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Red Deer RCMP Charge Dozens With Impaired Driving Over Holidays

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By Sheldon Spackman

Red Deer RCMP charged 29 impaired drivers and investigated approximately 44 more reports of suspected impaired drivers over the Holiday Season. The arrests were made during roving patrols between December 3rd and January 4th.

Mounties say one man was arrested for impaired driving after RCMP found him trying to flee after a collision. Four arrests were made thanks to reports from the public about suspected impaired drivers. Another driver faces charges for impaired driving under the influence of drugs. Eight of those charged with impaired driving were female and 21 were male.

In a release, Sergeant Al Nickolson with Red Deer RCMP says ā€œWe continue to see an increase in the number of citizens calling to report impaired drivers and RCMP thank the community for the active role they take in helping to keeping our city streets safe.ā€ Nickolson adds, ā€œRed Deerians are making a clear statement that they will no longer tolerate this dangerous behaviour in our community.ā€

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ā€˜Lot Of Nonsenseā€™: Kari Lake Announces Voice Of America Is Dumping Legacy Outlets

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From theĀ Daily Caller News Foundation

By Hailey Gomez

Special Adviser for the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) Kari Lake announced Friday that Voice of America (VOA) will terminate its contracts with The Associated Press, Reuters, and Agence France-Presse.

VOA, an international broadcasting state media network, is funded by USAGM, with former President Joe BidenĀ requestingĀ in March 2024 a budget increase for the 2025 fiscal year to further support the radio network. In an XĀ postĀ on Friday, Lake announced USAGM will end its ā€œexpensive and unnecessary newswireĀ contracts,ā€ adding that some of the major agreements included ā€œtens-of-millions of dollars in contractsā€ with AP News, Reuters and Agence France-Presse.

ā€œUSAGM is an American taxpayer funded News Organization with an 83-year history. We should not be paying outside news companies to tell us what the news isā€”with nearly a billion-dollar budget, we should be producing news ourselves,ā€ Lake wrote. ā€œAnd if thatā€™s not possible, the American taxpayer should demand to know why.ā€

During a meeting withĀ VOAĀ staffers Friday, employees were reportedly told to ā€œstop using wire service material for their reports,ā€Ā accordingĀ to Newsmax. Notably, audio, video, and text reports have often been used to supplement coverage from locations where reporters are not present, the outlet reported.

In an interview with Newsmax prior to the official contract cuts, Lake discussed how the agency was finding ā€œa lot of nonsense that the American taxpayer shouldnā€™t be paying for.ā€

ā€œToday, I started the process of terminating the agencyā€™s contracts with the Associated Press, Reuters, & the Agence France-Presse. This will save taxpayers about 53 million dollars. The purpose of our agency is to tell the American story. We donā€™t need to outsource that responsibility to anyone else,ā€ LakeĀ wroteĀ in an X post regarding the interview.

Disputes between The AP and the White House began in February after the corporate media outlet was revokedĀ press accessĀ for refusing to call the Gulf of America by its new name. The AP filed a lawsuit on Feb. 21Ā againstĀ White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, and Deputy Chief of Staff Taylor Budowich for injunctive relief.

Lake wasĀ swornĀ in as USAGMā€™s special adviser on March 3, saying sheā€™s ā€œlooking forwardā€ to serving America and ā€œstreamliningā€ the agency. The cuts from the agency follow President Donald Trumpā€™s push for his second administration to review the governmentā€™s wasteful spending.

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International

Zelensky, not Trump, instigated Oval office clash

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MXM logoĀ  MxM News

Quick Hit:

Miranda Devine pushes back against claims that 47th President Donald Trump “ambushed” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during their Oval Office meeting, arguing that it was Zelensky who provoked the confrontation. Devine contends that Trump was “cordial” and intent on brokering peace, while Zelensky entered the meeting “in bad faith,” contradicting and interrupting the president before ultimately derailing the negotiations.

Key Details:

  • Devine asserts that Zelensky was “negative from the start,” contradicting Trump within minutes and repeatedly interrupting him in an “insolent” manner.

  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Zelensky should have voiced concerns privately at a scheduled lunch instead of creating a public spectacle.

  • Trumpā€™s detractors, according to Devine, are using this incident to fuel yet another ā€œRussia hoaxā€ in their ongoing attempts to discredit him.

Diving Deeper:

Miranda Devine, in her latest op-ed for theĀ New York Post, refutes the mainstream mediaā€™s portrayal of 47th President Donald Trumpā€™s recent Oval Office meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as an “ambush.” Instead, she argues, it was Zelensky who instigated the confrontation by entering the meeting with “negative body language” and a “hostile attitude.”

“Trump could not have been more cordial,” Devine writes, emphasizing that Trump had successfully navigated complex negotiations to bring both Russia and Ukraine to a moment where peace seemed possible. But Zelensky, she asserts, was determined to sabotage that effort.

From the outset, Zelensky took a defiant tone, directly contradicting Trumpā€™s assertion that Europe had provided far less financial support to Ukraine than the U.S. “President Trump said that they made less support, but they are our friends,” Zelensky interjected, attempting to downplay Trumpā€™s concerns. When Trump reiterated his position, Zelensky repeatedly interrupted with “No, no, no.” Despite Trumpā€™s attempt to keep the exchange lighthearted, the tension in the room was palpable.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent later weighed in on the debacle, telling Fox News that “if Zelensky wanted to contradict Trump, the proper venue for that would have been 15 minutes later [at a private lunch].” Instead, Zelensky chose to grandstand before the press, leading to what Devine describes as the complete “blowing up” of the peace talks.

At the end of the meeting, Zelenskyā€™s smirk and thumbs-up to someone off-camera left little doubt in Devineā€™s mind that he had orchestrated the confrontation deliberately. His ambassador, she noted, appeared distraught, watching the spectacle unfold “with her head in her hands.”

Devine sees a broader political game at play. She argues that the media and Trumpā€™s political enemies have seized upon this incident to spin yet another “Russia hoax,” akin to the discredited Steele dossier, the first Trump impeachment over a call with Zelensky, and the “Laptop from Hell” censorship saga. “They could not tolerate that Trumpā€¦ would be successful in ending the war,” Devine writes, suggesting that warmongers on both sides of the aisle needed this peace effort to fail.

Trump, for his part, did not let the moment pass without drawing a direct line to the Biden familyā€™s corruption in Ukraine. He referenced Hunter Bidenā€™s infamous laptop, telling Zelensky: “It came out of Hunter Bidenā€˜s bathroom. It came out of Hunter Bidenā€™s bedroom. It was disgusting. And then they saidā€¦ the ā€˜laptop from hellā€™ was made by Russia. The 51 agents. The whole thing was a scam.”

Despite his provocations, Zelensky was met with Trumpā€™s signature diplomatic coolness. When Zelensky dismissed the minerals deal, a key component of Trumpā€™s proposed peace framework, Trump did not lash out. Even when Zelensky warned that “your American soldiers will fight” if Ukraine failed, a “severe provocation” as Devine puts it, Trump remained composed.

Only after an extended barrage of Zelenskyā€™s interruptions and dismissive tone did Vice President JD Vance finally respond, stressing that “the path to peace and the path to prosperity is maybe engaging in diplomacy.” That set Zelensky off, leading Trump to finally push back. “Weā€™re trying to solve a problem,” he told the Ukrainian leader. “Donā€™t tell us what weā€™re going to feel, because youā€™re in no position to dictate that.”

Now, with the negotiations shattered, the fate of Ukraine rests in Europeā€™s hands at an upcoming summit. “Ukraine canā€™t survive without America,” Devine warns, and Zelensky may soon realize that the stunt he pulled in the Oval Office cost him far more than he anticipated.

You can watch all 46 minutes of the February 28Ā meeting between Trump, Vance and ZelenskyĀ here.Ā 

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