make that throw.”

Maybe Josh Allen, right? There are certainly some other quarterbacks with cannons.

“I really don’t know,” Kmet said. “With the wind as it was. To be able to put touch on a pass like that but get it through the wind, it’s pretty epic.”

The 46-yard touchdown pass traveled 56.9 yards in the air, according to NextGen Stats.

“Going into the game, we had a lot of ammo, a lot of shot plays we could call if we needed them, and we’d talked about it,” Smythe said. “That was one of them. Obviously, perfect timing. Gotta have a special guy throwing the ball to get it up and down from there. I’ve never seen anything like that. That’s pretty impressive.”

Moore ran a post and was the primary read. Colston Loveland was a No. 2 option underneath. Keisean Nixon, who leveled Moore from behind earlier in the game, was in coverage and was lined up with outside shade. There’s no safety over the top. Nixon was in a tough spot. He was not going to be able to make a play on the ball unless it was underthrown and it wasn’t. Williams dotted it on the upfield shoulder, everything you teach a quarterback. First-and-10 was the perfect spot for one of the shot plays the team had been working on.

“That was one that we put in and we ran in practice on Thursday and it almost looked identical to that,” Ben Johnson said. “I thought Caleb threw a dime in practice and DJ came down with it, and we’re hopeful that it may or may not be there, but we timed that one up right. DJ ran a great route and Caleb threw him a great ball.”

HEROICS FROM THE BEARS pic.twitter.com/hkw7S72TMj

— NFL (@NFL) December 21, 2025

Moore figured he was getting the ball when he saw how the Packers were lined up. They brought pressure. They had to gamble a bit to create a negative play as the Bears were approaching the outer edge of field goal range.

“Just had to run like I did in practice and connect like we did at practice,” Moore said. “It was really a practice rep thing, but we hit it in the game.”

Said Williams: “Ended up working out just how we thought.”

Not every play translates from practice to the game, however. Take for instance the botched direct snap to Kyle Monangai on fourth-and-goal from the Packers 4-yard line in the first quarter.

Oof.

Kmet was lined up under center, as if he was going to take the snap. But Dalman’s snap was way too high for Monangai, resulting in an 18-yard loss and a turnover on downs. If the Bears had scored a touchdown there, perhaps the game takes on a different complexion.

“We got our short yardage plays during the week and that was one that we felt strongly about, obviously,” Johnson said. “Probably last thing in my mind was that the ball was going to go over the head (of Monangai).”

Said Dalman: “100% on me. (Monnagai) is lined up deeper than where the quarterback is and I overcompensated. I snapped it too high.”

Dalman said the play was practiced a “good amount” during the week. “Didn’t execute in the game. It’s on me,” he said.

You have to figure the Bears wanted Monangai to attack one of the edges on the play because they were trying to sell a sneak by Kmet there. The Bears entered with the NFL’s second-ranked rushing offense and they tried to get fancy — and it blew up.

“(Johnson) was kicking himself,” Kmet said. “He came in at halftime and he was pissed at himself for calling that, ‘That’s on me.’

“But we feel like we need to execute that play. I know to you guys it looks like a trick play. Really, all it was is a direct snap to the running back. We’ve done wildcat stuff before. Little bit of a high snap. He felt like it was probably not the right call in that moment, but on our end, we feel like we have to execute it.”

4. The deeper the Bears get into the season, the more ways the special teams unit is finding ways to come up with big plays.

Chicago Bears kicker Cairo Santos (8) celebrates after an overtime victory over the Green Bay Packers at Soldier Field in Chicago on Dec. 20, 2025. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

The Bears don’t pull off the rally without the onside kick by Cairo Santos, the second he’s pulled off in two seasons. Maybe it won’t happen regularly — he’s 3 for 20 on onside kicks — but this end-over-end ball he drove into the ground was a beauty. We’ve seen him kick spinners before. Kickers try to mix it up and the Bears came up with the right play here and then got the recovery.

It’s been a focus for the special teams unit ever since what Daniel Hardy, who was in the scrum for the ball, called the “cluster (bomb)” game at Cincinnati back on Nov. 2, when pretty much everything that could go wrong went very wrong.

“That was very uncharacteristic of our team,” Hardy said. “We want to be able for Ben Johnson, offense, defense, whoever, when they need us to make a play, we don’t want to anyone to have any doubts. We want them to be able to depend on us. That’s what every week we step on the field to prove. That’s what we did today.”

Santos got the ball set quickly for the onside kick after hitting a 43-yard field goal with 1:59 remaining. The hope was he would make the field goal with more than two minutes remaining so the Bears would save the two-minute warning.

“I knew the situation,” he said. “I tried. We were waiting for the K-ball there. I was focused on making the kick first. Yeah, I knew, I was trying to aim to have it before the two-minute (warning), but I am just glad we made the kick first.”

Fair point. If Santos missed the field goal, the game almost surely would have been over. He made it and that led to the onside kick, which he then sort of hurried to kick once everything was set. It was part of the strategy.

“Good job to guys for being set and just waiting for the opportunity,” Santos said. “We just needed the ball to take a good bounce and give us a chance.”

Bears recover the onside kick

GBvsCHI on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/gabjYXsJXB

— NFL (@NFL) December 21, 2025

Whether the Packers were completely ready, who knows? Based on how they were aligned, they wanted the ball to go to starting wide receiver Romeo Doubs. He just couldn’t make the play. He looked a little hesitant at first and then the ball clanged off him.

“It was a perfect pace to it, bounce and then it was unpredictable the way it was bouncing,” Santos said. “It was probably the best I’ve ever hit that kick. Once I hit it, it kind of bounces the way it wants to do it. But it just had the perfect pace to it to allow our guys to go in and recover.”

Blackwell, who had the blocked field goal to seal the win at Las Vegas, was right place at the right time with Hardy and linebacker Noah Sewell in the vicinity as well.

“We always believe,” Blackwell said. “Guys were talking like, ‘We’re fine. We’re gonna score right here, get an onside, score again, and we’ll win.”

Said Hardy: “That’s a Bears play right there. Everyone doing their job.”

It shouldn’t be overlooked that Santos connected on three field goals from 46, 51 and 43 yards. On television, it was evident how much the wind was playing with the flight of the ball flight. That’s a different animal at Soldier Field because the wind isn’t always the same at each end zone. In other words, it could be in the kicker’s face in both directions at various times.

5. At 3:42 p.m. Saturday, more than 3½ hours before kickoff, offensive coordinator Declan Doyle, with a call sheet in hand, began working his way around Soldier Field.

Chicago Bears offensive coordinator Declan Doyle stands on the field as players warm up for a game against the Green Bay Packers at Soldier Field in Chicago on Dec. 20, 2025. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

He occasionally would glance down at the sheet while, in his mind, an actual game was happening around him. Third-and-8 on the opponent’s 32-yard line. What’s the call? First-and-10 from your 17, what are you doing?

It’s a routine the 29-year-old offensive coordinator has gone through pregame since he broke into the NFL as a low-level assistant with the New Orleans Saints at 22. Before every game, even last Sunday when the temperature was hovering just above zero three hours before kickoff of the game against the Cleveland Browns, Doyle went through the paces, a process that can take him upward of a half-hour.

Doyle views it as an important step in preparing him for the opportunity to one day be the guy with the headset making the calls as the play clock winds down and a quarterback is waiting for his decision.

“I knew someday I wanted to be a play caller,” Doyle said. “And I knew the first time I called a play it probably wasn’t going to be in a high school game. It was probably going to be in a bigger setting and I needed practice for that. Basically, my way to supplement the learning process was to start doing that.”

So, in New Orleans Doyle would build a call sheet with his own set of openers and then in a mostly empty stadium with only workers preparing for the rush of thousands of fans, he’d go through the process of calling plays for three or four offensive drives, imagining the different scenarios that could occur — sudden change, red zone, backed up deep in his own end, two-minute, you name it.

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“You’re visualizing the play and the defense and the problems that could happen and you’re kind of evaluating it as you go,” Doyle said. “I find myself always putting the offense in poor situations. You’ll be like, ‘Ah, holding. All right. First-and-20, what am I going to call now?’

“You’re trying to practice for those times where there’s a little bit of uncertainty for how that would go and how fast your mind has to be to process that.”

Doyle has had one opportunity to call plays. Ben Johnson gave him the responsibility during the second half of the second preseason game, a 38-0 win over the Buffalo Bills.

“It felt like all of that stuff, I had done it before,” Doyle said. “It’s no different than anybody trying to acquire a skill. You have to practice it before you go do it. That’s always been my mindset.”

Doyle has been joined by Antwaan Randle El, the wide receivers and assistant head coach, who has his own call sheet and goes through the paces at the same time.

Chicago Bears assistant head coach/wide receivers Antwaan Randle El (right) gives some directions to his players n the first quarter of a game against the Green Bay Packers at Soldier Field in Chicago on Dec. 20, 2025. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

The practice helps prepare them for being a call or two ahead, understanding what kind of situation they could land in on third down, and even setting up calls that play off a similar formation and look in future possessions.

“It’s not just as it relates to our game plan,” Randle El said. “I am calling it so I can stay in the practice of doing that. It’s hard to get a chance to call it in preseason when you’ve got the head coach calling the plays and you’ve got the coordinator, who is probably going to get a chance to call it in preseason a couple times. So, the receiver coach, assistant coach, you’re probably not getting that shot.”

Coaches’ schedules are so packed that there isn’t a lot of time during the week for career enrichment like this. There is time three hours before kickoff, and as Randle El said, when you wait until the end of the week you’re working off a full game plan.

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Doyle first got to know passing game coordinator Press Taylor in a phone conversation during the summer of 2024 when they discussed the art of practicing to be a play caller. Taylor, who was the offensive coordinator in Jacksonville from 2022-24, used to do it watching games in his office on Thursday nights.

“It’s just a way to say, ‘What would I do in that situation?’” Taylor said. “The call sheet is good, but nut-cutting time comes down to when it’s third-and-goal at the 11-yard line. Do you have a call you love? If I can prepare that from Monday to Saturday, Sunday is a lot easier. The first time I came up on the situation, it’s third quarter at Lambeau on third-down-and-goal, and it’s shoot, maybe I didn’t plan for the unexpected.”

By going through the exercise while watching a game, Taylor was pushed into all sorts of random positions in terms of down, distance, field position and game situation. Doyle said he knows defensive coaches, including New York Jets coach Aaron Glenn, who have used similar training exercises.

“Defensive guys have the benefit of watching a game and the offense coming on the field, and it is realistic to what they could be seeing versus where I am calling a personnel or we’re putting personnel on the field, that dictates what we’re going to see from the defense,” Doyle said. “And so they could sit there and just watch a game in their office and call a game in their head. ‘Hey, I’m seeing 11 personnel and I am going to call this defense.’ And then the next snap, ‘It’s second-and-6, here’s my defensive call.’”

Occasionally, there are obstacles on the field. Before the Week 11 road game against the Minnesota Vikings, a collection of mascots was playing a pickup game on the field at U.S. Bank Stadium. So, Doyle and Randle El had to navigate their game as they walked the field and envisioned a game for which they were calling plays.

It’s something Doyle figures will give him a head start if and when the opportunity arises to do more than call plays in an exhibition game.

“I came up with it on my own,” he said. “I was really thinking if I don’t prepare this way and I ever get the chance to do that, I’m going to be that far behind versus if I am preemptive about that and thinking that way. I am going to be flawed but I will correct my thinking and that line of thought as I go and it will get better and better.”

6. We’ll see if the league fines Austin Booker for one — or both — roughing the passer penalties against Jordan Love.

Chicago Bears defensive end Austin Booker (94) tackles Green Bay Packers quarterback Jordan Love (10) in the first quarter of a game at Soldier Field in Chicago on Dec. 20, 2025. A roughing the quarterback penalty was called on Booker on the play. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

The second penalized play — when Booker got helmet-to-helmet contact with Love — knocked the Packers quarterback out of the game with a concussion.

The Bears were penalized 10 times for 105 yards on Saturday night. It’s only the second time they’ve made more than 43 penalty yards in a game since Oct. 26 at Baltimore, so they’ve cleaned things up by and large.

The second roughing call — when Love was knocked out — happened midway through the second quarter. It was play action, and defensive tackle Gervon Dexter got some penetration, which led to Love to try to step up. That’s when Booker, who finally came free on extra lineman Darian Kinnard, got Love in his sights.

“I’m just playing football, making a tackle,” Booker said. “He ducked his head and football plays happen.”

I asked Booker if he felt like he hit Love with the crown of his helmet. There are replay angles that appear to show that.

“Not at all,” he said. “I am playing football. Trying to go hit some people.”

The game isn’t played in slow motion or freeze frame and there’s no clicker to back things up. Booker isn’t out to hurt anyone and Love was definitely bracing for contact before Booker hit him, which led to his head dipping a little. Hit the quarterback in the head, they’re going to call it whether his head is moving or not. And they might just fine Booker.

“If they want to, they can,” he said. “Shoot, we’re just playing football. Whatever happens, happens. I pray for him but he’s out there on the football field just like everybody else. Injuries happen every day. Football is football.”

Packers coach Matt LaFleur said “stuff happens,” and Green Bay has had more than its share of that “stuff” lately with injuries.

“I just know when a guy gets hit in the head like that, I was prepared for the worst, I would say, in that moment,” LaFleur said.

Packers left guard Aaron Brooks took issue with Booker’s hit.

“What’s the flag they called on that, roughing the passer?” Brooks said according to ESPN. “I just don’t know, guys get kicked out of games for taunting, but if you hit a quarterback late in the head, you know what I’m saying? That should get the same treatment for something as simple as taunting. I think that has to be re-evaluated. I think that’s ridiculous.”

Brooks’ frustration is understandable, but the hit wasn’t late.

7. In the weeks leading up to the 2010 NFL draft, I had a conversation with Drew Fabianich, then a national scout for the Dallas Cowboys.

Bears safety Major Wright (27) heads to the end zone after intercepting Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford for a touchdown in the Bears’ 37-13 win Nov. 13, 2011, at Soldier Field. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

I figured the Bears were going to be in the market for a safety as they’d been going through young ones almost annually, and Al Afalava wasn’t exactly a hit. I was curious who he thought they’d pick in the third round at No. 75 (the club was without selections in the first two rounds). If he had to pick one, what safety would GM Jerry Angelo be taking?

“I’m going to have to call you back on that one, pardner,” Fabianich said with his southern drawl.

It must have been four days later when Fabianich called.

“The Bears will take Major Wright at No. 75,” Fabianich declared. “They’re going to want Morgan Burnett, but he’ll be gone.”

As the third round got rolling, both safeties remained on the board. Then, the Green Bay Packers acquired the 71st pick, trading third- and fourth-rounders to the Philadelphia Eagles for the choice. The Packers picked Burnett. Four selections later, Wright became a Bear.

Fabianich continued to be gold over the years foretelling Bears’ draft picks, suggesting way ahead of time Leonard Floyd and Roquan Smith were ideal picks for the organization. Now, he has taken his talent for skill evaluation to Mobile, Ala., where he’s in his first year as the executive director of the Senior Bowl.

I haven’t run across another personnel man possessing a similar combination of conviction and accuracy when forecasting the draft — and I’m always looking for them. So, Fabianich was the perfect person to turn to for a thumbnail sketch of the 2026 draft at a different time of year for the Bears.

Instead of focusing on draft position in late December, the franchise is zeroed in on playoff seeding. But draft preparation continues, as always, and GM Ryan Poles had his staff of scouts at Halas Hall for meetings this past week.

The Bears have been a regular in the top 10 for more than a decade, making draft chatter a big part of the conversation before Thanksgiving most seasons.

Bears’ selections in the first round since 2015

2025: No. 10
2024: No. 9
2023: No. 1 (traded to Carolina Panthers)
2022: No. 7 (traded the year before to move up for Justin Fields)
2021: No. 20 (traded to move up for Fields)
2020: No. 19 (traded in Khalil Mack deal)
2019: No. 24 (traded in Mack deal)
2018: No. 8
2017: No. 3
2016: No. 11 (traded up to No. 9 for Leonard Floyd)
2015: No. 7

With the exception of 2016, when they had the 11th pick in the draft, the Bears have been in the top 10 every year but in the three drafts following the acquisition of Mack. The team made two playoff appearances (2018 and 2020) with Mack and lost in the wild-card round both times.

Barring some kind of big trade up, the board will look different when the Bears’ pick comes up in 2026. They chose Fields with the 11th pick in 2021. Before that, the last pick the team made in the first round outside of the top 10 was in 2014, when cornerback Kyle Fuller was the choice at No. 14. One explanation for the Bears’ struggles over the last decade-plus is they didn’t turn all the premium draft capital into much. Fuller was selected to two Pro Bowls. Mitch Trubisky was named to one Pro Bowl and Mack had three Pro Bowls for the Bears.

The roster is in better shape now, and Ben Johnson and the coaching staff have gotten much more production from depth through the season. Every personnel man is going to have a different take on the draft — especially this far out — but I asked Fabianich about a handful of positions that could be key to the Bears.

Left tackle: “It’s not bad. Depending on a couple of juniors, if they come out, there are four pretty damn good left tackles that are going to be out there,” he said.

Defensive line: “Last year, the interior was really strong and there were not a lot of edge rushers last year,” Fabianich said. “It’s flipped. There are a lot of edge rushers this year and it’s really strong with defensive ends and edges but the tackle group is not as good. That’s high-end guys, there is some depth. There are some really big noses in this group that are more than just space eaters. They’ve actually got a little bit of pass rush to them.”

Cornerback: “The corners are about the same as there were last year,” he said. “There are some high-end guys and there will be guys until about the fourth round. It falls off after that.”

Safety: “Safeties are good at the top two or three, but then it’s just a good class after that,” he said. “There’s not a lot of numbers in the safeties or inside linebackers. I don’t think high schools and colleges are producing those positions just because of 7-on-7 and spread offenses. Guys don’t want to play those positions anymore or at least that’s my opinion.”

Fabianich said the tight end class could rival the 2025 group that saw five selected in the top 50 picks. Guard is down this year, in his opinion, and there’s depth at wide receiver but a shortage of No. 1 targets.

Sure is different to be in late December and not be talking about a pick in the top 10 and specific targets.

8. East Chicago Bears, anyone?

Bears President and CEO Kevin Warren walks on the field before a game against the Packers on Dec. 20, 2025, at Soldier Field. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

The organization released a letter from President/CEO Kevin Warren to fans at 5 p.m. Wednesday announcing anything and everything is in play in terms of a site for the team’s new stadium, including northwest Indiana.

Who knows, maybe there’s enough land at the site of the defunct Dairyland Greyhound Park in Kenosha? It would be a hop, skip and a jump from Halas Hall.

Seriously, as best I understand the situation, the Bears are eyeing the possibility of putting up a stadium in Hammond. Either that or before lawmakers return to Springfield in 2026, the team is attempting a leverage play as it seeks public funding for infrastructure around Arlington Heights that could approach $1 billion as well as tax breaks.

“This is not about leverage,” Warren wrote in the letter.

If you have to say it’s not about leverage, it’s only about leverage. The franchise’s stadium pursuit has become such a flip-flop operation, at this point it’s literally all over the map. Pick a town, any town.

From Jan. 7: “Downtown still remains the focus,” Warren said at an end-of-season news conference. “The museum campus. I feel that we made a massive amount of momentum. Again, I’ve been here 20 months and we’ve made great progress. But along those lines, we own 326 acres of beautiful land in Arlington Heights. It’s a fantastic piece of property. We were able to get the memorandum of understanding done there. So optionality does exist, but I’ll remain steadfast that the goal remains that we have shovels in the ground in 2025 and I’m confident that will happen.”

Warren went on to hint there would be evidence of that momentum and progress come spring or summer.

A Bears digital billboard glows at sunrise just off of Route 53 at the former Arlington International Racecourse on May 23, 2025, in Arlington Heights. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

By spring, the Bears publicly pivoted to Arlington Heights, and Warren reemphasized that in a letter to fans on Sept. 8, hours before the kickoff of the season that night.

“Moving outside of the city of Chicago is not a decision we reached easily,” Warren wrote. “This project does not represent us leaving, it represents us expanding. The Bears draw fans from all over Illinois, and over 50% of our season ticket holders live within 25 miles of the Arlington Heights site.”

The Bears shifted the goalposts, if only a little, to say the goal was to move some dirt before the end of the year. Well, 2026 is coming fast. It’s 11 days away.

No word what percentage of season ticket holders live within 25 miles of Hammond. It’s roughly 27 miles from Soldier Field and 66 miles from Halas Hall. For staff living near the facility and the families of players and coaches, you’re talking about a nearly 140-mile commute for home games.

What to know about the Chicago Bears’ possible move from Soldier Field

It would be a heck of a move, although not quite as far as the San Francisco 49ers went. Levi’s Stadium opened in Santa Clara, Calif., in 2014, and is 39 miles from the location of their previous home at Candlestick Park, which was in San Francisco.

However, the 49ers were headquartered in Santa Clara when they played in San Francisco, so the stadium switch actually centralized their operation. The Bears have spent hundreds of millions to make Halas Hall one of the elite facilities in the league. It dwarfs what a lot of other clubs have and it’s impossible to imagine the McCaskeys desiring to move their hub any decade soon.

There’s been a dizzying amount of back-and-forth since the Bears entered into a purchase agreement with Churchill Downs for the Arlington Park site on Sept. 29, 2021. How long ago was that? Well, Matt Nagy was still coach of the Bears, Ryan Pace was the general manager and Caleb Williams was a backup to Spencer Rattler at Oklahoma.

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Reality is this stadium-site search is an odyssey that has been going on for nearly 55 years. The Bears left Wrigley Field after the 1970 season, signing a three-year lease that included two one-year options to play at Soldier Field. The goal was for Soldier Field to be a temporary home as the club sought its own stadium. It’s been a rock fight with the team losing countless rounds since then with the exception of the Soldier Field remodel completed in time for the 2003 season.

At an Arlington Heights board meeting on May 28, 1975, George Halas declared: “In 1977, the Bears will play in Arlington Heights.” He pledged to sign a 35-year lease if an 80,000-seat stadium was constructed adjacent to Arlington Park. High bond costs sacked that plan. In September 1975, the Bears floated the idea of moving to Dyche Stadium. An Evanston city ordinance prohibited that.

In 1978, Bears President George “Mugs” Halas Jr. threatened to leave Soldier Field because concerns the team raised with the Chicago Park District were not being adequately addressed.

“I think it’s time we started taking off the gloves,” Halas Jr. told the Tribune’s Don Pierson. “Maybe we’ve been quiet too long.”

In 1980, the Bears hinted they might move home games for that season to Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Ind., something that turned into a negotiation tactic. Countless other locations have been floated over the years. In June 1991, the Bears targeted nine suburban sites for a new stadium, including West Chicago, Waukegan, Arlington Heights and Hoffman Estates. This was after the McDome project, slated for Gary, Ind., fell apart.

“The nine look like there is some promise on assistance with land acquisition, infrastructure and taxes,” Bears director of team administration Tim LeFevour told Pierson.

Maybe this is Warren taking the gloves off with Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Illinois lawmakers by announcing northwest Indiana — and wherever else — is in play. Indiana would bend over backward to land the Bears. Hoosiers would not only provide the shovels, they’d send a limousine for the McCaskeys and roll out a red carpet. Think about it. The Bears could arrange to play the Indianapolis Colts to end the preseason every year. They could name it the I-65 Bowl.

Since hiring Ben Johnson in January, the Bears’ fortunes have turned dramatically on the field. In the same period, progress off the field is impossible to measure unless you’re counting the number of open letters to fans.

If Pritzker and Co. call the latest move a bluff, then what?

9. What’s the No. 1 seed in the playoffs worth?

Fans wave towels as the Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers kick off Dec. 20, 2025, at Soldier Field. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

Since the NFL expanded to a 14-team system in 2020, the top seed in the conference is the only club to earn a bye. Of the 10 No. 1 seeds (in both conferences) since 2020, one has won the Super Bowl (the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LVII), four have reached the Super Bowl and lost, two have lost in a conference title game and three were one-and-done in the divisional round, including the Detroit Lions last season with Ben Johnson as offensive coordinator.

Perhaps the more telling statistic is that only one non-division winner has reached the Super Bowl in the current format. That was the 2020 Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who had the No. 5 seed and won playoff games at Washington, New Orleans and Green Bay to reach the Super Bowl and then smashed the Chiefs. That was a special run Tom Brady led.

It’s hard to go on the road and win in the postseason, and it’s even more difficult to pull it off in two or three consecutive weeks. That’s why at least winning the NFC North and gaining a minimum of one playoff game at Soldier Field is such an important goal for the Bears.

The Seattle Seahawks (12-3) will end this week as the top seed in the NFC after their own wild overtime victory Thursday night over the Los Angeles Rams. Right now, the Bears are the No. 2 seed, but the slate of games is incomplete. Monday night is must viewing for the Bears. The San Francisco 49ers (10-4) face the Colts in Indianapolis. A Niners win would move them to No. 2 and drop the Bears to No. 3 and set up a huge showdown next Sunday at Levi’s Stadium. With a Colts win, the Bears would stay at No. 2.

The Bears have what amounts to a little more than a two-day-rest advantage over the 49ers for that game because the Niners will have to fly home from Indianapolis after the game Monday night. That could be significant in Week 17.

It’s possible the Bears still could hunt down the top seed in the NFC. Figure they would need to win out and get some help. The key is at least starting a playoff path at home because the wild-card route is a path full of serious obstacles.

10. Great poise by Caleb Williams to back pedal in the face of a Cover zero pressure on the 6-yard touchdown pass to Jahdae Walker.

Bears wide receiver Jahdae Walker catches a touchdown against the Packers in the fourth quarter on Dec. 20, 2025, at Soldier Field. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

That’s what a quarterback has to do in that instance to buy a little more time, which in this case gave Walker more room.

The Packers blew coverage on the play. Keisean Nixon or Nate Hobbs — one of them — needed to follow Walker, the undrafted rookie free agent from Texas A&M. Both went inside. Walker was uncovered.

“I know to the people that haven’t been in the building, it’s like, ‘Oh my gosh, you’re going to the undrafted rookie on fourth down,’” coach Ben Johnson said. “Well, we see what he does every single week. We see how he goes about his business. There’s a reason why we didn’t want to expose him to the waiver wire and someone poach him after the preseason.

“We see a bright future for this guy. He’s done nothing but steadily improve over the course of the season. The coaches trust him. Caleb trusts him. When it’s a big moment like that and you’re not sure exactly what coverage they’re going to be in, as I described the play, anybody could get that ball depending on what they call. I had a lot of confidence that he was going to come down to get it and so does Caleb. So that’s where we’re at as a team right now. I feel like everyone trusts that whoever’s out there on game day, they’re going to come through for us. It doesn’t matter who it is at this point.”

It’s really something when you start going through the roster and noting the number of backups, practice squad guys and players added since the start of the season that have had moments — big plays in wins — this season. That’s a combination of work done by the front office and then the coaching staff and I think the players do a good job of sort of helping newcomers get up to speed too.

Walker isn’t new. He had a good camp and then dazzled in preseason. He got an opportunity created by injuries and more impressive was a 15-yard catch on an in-breaker in some traffic. The Bears have been holding on to Walker. He’s been one of the bottom guys on the 53-man roster — the sixth receiver — but there’s a reason they’ve been doing so.

10a. Have to see what else happens over the remainder of Week 16, but Johnson has to move up a little in the race for Coach of the Year honors, right?

I checked Saturday morning and the field was pretty tight, and it was clear Seattle coach Mike Macdonald got a bump following his team’s win Thursday night.

Fanatics Sportsbook still had New England’s Mike Vrabel (+175) as the favorite followed by Macdonale (+200), San Francisco’s Kyle Shanahan (+400), Jacksonville’s Liam Coen (+750), Johnson (+800) and Denver’s Sean Payton (+1000).

Like I said, Johnson for sure gets a boost for a prime time win over the Packers. Sometimes this award is just about done by now or a two-man race. You’re looking at a ton of possibilities here. That Johnson is even in the running is something is a testament to the work and belief he’s instilled in the building. I bet he’d be fast to want to include assistants, players, support staff and others.

10b. Here’s the comp that is intriguing: The 2025 Bears are like the 2024 Commanders. That’s what one pro scout said.

“Got hot, started catching a lot of breaks then started making breaks,” he said. “Got good enough to go out and win two playoff games on the road and reach the NFC title game.”

Here’s the comp that is not intriguing: The 2025 Bears are like the 2024 Commanders. Same pro scout.

“All the breaks that went their way worked against them and they’ve totally fallen apart,” the scout said. “Four wins this season and a big mess.”

This guy wasn’t drawing a clear parallel between the Bears and Commanders but he did say he thinks some of the instant success for the new coach — Johnson for the Bears and Dan Quinn last year in Washington — and some of the fluky finishes make for a real comparison. It’s not a comparison game the Bears would want to take into the offseason, I know that much.

10c. One number that popped when I was looking at defensive statistics: Grady Jarrett was credited with seven tackles — three solos and four assists. That’s the most tackles Jarrett has since producing seven for the Falcons on Nov. 22, 2020, against New Orleans. Over the last three games or so, he’s starting to be a little more explosive and disruptive.

10d. On the look-ahead line at Westgate SuperBook in Las Vegas, the 49ers were installed as a 2 1/2-point favorite over the Bears for the Sunday, Dec. 28, game at Levi’s Stadium.

10e. The Bears are planning to stay over in the Santa Clara area after the game next Sunday. They figure the best approach for rest and recovery is to spend the night after the game with the return flight scheduled for about 9 a.m. on Monday. Typically, teams return immediately after a game but in the NBC prime time slot, that would have meant an arrival at O’Hare around 4 a.m. After a bus ride back to Halas Hall, players would have been getting home after 5 a.m. Now, they’ll arrive back from San Jose, Calif., around 3 p.m. the day after the game with at least a solid night of rest.

10f. Happy Holidays. Thanks for reading.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/21/chicago-bears-brad-biggs-10-thoughts-packers-week-16/ 

Posted in News

5K race, jog for kids added to Park Ridge ‘Stroll’ holiday lineup: ‘We have a lot of fun together

This year marked the second annual “Park Ridge Christmas Stroll,” and organizers expanded it by adding an early morning run event that also raised money for a local nonprofit.

The Santa Stroll on Dec. 13. featured a 5K run, one-mile stroll and a three-block “Jingle Jog” for kids age 8 and younger, all at Washington Elementary School. Along with the Christmas Stroll, the Santa Stroll was hosted by “STROLL Park Ridge,” a free monthly magazine for residents of the north suburban town.

Participants in the inaugural “Santa Stroll” event. wore holiday festive wear as they made their way around the course for the 5K, one-mile jog and “Jingle Jog” for kids 8 and under on Dec. 13 in Park Ridge (James C. Svehla/for Pioneer Press)
Participants in the inaugural “Santa Stroll” event. wore holiday festive wear as they made their way around the course for the 5K, one-mile jog and “Jingle Jog” for kids 8 and under on Dec. 13 in Park Ridge (James C. Svehla/for Pioneer Press)
A 5K run, one-mile jog and “Jingle Jog” for kids 8 and under took place as part of Stroll Christmas Dec. 13, 2025 in Park Ridge. (James C. Svehla/for Pioneer Press)

Dolly McCarthy, publisher of STROLL Park Ridge and organizer of the Santa Stroll, told Pioneer Press the inaugural event grew out of the Park Ridge Christmas Stroll, which the magazine first presented in 2024 and drew 3,000 attendees.

“We already had a really successful inaugural year of the Christmas Stroll,” McCarthy said. “We realized that year how people in our town, families were excited and hungry for an event that was all about the holiday season, celebrating together.”

According to McCarthy, the 2024 Christmas Stroll raised more than $6,000 for the Kiwanis, a service club she described as being “all about kids” – and of which she is a member.

The Santa Stroll was a fundraiser for The Harbour, a Park Ridge nonprofit community service organization that aids youth and young mothers experiencing homelessness.

“I’ve always wanted to do something special for The Harbour,” McCarthy said. “It’s a place that really helps build community.”

The Santa Stroll, which featured a route in Centennial Park, included appearances by Santa Claus and Buddy the Elf, bagels, cookies, a live DJ, giveaways from race sponsors and hot chocolate.

McCarthy said more than 200 people registered for the Santa Stroll, which was conceptualized and planned with STROLL Park Ridge interns from Maine South High School.

“That’s pretty darn good for our first year,” said McCarthy, who added that she hoped for at least 200 registrants. “We hope to start a new tradition in Park Ridge with Santa Stroll.”

Race participants received Santa hats and children who took part in the Jingle Jog received reindeer antlers, bells from Santa’s sleigh and Rudolph’s red noses.

Participants were encouraged to wear their holiday festive best, and McCarthy said a $25 area restaurant gift card was to be awarded to the best dressed adult and best dressed child.

“In Park Ridge we have a lot of fun together,” McCarthy said. “We are in the coldest month of the year … but this goes to show Park Ridgians will come out and support each other no matter what conditions are. We love to play together.”

The Santa Stroll, which had 7 a.m. check-in and 8 a.m. start times, was followed by a packed Saturday schedule at the Christmas Stroll in the Uptown neighborhood. That event benefitted Kiwanis of Park Ridge.

“We wanted to have an event for families to come and just experience the wonder and awesomeness of the season together as a community,” McCarthy said about the race and the overall daylong event.

Jessi Virtusio is a freelancer.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/21/park-ridge-christmas-stroll-adds-run-and-kids-jog/ 

Posted in News

DNA Evidence Proves “First Black Briton” Was Actually A White Girl

DNA Evidence Proves “First Black Briton” Was Actually A White Girl

In 2021 the establishment media was electrified by a discovery involving the ancient remains of a woman found over a century ago near a village in East Sussex in Britain.  The reason leftist journalists were so hyped?  A supposedly comprehensive study by “experts” in facial reconstruction had determined that the nearly 2000 year old skeleton belonged to a Sub-Saharan African person.

The remains became known as the “Beachy Head Woman” and images of her reconstructed black face circulating internationally.  This was proof, somehow, that progressives had always been right to support third world immigration.

The new data arrived conveniently in time to support a far-left campaign to defend the ideas of multiculturalism.  Part of this narrative asserts that Caucasian regions of the world have never actually been Caucasian and that western culture doesn’t really exist.  In fact, white Europeans have no claim to any lands anywhere, they have no home, and African/Asian migrants have “always” freely traveled throughout Europe.

The political left was enthralled, taking to social media and reposting the discovery millions of times over to “own the fascists”.  The BBC even paid to have a plaque constructed on the site where the bones were discovered proudly proclaiming that this is where the first Briton of “African origin” had been found.

School lessons were immediately developed in the UK, teaching students about the multicultural history of Britain.  This was scientific confirmation to back up the avalanche of European entertainment content depicting Sub-Saharan Africans as integral to the history of the continent, roaming the lands as tribesman or enjoying the finery of royal court.   

Leftists argue that their version of history justifies the expansion of open mass immigration, because “things have always been this way” and white people today who want to protect their histories and cultures from erasure are merely ignorant of the past.  

The problem is, Beachy Head Woman is not African or black.  Recently confirmed DNA evidence shows she was white with blonde hair and blue eyes.  She was not a migrant, but born in ancient Britain.

The narrative began to break down in 2023 when genetic studies indicated she might have come from Cyprus (a part of the Roman Empire) and was not of African origin.  More advanced DNA analysis, released this week, destroyed the claims of migration and also embarrassed the “experts” involved in the facial reconstruction of the skull.

The new study, led by researchers at London’s Natural History Museum, working in collaboration with University College London, used advanced ancient DNA sequencing that was not available a decade ago. By extracting a much larger quantity of high-quality DNA, they were able to place her ancestry within a broader Roman-era genetic framework. 

The results show that her DNA is most similar to that of individuals from rural southern Britain during the Roman period and to modern populations from England. There are no traces of recent sub-Saharan African or Mediterranean ancestry. Isotope analysis of her teeth and bones indicates that her early years were spent on the south coast of Britain, and her mobility patterns were similar to those of other local individuals from the same period.

It’s a perfect example of the growing problem of ideology mixing with science and poisoning the well of human knowledge.  The rules of scientific investigation require an objective mindset, letting the evidence show whatever the evidence shows.  However, with the invasion of woke cultism into every facet of academia, the goal of science is now to fulfill the demands of the multicultural narrative.

Luckily, the takeover of academia is not total and the truth still slips through the cracks on occasion.  

Woke “science” approaches investigation by developing a desired conclusion first, and then manipulating the evidence to support that conclusion.  In other words, science is nothing more than another propaganda tool.  This is why wokeness can no longer be allowed to spread into western academics or into STEM fields; it’s not just destructive to political discourse and social stability, it is also a cancer eating away at the pillars of human knowledge.  

If these people are allowed to continue their conquest of science, modern human civilization will crumble.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 12/21/2025 – 07:35

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/dna-evidence-proves-first-black-briton-was-actually-white-girl 

Posted in News

Popularity of her cinnamon rolls leads to home baking business for Hinckley woman

These days, Hinckley resident Fran Kriesch has an infectious smile permanently etched on her
face about becoming a home baker and sharing her talents with hundreds of others.

“I started this a while back. A friend of mine came by and said she wanted my cinnamon rolls
for her son’s birthday ‘but I want to pay you for them,’” Kriesch recalled. “I said ‘No, I’ll just
make them for you,’ but she said she was going to pay for them and added she wanted me to think about starting a business with these rolls.”

That endorsement led to the founding of Fran’s Cozy Kitchen, a home baking business that has been gaining traction now for more than three years, thanks largely to the benefits of word-of-mouth and living in a small town.

Kriesch, 50, said she used to work as an elementary school teacher in Kentucky and later moved to DeKalb and Northern Illinois University where she was supervising students in the elementary education program.

“That was before I had my two sons, Nathan and Seth, and once they were born, I stopped working to stay home with them,” Kriesch said. “I committed to this business three years ago. I love baking. It brings me so much joy and I was realizing after my friend suggested this that I might be able to meet a niche in our local community while also doing something that I absolutely love.”

She said she got help from a family member and made sure she did everything right in launching Fran’s Cozy Kitchen.

“My brother is a business guy and I called him and got tips on what to do and registered with the
Secretary of State, took the class here from the DeKalb County Health Department and the exam
to pass the food safety manager class. I just started rolling,” she said. “We’ve had so much fun.”

She said that Hinckley is “a small-town community, so we’re meeting a small niche here locally.”

“My husband said we have to get a website for you – he’s my web designer – and he got that
going. I started out with just the rolls,” Kriesch added. “The rolls are decadent, gooey, yummy,
amazing. There’s a special icing that I can’t give the recipe for, but people love them.”

Now firmly entrenched in the holiday season, Kriesch said she is working at a frenetic pace trying to keep up with the demand.

“This is one of my busiest times of the year for sure, and we had great success over Thanksgiving,” Kriesch said. “In terms of my business, about 60% of my annual sales happen right now between Thanksgiving and Christmas, although people do want them for different occasions during the year.”

Without a kitchen staff, Kriesch said her only strategy for trying to keep up with demand is simply “to get up earlier.”

During the holiday season, Kriesch said she makes 12 pans of rolls a day, with a dozen rolls in each pan.

“It’s a seven-hour process,” she said.

“During the normal rest of the year, I’m working two to three days a week with baking and now it’s every day except Sunday,” she said. “Last year, I sold out because the demand was so high for the cinnamon rolls and I have to start earlier to keep up with demand. I sold 300 pans of rolls but we also added the cookie business which includes oatmeal chocolate chip, oatmeal raisin and regular oatmeal.”

After receiving feedback from customers, Kriesch said she has also added a gluten-free salted caramel Rice Krispies treat and this season introduced a Christmas dough cookie which “has red and green M&Ms in it.”

“Those have been really popular and it’s a toss up as to whether the cinnamon rolls or the cookies are more popular,” she said.

The origin of the cinnamon roll recipe comes from a formula Kriesch said she found online “and
then I did some tweaking to make it my own.”

Karen Yaggie of Hinckley found out about Kriesch and her treats at a local event and has become a big  fan of the cinnamon rolls.

“We both live in the same town. I saw her and got a chance to taste her cinnamon rolls at a community event and from there I was hooked,” Yaggie said.

For more on Fran’s Cozy Kitchen, go to www.franscozykitchen.com or call 815-508-9636.

David Sharos is a freelance reporter for The Beacon-News.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/21/popularity-of-her-cinnamon-rolls-leads-to-home-baking-business-for-hinckley-woman/ 

Posted in News

Column: Pharmacy staff members deserve thanks for handling a busy job with style

We have all been in line at a retail business, and have observed the store’s staff functioning in what seemed to a busy and somewhat chaotic environment.

While waiting in line at the Montgomery Walgreens Pharmacy over the years, I have admired its staff for handling “organized chaos” very efficiently. Staff members there admitted that the “organized chaos” nickname definitely fits their pharmacy.

The Montgomery location is a 24-hour store with two drive-thru lanes. At times, I have seen about eight cars waiting in the drive-thru and at least eight more people waiting in line in the store. The staff always seems to be up to those tasks while most of us might be overwhelmed.

We should also remember that any pharmacy staff must also deal with doctors, clinics and insurance issues in addition to the customers in the store and in the drive-thru. Multitasking is a way of life for this group, and they do it well.

On a recent trip there, I imposed on three staff members (one at a time) to step away for a few brief minutes to talk about their careers.

At the head of the operation is Pharmacy Manager Jeff Stacey, who has been with the company for 20 years, and at the Montgomery location for about eight years. He has a big job handling patient needs, legal needs and those of the business.

“Day to day operations, filling prescriptions and dealing with problems” is how Stacey describes his job.  “And regarding problems, the buck stops with me.

“Our staff is great. They work hard and are always trying their best. They’re out there trying to help people,” he added.

Staff Pharmacist Stephanie McGinnis has also been with the company for 20 years, and has worked at the Montgomery store for about 14 years.

I asked her about coping with the pharmacy’s extremely busy atmosphere.

“Retail pharmacy has become a different world since COVID,” McGinnis said. “It has been a lot of stress with a limited staff and more prescriptions. We’re giving immunizations and doing COVID testing, which puts more demands on our staff.”

She went on to say that she enjoys talking with people and helping sick people to feel better.

Sandy Macias is a Certified Pharmacy Technician, and has worked at the Montgomery Walgreens for 10 years. The pharmacy has about 10 “techs” (not all working at the same time) and Macias has the longest tenure of that group.

She and the other techs are really the face of the pharmacy in dealing with the public, and all of them do an amazing job. At times, I have seen one customer after another have a special need or question. With their computer skills, and with the help of the pharmacists sometimes, this group always seems up to the task, even when customers at times get “testy.”

I have rarely seen any retail person as efficient and friendly to all as Macias, many times in those chaotic situations. She is always even-tempered and up to any task, and has helped me with insurance issues and other problems along the way. I asked her how she functions so well, particularly when things get “crazy.”

“I’m a people person, and I really like helping customers,” she said. “Even though some of it is routine, I always see different sorts of problems and always have a puzzle to solve. It’s always something new and somebody new.”

Macias is bilingual, as are some of the other staffers, and is called on frequently for that reason.

I finished our very brief interview by asking her how she handles the extremely busy times.

“I realize that in my job, customers are sick,” she said. “I try to remember that even when I do get a little bit upset, many customers are sick and have to wait in a line. I try to put myself in their shoes, and that’s what helps me to cope.”

Wherever we go for our pharmacy needs, we should try to realize that the pharmacists and staffers are half of the team which helps keep us alive and well. Give them a well-earned “thank you” sometime.

Tom Strong is a freelance reporter for The Beacon-News.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/21/column-pharmacy-staff-members-deserve-thanks-for-handling-a-busy-job-with-style/ 

Posted in News

Shea Serrano tackles Michael Jordan’s numerology and Dennis Rodman’s brilliance in ‘Expensive Basketball’

Author Shea Serrano embraces one of the toughest truths of NBA writing: There’s no simple way to write something new about Michael Jordan.

Three decades after his reign in the NBA, there aren’t many fresh ways to frame the success and brilliance of the GOAT. It all has been said and done already. At any given time, Serrano noted he has at least three books about Jordan piled up on his desk, including “The Jordan Rules” by Sam Smith and “When Nothing Else Matters” by Michael Leahy.

“Everything has been covered with this guy,” Serrano said. “You can’t just show up and be like, ‘Oh, what a maniacal competitor he was.’ That’s not additive. It’s not interesting.”

But when he began working on his fifth book, “Expensive Basketball” — available now in hardcover through Grand Central Publishing — Serrano knew he couldn’t avoid writing about Jordan.

PATRICK D. WITTY / CHICAGO TRIBUNE

The Chicago Bulls’ Michael Jordan heads up court during a game at the United Center on Dec. 15, 1998. (Chicago Tribune)

Serrano wanted to write a book about expensive basketball. The kind of basketball that is more valuable than a statistic or a scoresheet. The type that sticks with a fan for decades, that can be recounted on pure memory. And you can’t write a book about that kind of basketball without writing at length about Jordan — because Jordan played some of the most lavish, expensive basketball of all time.

To find a new avenue to discuss Jordan, he turned to Mike Lynch, the executive director of data at Sports Reference who consistently helps Serrano with research projects. Serrano had become fascinated with the fact Jordan won 66% of his regular-season games and 66% of his playoff games.

Those numbers were — definitely, obviously, inarguably — a coincidence. But that didn’t make them any less interesting.

Serrano wanted to dig deeper, gathering every factoid related to the number 6 that he could find. The goofier, the better. Jordan won six Finals MVP trophies. He shot two of the most iconic shots of his career over players wearing the No. 3. Add that up and it’s another 6.

The result is an entire chapter documenting every instance of the number 6 — and its divisors and dividends — in Jordan’s career. Is there a meaning to the repetition of this number? Is it all coincidence? Serrano didn’t need to interrogate either question. He just wanted to capture an oddity in the midst of the greatest basketball career of all time.

This chapter ultimately became Serrano’s favorite in the book. It also took the most time and effort to research and write and perfect. And Serrano is confident about the chapter — confident that they will either love it more than any other part of the book or think it was the dumbest thing they ever read.

“That’s always a good space to be in when you’re writing,” Serrano said.

In many ways, this is the central ethos of Serrano’s writing in “Expensive Basketball.”

He didn’t want to write a book about numbers. It’s easy to get stuck on the stats in modern basketball. But when Serrano thinks about the sport, the records and the advanced analytics are never the first thing that spring to his mind. And when he spoke to fellow basketball fans in preparation for writing his latest book, he found that his experience was mostly universal.

“No story that I heard ever started with a number,” Serrano said. “It was always a feeling that they were talking about. Basketball fans are smarter than they’ve ever been. They have access to more information than they’ve ever had. So it’s not uncommon to have a normal, casual conversation with a basketball fan where they are referencing efficiency ratings or win shares. Advanced analytics have become a part of casual conversation.”

But Serrano also didn’t want to push the facts of the sport to the side. He sees how a deepened understanding of statistics has allowed appreciation of the NBA to deepen beyond simple scoring numbers. And he believes it’s always a positive when fans get smarter about their favorite sport.

Instead, Serrano wanted to write about basketball by asking and answering two key questions: Did you care? Why?

“The book is not a refutation of stats,” Serrano said. “It’s an affirmation of feelings.”

To Serrano, few players support this approach to consuming basketball more than Bulls legend Dennis Rodman.

Dennis Rodman leaves the stage carrying on up-side-down NBA trophy at the Bulls’ championship rally at Grant Park on June 16, 1998. (Chuck Berman/Chicago Tribune)

Many old-school basketball fans believe Rodman exists in a different version of the sport. But Serrano disagrees. He feels that everything that made Rodman stand out in the ’90s — studying the ricochet of specific shots off the rim, tipping rebounds to himself — would only be amplified in the modern NBA.

Serrano argues that Rodman, a Hall of Famer, could inform these instincts with advanced analytics that would only make him a smarter, sharper rebounder and defender. And fans would have a more comprehensive way to understand his strengths — for instance, Serrano compared him to Draymond Green as an example of a defensive specialist who has earned both respect and ire throughout the league.

“I think Dennis Rodman would not only be able to play in today’s game, I think he would be an incredible weapon that people would appreciate certainly more than they did when he was actually doing it,” Serrano said. “He was intuiting all of that without any numbers. He just felt it. I can’t imagine how even more effective he would be with access to all of that information. … People would’ve loved him today. He would have been a cult figure amongst basketball nerds.”

This book was a risk. That felt strange for Serrano to say at this point in his career — after three New York Times bestsellers, the launch of his own digital publishing company, the production of his sitcom series, “Primo.”

But “Expensive Basketball” is a stretch for Serrano. When he sold the book in 2021 after finishing “Hip-Hop (and Other Things),” Serrano knew his publisher assumed he planned to follow the same format that launched his success over the last decade. Instead, Serrano envisioned a completely new look for “Expensive Basketball” with a sleeker design and a vertical shape that branched away from his traditional style.

“You always have an idea of what you want a thing to feel like, to look like,” he said. “I wanted the book to look important. I wanted it to feel important. That comes down to — not just the writing itself, but also the overall presentation of it. So I had to convince the publisher to make the cover look a certain way and convince them to let me use a certain type of art on the inside. The book looks totally different than all of the other books that I’ve done to this point.”

Four years later, Serrano is glad he took the leap. “Expensive Basketball” already hit the New York Times bestseller list and became the No. 1 book in indie bookshops for the first time in his career.

And alongside this look, Serrano hopes the writing mirrors the basketball he loves the most — expensive, but well worth the price tag.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/21/shea-serrano-expensive-basketball-book/ 

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Letter: Marmion graduates talk about value of Rosary education for young women

Merry Christmas from three Marmion graduates who want to talk with you about Rosary College Prep.

Between the three of us, we have nine daughters who are current Rosary students or alumnae.

We believe so strongly in the irreplaceable value of Rosary that all of us serve on the school’s Governing Board. Rosary is here to stay.

Long before Nov 16, 2024, the day Marmion Academy announced its plan to go co-ed, Rosary was already ahead of the game, planning a robust future.

Prior to Marmion’s announcement, Rosary’s board and Head of School Amy McMahon were two years into creating a strategic plan to prioritize growing the enrollment through expanded outreach and marketing, funding the mission, all while maintaining academic excellence.

Long before that date, Rosary was already in the process of creating a proud new banner proclaiming Rosary’s true identity as the best all-girls college preparatory school in Chicago’s western suburbs, to be known from July 1, 2025, as Rosary College Prep.

In spring 2024, Rosary’s Governing Board surveyed and gathered essential data from current and past school parents. We hired an agency specializing in nonprofits to conduct on-site interviews with administration, faculty, students, parents and board members.

The findings confirmed the board’s belief: There is a robust appetite in the region for well-rounded, all-girls, Catholic college prep education. For 63 years and counting, that has been Rosary’s mission, fueled by the mission and vision of the Dominican Sisters of Springfield.

We certainly knew that Marmion’s decision would impact Rosary, but we also knew that Rosary was prepared for the challenge.

Rosary’s 20-member board includes three Marmion and seven Rosary graduates. More than half of board members have ties to both schools, through their spouses and/or as parents.

Our board believes that Rosary is simply the best college prep school for girls in the Chicago suburbs, and we are backing that up. This year, the board had 100% participation in Rosary’s Giving Tuesday, doubling its strong donation amount from last year.

The choice for a Catholic education for our daughters is clear for us. Here at Rosary, these young women discover the traits and talents that inspire their dreams and fuel their passions. Additionally, they are encouraged, engaged and empowered to find a place where they belong and thrive – a sisterhood of truth, faith and strength.

We have witnessed this transformation first-hand! Here’s what just a few of our daughters have to say about the impact of their Rosary education:

“Looking back, I didn’t realize how much Rosary was preparing me for college until I entered such a fast-paced, demanding academic environment,” says Alexandra Kackert, now a junior at Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business. “The rigorous college-preparatory classes and the many extracurricular activities taught me time and stress management early on, while the teachers and staff consistently motivated me and helped shape me into a confident young woman. I couldn’t be more grateful for Rosary.”

“Rosary made me the most confident kid in the classroom,” says Rosary graduate Reese Gilla, a student-athlete at Washington and Lee University. “I was prepared academically and socially, helping me build thoughtful relationships with my professors and coaches that led me to have a very successful term.”

Rosary consistently delivers on its promises of academic achievement, leadership skills and real-world preparation for its students, who are deeply formed through consistent practice of the Dominican values of prayer, study, preaching and community service.

“I developed some great relationships with teachers that I don’t think would have happened elsewhere,” says Rosary graduate Jessica Hirner. “Rosary is a comfortable place to learn and grow. And as a young Catholic, I felt the confidence to grow in my faith, and to be my true self, who God made me to be.”

So yes, Rosary has a proven track record of success. If you and your junior high daughter want a safe, challenging and healthy learning environment that allows girls to be themselves, grow in self-confidence and be the daughters of God they are called to be, Rosary College Prep is the place for you. Let’s talk.

Steve Hirner, Andy Gill and Pat Kackert,

Rosary Governing Board members and Marmion graduates

 

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/21/letter-marmion-graduates-talk-about-value-of-rosary-education-for-young-women/ 

Posted in News

Column: Chicago Cubs’ Matt Shaw enters a new world with his Turning Point USA appearance

Matt Shaw was back in a familiar place this weekend.

But instead of speaking to a dozen or so media members in front of his Wrigley Field locker, the Chicago Cubs third baseman was wearing a sports coat and addressing hundreds of people at an annual Turning Point USA event in Phoenix.

Shaw’s media gathering in late September was his first real opportunity to explain why he had left the Cubs earlier to attend a memorial service for Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, who was shot and killed at a Utah college event in September. Shaw gave his answers, repeatedly referring to their shared faith, and the story soon disappeared. There was no booing of Shaw at Wrigley, despite some backlash to his decision on social media.

Flash forward three months. Shaw’s speech Friday at the Turning Point gathering was an opportunity to spread his message of faith on a national stage, alongside prominent conservative speakers who make a living spreading their political messages. A video introducing Shaw even included a snippet of that locker room interview in September.

Whether his political views were the same as Steve Bannon, Tucker Carlson or other MAGA speakers, Shaw immediately became associated with the movement by agreeing to to be a speaker. Political messaging is the purpose of Turning Point. Current leader Erika Kirk, the widow of Charlie, had announced Thursday at the event that “we are going to get my husband’s friend JD Vance elected (president in 2028) in the most resounding way possible.”

The Turning Point X account posted three videos of Shaw talking about his faith, making him seem as important to the organization as the others.

Speaking with Shaw in spring training in March in Mesa, Ariz., I never would have envisioned he would become a spokesman for a political movement. But that’s where we are at the end of 2025, and where we’re headed in ’26 is anyone’s guess.

As much as I might disagree with the Kirk movement and many of its leaders, Shaw certainly had the right to speak. He didn’t need his employer’s permission, or the permission of Cubs fans. It’s a free country, at least it was as this story was being written.

But Shaw should realize it’s going to make him a hot-button athlete at a time when he’s still trying to prove himself as a major-league player. He was a stellar defensive third baseman but hit only .226 as a rookie and went 2-for-17 in the postseason. Shaw’s development is important if the Cubs are to take another step forward in 2026.

Making a decision to participate in a political movement that’s anathema to many Americans, including a large percentage of fans of the team that currently employs him, only ensures that Shaw will remain in the spotlight in ’26, beginning next month at the Cubs Convention.

Cubs third baseman Matt Shaw speaks during Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest 2025 on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025, in Phoenix. (Ross D. Franklin/AP)

Shaw said in September that he realized there would be a backlash to his decision to attend the Kirk memorial and that he had “turmoil about what I should do” before talking to a handful of teammates. They told him to go, as did manager Craig Counsell.

“Whatever backlash comes is OK,” Shaw said afterward, adding he didn’t read anything that was said about him on social media.

Turning Point tweeted one video of a child asking Shaw how he shares his faith with his Cubs teammates, and another of an adult wearing Shaw’s Cubs jersey who called him “courageous” for supporting Kirk and their cause “when so many people in media or sports think differently and don’t understand your point of view.”

“Great question,” Shaw replied. “Thank you for sharing.”

Shaw conceded to the fan that he got “a lot of backlash” for his relationship with Kirk. “No matter how much hate, no matter how much people may disagree or argue with me, or go on TV and say ‘He’s the worst,’ it doesn’t change who I am and what I believe in,” he said.

Shaw knows he’s upsetting many fans while becoming more respected by many of his admirers. The responses on the Turning Point video tweets included angry fans hoping the team would sign third baseman Alex Bregman to replace Shaw. Again, he knew the potential ramifications of appearing at the event.

Chicago Cubs third baseman Matt Shaw walks on the field during a game against the Mets on Sept. 23, 2025, at Wrigley Field. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

Shaw is considered media-friendly by Cubs writers, but he said at the event that some media come in and “they can kind of manipulate what we say.” If anything he said was manipulated, he should tell that reporter and ask for a correction.

When I asked Shaw in September what he would say to his fans who would be disappointed in his relationship with Kirk, he replied: “I don’t think it’s just fans, I think it’s people in general that I’m going to continue to try to support in any way I can. Disappointment is something natural for people you disagree with, and that’s OK. I think any way that I can support them and love them, I’m going to do that.”

The Cubs supported Shaw’s decision. Obviously he couldn’t have left the team without the permission of management. When I asked President Jed Hoyer afterward whether it was a difficult decision, he said no.

“Obviously (Shaw and Kirk) had a relationship, and I don’t think I’ve ever said no to a player who felt like it was important to them to grieve or to be somewhere,” he said. “That’s a moment where you have to trust your players and understand they’re humans and that’s something he wanted, and we weren’t going to stand in the way of it.”

I’m sure Shaw still has the support of many teammates and others in the organization. But the Cubs are a big organization, and I know many employees who disagree with Shaw’s decision to closely align himself with the Kirk movement. Going to a memorial is one thing. Speaking at a Turning Point event is quite a leap forward.

Politics and baseball don’t often mix, but Shaw isn’t the first Cubs player to wear his conservative message on his sleeve. After Donald Trump was first elected president in 2016, pitcher Jake Arrieta tweeted: “Time for Hollywood to pony up and head for the border #illhelpyoupack #beatit.”

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Then-Cubs President Theo Epstein noted the trolling of Democrats the next day and told me: “I believe in the First Amendment. But I also believe we should be mindful of how other people feel.”

Epstein was not shy about being a progressive Democrat who contributed to presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. But he also knew Arrieta had the right to speak his mind, just as Hoyer knows Shaw has a right to be a spokesman for Turning Point.

Whenever I asked Epstein if he was interested in a political career after baseball, he laughed it off.

“I’m not sure why anyone would inflict that on themselves or their family,” he once said. “Policies are interesting to me. Politics, not so much. There are ways to impact the world around us without necessarily diving into those political waters, and maybe someday I’ll be lucky enough to do that in some form or another.”

Perhaps there is a political future for Shaw down the road. He certainly looked at home during the Turning Point gathering and has a lot of self-confidence.

But first he’ll have to focus on his current job, where actions will speak louder than words.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/21/chicago-cubs-matt-shaw-turning-point-appearance/ 

Posted in News

Swiss Authorities Silent As EU Sanctions One Of World’s Most Respected Military Analysts

Swiss Authorities Silent As EU Sanctions One Of World’s Most Respected Military Analysts

Authored by Peter Hanseler via ForumGeopolitica.com,

When German journalists Röper and Lipp were sanctioned, no one in Switzerland reacted—now one of the world’s most respected military analysts is being sanctioned—a Swiss citizen. Weltwoche is waking up, Switzerland is fast asleep.

Introduction

Terrorizing journalists with sanctions in order to suppress the truth is nothing new for the EU.

On May 20, 2025, the EU sanctioned two German journalists for the first time—Alina Lipp and Thomas Röper. At the time, we reported in detail on this case, “EU sanctions German journalists,” and also analyzed the case from a legal perspective.

The result was clear: punishment without crime or trial, disenfranchisement and expropriation without a hearing.

The EU is dangerously close to the Nazi regime of 1936, when Thomas Mann was expatriated.

Following the same pattern, action is now being taken against a Swiss citizen for the first time.

Jacques Baud – You Can’t Be More Objective Than He Is

Jacques Baud is one of the most objective and respected military analysts around. He is highly regarded and respected not only throughout Europe, but also in the US.

His work is not limited to analysis on the most prestigious YouTube platforms; he has also written numerous excellent books. His style is unique in that he does not concern himself with politics, but only with the analysis of warfare, in a calm and dispassionate manner. His analyses have never been anti-Ukrainian or pro-Russian, but objective.

He has long seen a NATO defeat on the horizon, not based on his wishes, but on the facts on the long front and the war strategy and tactics of the various parties.

This did not fit in at all with the Russophobic war cries of the EU, which still dreams of ultimate victory today, just like Adolf Hitler did in the spring of 1945.

The latest example comes from Friedrich Merz, whose lucidity must now seriously be called into question. To justify the theft of Russian assets, he said the following before the German Bundestag on December 15, 2025:

“To be very clear and very explicit here: we are not doing this to prolong the war. On the contrary, we are doing this to end this war as quickly as possible, ladies and gentlemen. Because this sends a clear signal to Moscow that continuing this war is pointless for Moscow.”

Friedrich Merz, December 15, 2025

Jacques Baud’s crime was therefore that his analyses were correct – no more and no less.

Die Weltwoche Stands up— Finally

When Alina Lipp and Thomas Röper were sanctioned, Weltwoche contented itself with an indifferent, lukewarm article and did not stand up for its colleagues – we were shocked.

It seems that the opportunistic Mr. Köppel has felt the heat from Ms. Kaja Kallas a little too closely for his liking: Köppel is finally standing up, because he could be next, and, as Martin Niemöller said, when it’s your turn, you’re wide awake.

“First they came for the Communists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Communist
Then they came for the Socialists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Socialist
Then they came for the trade unionists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a trade unionist
Then they came for the Jews
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Jew
Then they came for me
And there was no one left
To speak out for me

Holocaust Memorial Day Trust

Now Weltwoche is also reflecting on the lack of a fair hearing and politically motivated persecution, not in as much detail as in our article of May 25, 2025, but still.

“Opportunism is costing a 70-year-old military analyst his quality of life”

Weltwoche has published half a dozen articles on Jacque Baud, and Köppel is playing the Joan of Arc of journalists, styling himself in his own way as the Winkelried of his guild. It’s rather late in the day. Had Köppel reacted with the same force in May, the men and women in Brussels would probably have thought twice about sanctioning a Swiss citizen. Opportunism is costing a 70-year-old military analyst his quality of life.

Official Switzerland Remains Silent

It is nothing new that my home country no longer has any backbone when it comes to Brussels. Weltwoche writes:

“In Bern, they would prefer to have nothing to do with it and are passing the buck like a hot potato.”

Weltwoche, December 18, 2025

This is obviously worrying, but the Swiss government is behaving in exactly the same way as Köppel did in May this year when German colleagues were sanctioned. They wanted nothing to do with the whole affair.

The Next Litmus Test for Switzerland Is Coming Soon

The EU’s plundering of the Russian Federation’s frozen funds will soon be complete. Incidentally, this has nothing to do with war, but rather with the sheer financial and political survival of the EU and its criminal leaders, because without the stolen money, the EU is bankrupt.

Despite the clarity that the EU is a criminal organization, Switzerland is negotiating a comprehensive package of new agreements with the EU, including the integration of dynamic legal adoption processes. This means that Switzerland is actually discussing automatically adopting the laws of a criminal organization.

Patrick Baab Interviewed Jacques Baud

We would like to draw your attention to the interview recorded on December 16 by our author Patrik Baab with Jaques Baud.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 12/21/2025 – 07:00

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/swiss-authorities-silent-eu-sanctions-one-worlds-most-respected-military-analysts 

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Miles de personas celebran el amanecer del solsticio de invierno en Stonehenge

Associated Press

LONDRES (AP) — Miles de personas aplaudieron y bailaron el domingo alrededor de Stonehenge mientras el sol se elevaba sobre el círculo de piedras prehistóricas en el solsticio de invierno.

Los asistentes, muchos disfrazados, se habían reunido antes del amanecer y esperaron pacientemente en el campo oscuro y frío en el suroeste de Inglaterra. Algunos cantaban y tocaban tambores, mientras que otros se tomaban un momento para reflexionar entre los enormes pilares de piedra.

Muchos hacen el peregrinaje al círculo de piedras cada verano e invierno y lo consideran una experiencia espiritual. El antiguo monumento, erigido entre hace 5.000 y 3.500 años, fue construido para alinearse con el movimiento del sol en los solsticios, fechas clave en el calendario para los antiguos agricultores.

El domingo es el día más corto del año al norte del ecuador, donde el solsticio marca el inicio del invierno astronómico. Es lo opuesto en el hemisferio sur, donde es el día más largo del año y comenzará el verano.

El solsticio de invierno se produce cuando el sol describe su arco más corto y bajo, pero muchos lo celebran como un momento de renovación porque a partir del domingo, el sol comienza a elevarse nuevamente y los días se alargarán un poco más cada día hasta finales de junio.

___

Esta historia fue traducida del inglés por un editor de AP con la ayuda de una herramienta de inteligencia artificial generativa.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/21/miles-de-personas-celebran-el-amanecer-del-solsticio-de-invierno-en-stonehenge/