Newsom Says California Will Oppose Offshore Drilling Expansion As State Relies on Iraqi Imports To Meet Energy Demands

California governor Gavin Newsom (D.) declared this week that a Trump administration proposal to expand oil drilling off the coast of his state is "Dead on arrival." His opposition comes as California relies on imported oil from authoritarian states like Iraq and Saudi Arabia to meet its energy demand.

The post Newsom Says California Will Oppose Offshore Drilling Expansion As State Relies on Iraqi Imports To Meet Energy Demands appeared first on .

Democracy promotion is dead: Good riddance



What passes for intellectual heft at the Atlantic is any criticism of President Donald Trump. In the Atlantic’s pages and its digital fare, you can read the now-discredited musings of David Frum, who helped bring us the endless wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; the inane foreign policy arguments of Max Boot; the interventionist prescriptions of Anne Applebaum; and now, the democracy promotion of political science professor Brian Klaas, who, in a recent article, blames President Trump for killing “American democracy promotion.”

If Klaas is correct, that is one more reason that Americans need to thank President Trump.

Klaas’ first priority is using American treasure and blood to promote his chimerical notions of global democracy and universal human rights.

One would have thought that the debacles in Afghanistan and Iraq would have humbled our nation’s democracy promoters — but they haven’t. One would have thought that the failed foreign policy of Jimmy Carter would have humbled those who wish to make “human rights” the centerpiece of U.S. foreign policy — but it didn’t. One would have thought that the chaos facilitated by the so-called “Arab Spring” would engender prudence and introspection among the democracy promoters — but it is not so.

Professor Klaas wants the world to become democratic and for U.S. foreign policy to lead the effort in bringing the globe to the promised land.

Rewriting history

The Trump administration, Klaas writes, has “turn[ed] against a long-standing tradition of Western democracy promotion.”

Perhaps Klaas has never read George Washington’s Farewell Address, in which he counseled his countrymen to conduct foreign policy based solely on the nation’s interests. Or perhaps he missed John Quincy Adams’ July 4, 1821, address, in which he cautioned against going abroad in search of monsters to destroy and reminded his listeners that America is the well-wisher of freedom to all but the champion only of her own.

Perhaps Klaas believes that Wilsonianism is a “long-standing” American tradition, but in reality, it is mostly limited to starry-eyed liberal internationalists and neoconservatives.

Klaas mentions the “democracy boom” under President Bill Clinton, which was nothing more than a temporary consequence of America’s victory in the Cold War. Yet Klaas thinks it was the beginning of “shifting international norms” where freedom and democracy triumphed in “the ideological battle against rival models of governance” and “had become an inexorable force.”

Here, Klaas is likely referring to Francis Fukuyama’s discredited theory of the “end of history.” We have since discovered, however, that history didn’t die and that democracy is fragile, especially in places and among civilizations that have little democratic experience.

Fukuyama was wrong, but Samuel Huntington was right when he wrote about the coming “clash of civilizations.” One wonders if Klaas has read Huntington or Toynbee — or Spengler for that matter. Or, even more recently, Robert Kaplan’s “The Tragic Mind.”

Authoritarianism disguised as ‘democratic’

Klaas criticizes Trump for praising dictators, but President Woodrow Wilson praised Lenin and President Franklin Roosevelt praised Stalin. Klaas says that Trump is indifferent to democracy and human rights. No, Trump simply refuses to make them the centerpiece of U.S. foreign policy, which is a “long-standing” tradition that stretches back long before Wilson to our founding fathers.

However, neither Wilson nor FDR wanted America to right every wrong in the world, as Klaas does. Klaas wants his “human rights” and democracy agenda “backed by weapons.” He laments that authoritarian regimes no longer need to fear the “condemnation” and the “bombs” of the American president.

Klaas’ leftism is revealed when he condemns the United States for helping to replace Mossaddegh with the pro-American shah of Iran, overthrowing the Marxist regime of Patrice Lumumba in Congo, helping to overthrow Allende in Chile, and cozying up to other authoritarian regimes.

RELATED: Vance makes one thing abundantly clear ahead of Trump's big ceasefire meeting with Putin

Bonnie Cash/UPI/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The professor also might want to read Jeane Kirkpatrick’s “Dictatorships and Double Standards” to learn that sometimes doing these things is in America’s national interests. Klaas’ leftism jumps off the page when he refers to the illegal aliens removed by the Trump administration — many with criminal records — as “foreign pilgrims.”

Some of those “foreign pilgrims” raped and killed Americans. But Klaas’ first priority is not America or its citizens; it is using American treasure and blood to promote his chimerical notions of global democracy and universal human rights. He is anti-Trump precisely because Trump’s foreign policy is America First. Let’s hope Klaas’ style of democracy promotion is dead.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published by RealClearDefense and made available via RealClearWire.

Blaze Media's Julio Rosas embeds with Noem's DHS as it slams shut South America's illegal migration pipeline



Blaze Media national correspondent Julio Rosas is embedded with the Department of Homeland Security and Secretary Kristi Noem this week in South America.

On Sunday, Rosas and the DHS traveled down to Buenos Aires, Argentina.

'As we saw during the Biden-Harris administration, it wasn't just Central American countries where people were coming from, but people here in South America taking advantage of Biden's open border.'

"We started out the day in Washington, D.C. We flew out of Joint Base Andrews. It was about a three-hour flight to Puerto Rico, where we stopped and just refueled. And then we finished off the last of about seven and a half hours to Argentina," he explained.

— (@)

Rosas stated that Noem's DHS has plans to conduct a tour, beginning with Argentina and continuing to Chile and Ecuador, to sign new agreements with these countries to "help crack down on illegal migration from this region to North America."

RELATED: 5 things Trump must do to fulfill his mass deportation mandate

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Argentina's Minister of National Security Patricia Bullrich sign an agreement on July 28, 2025, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photo by Alex Brandon-Pool/Getty Images

"As we saw during the Biden-Harris administration, it wasn't just Central American countries where people were coming from, but people here in South America taking advantage of Biden's open border," Rosas said.

"The Trump administration, yes, they have secured the southern border, but they wanted to solidify some of the things that they did in the first administration," he continued.

The administration now seeks to "strengthen" those "relationships," Rosas added.

RELATED: 'Give me a break': Gov. DeSantis fires back after illegal aliens make insane complaint about ICE

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem greeted by U.S. Embassy Charge d'Affaires Heidi Gomez as she arrives at the Bosch Palace on July 28, 2025, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photo by Alex Brandon-Pool/Getty Images

The department's new agreements aim to achieve improved information-sharing regarding the criminal histories of foreign nationals and ensure cooperation with deportation flights.

Rosas noted that Monday through Wednesday would include full days in each of the countries, participating in cultural engagements and securing the administration's vital agreements.

Rosas stated in a Monday social media post that Noem signed an agreement with Argentina's minister of national security, Patricia Bullrich, to work toward "Argentina becoming eligible for the Visa Waiver Program," "streamlining repatriations," and "fugitive enforcement to ensure fugitives are not released upon repatriations."

"Noem cites Argentina having the lowest visa overstay rate for all of Latin [America] as one reason to have the country back in the program," he wrote.

Rosas also noted that Noem had a meeting with Argentinian President Javier Milei.

— (@)

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

7 men charged in connection to Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce, and Joe Burrow home invasions



Seven men were charged by federal prosecutors in connection with a series of robberies from the homes of professional athletes.

Specifically, the men were alleged to be connected to the burglaries that occurred at the homes of NFL players Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce, and Joe Burrow.

Four of the men — Alexander Chavez, Bastian Morales, Jordan Sanchez, and Sergio Cabello — were named in the robbery of Burrow's luxury items, which included diamond chains and Louis Vuitton luggage. Blaze News previously reported that all the men were noted as illegal immigrants from Chile.

The robbery at Burrow's home was originally reported by Olivia Ponton, a 23-year-old Sports Illustrated model, who was at Burrow's home at the time.

The remaining three defendants named were Pablo Zuniga Cartes, Ignacio Zuniga Cartes, and Bastian Jimenez Freraut. The men were also from Chile, but it is unclear whether they are illegal immigrants.

A copy of the court complaint reportedly included a photo of those three men posing with a safe and jewelry, alleged to be stolen from the home of NBA player Bobby Portis. The safe included chains, watches, and cash, along with a designer suitcase and designer bags.

The Milwaukee Bucks forward posted on social media in November 2024 that he had been robbed of his most prized possessions.

The complaint was obtained by ABC News, which reported that the men, ranging between the ages of 20 and 38, are members of a South American crime group that has stolen more than $2 million worth of goods.

Each man faces up to 10 years in prison after being charged in Florida with conspiracy to commit interstate transportation of stolen property.

FBI investigators said the robberies were also linked to other players from the NFL's Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the NBA's Memphis Grizzlies; the identities of those players were not revealed.

Federal authorities said the burglars had a "clear and consistent modus operandi" based on athlete schedules and locations that were publicly available. Burglars allegedly entered through a broken window or by prying open a sliding door with a crowbar. Many of the break-ins have been recorded on surveillance cameras.

In Florida, some of the criminals even rented vehicles and left them "in the vicinity of [the] burglaries committed."

ABC reported that a New York pawn shop owner was also charged by the FBI for selling some of the stolen goods.

The charges came just days after it was announced that LAFC soccer star Olivier Giroud was also the victim of a robbery at his home in Los Angeles.

Other robberies that have seemingly gone unsolved, as of the time of this writing, include Pittsburgh Penguins star Evgeni Malkin, who was robbed of his three Stanley Cup rings in mid-January.

Additionally, NBA megastar Luka Doncic had his home in Dallas burglarized in December 2024 while he was away.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

South American 'crime tourist' gangs suspected in several Utah burglaries



Gangs of foreign nationals apparently continue to ravage the country, as some are now suspected in a string of burglaries in the greater Salt Lake City area.

In the past several months, local and federal law enforcement have warned Americans about gangs of foreign nationals allegedly engaging in "burglary tourism" in suburban Detroit, Scottsdale, and Los Angeles. These gangs either target residences while homeowners are away or approach unsuspecting victims to steal belongings off their persons.

'Don't be paranoid or afraid, but just be smart, keep items of value close.'

This second group of thieves follows the same basic modus operandi. Thieves work in pairs or groups of three. One member targets a victim and distracts him or her by asking for help, while an accomplice then quickly snatches the victim's wallet. The thieves then use the victim's cash or credit cards to purchase electronics or other expensive items that can be sold for a profit, all before the victim even realizes anything has been stolen.

"The victim believes the wallet is in the purse until they get to a point of sale or return home," said Lt. Brian Cooper of the Farmington Police Department in Farmington, Utah.

"These suspects are often parts of criminal organizations and will travel doing this. Sometimes they've been referred to as 'crime tourists,'" Cooper added.

Though many American cities have been overrun by migrants in the country illegally, most of these gang members are actually in the U.S. legally, exploiting a security loophole in the federal visa waiver program. They then travel about the country in rental vehicles, reportedly using fake IDs.

While some of these gangs come from China, most originate from Chile or other South American countries. "The common links are they're organized crime groups, they're here temporarily, and in our [recent] experience, they have been foreign nationals, but most closely associated with South American theft groups," Cooper explained.

For now, these gangs have brazenly taken advantage of people's kindness and good nature, but few have engaged in acts of physical violence, Cooper claimed.

"We haven't seen many violent encounters or that they're armed," he said. "In one of our recent cases, the victim realized the theft was occurring [and] confronted the suspect; [the suspect] dropped the wallet and ran."

Cooper and other members of Farmington PD believe "South American theft groups" are responsible for at least four robberies that occurred in Farmington within the past month. So far, police have managed to arrest several suspects, including America Daniela Gonzalez Tobar, a 42-year-old Chilean national listed on an FBI watch list because of her "ties to transnational criminal organizations, specifically the Chilean Theft Group."

Cooper advised concerned Americans to have reasonable skepticism about pleas for help from strangers and to guard their belongings carefully. "Keep your property secure, don't be cavalier when shopping. Don't be paranoid or afraid, but just be smart, keep items of value close," he said.

Unfortunately, valuables may not always be safe at home, either, as some criminal gangs have likewise been known to target residences when homeowners are out of town. To protect themselves against home invasion, Chris Bavender, an FBI public affairs specialist in Indianapolis, suggested that people "vary" their "daily routine," "take photos of valuables and keep those items in a safe," and refrain from leaving "large amounts of cash" in their homes.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

FACT CHECK: Video Shows Beachgoers Watching Eclipse In Chile In 2019, Not Recent U.S. Eclipse

The 2019 eclipse was visible in Chile and Argentina, according to The Guardian

'Burglary tourism' is 'a national issue': Police warn about uptick in foreign criminals abusing visa waiver program



Local law enforcement departments in multiple states are warning about an uptick in South American criminals abusing the United States visa waiver program.

The Los Angeles Police Department told residents that "burglary tourism" has been increasing over the last five years, Blaze News previously reported.

The criminals, mainly from Chile, enter the U.S. through the tourist visa system, which does not require travelers from eligible countries to submit to a background check.

After entering the country, the organized groups target affluent neighborhoods, using WiFi jamming devices to disrupt security systems. The criminal rings steal high-ticket items, including jewelry, designer purses, and other valuables, that they can turn for a quick profit. After selling the items, they send the cash back home.

LAPD Deputy Chief Alan Hamilton told the Los Angeles Times last month that the sophisticated heist rings are not new to the area but noted that they have become increasingly more active.

"The number of crimes tied to these kind of crews are way, way up," Hamilton stated. "They often target homes often connected to open spaces, hiking trails and canyons that give them access."

Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer explained that the criminals "take advantage of the fact that most people don't have window sensors or motion detectors on their second floors."

According to Spitzer, the burglars sometimes "lie in wait in these ghillie suits so they remain camouflaged."

Scottsdale Police Chief Jeff Walther stated during a recent press conference that burglary tourists are also targeting high-end neighborhoods in Arizona.

"What we're getting is hundreds and hundreds, if not thousands, coming in through the visa waiver program that are committing residential burglaries in dozens and dozens and dozens and dozens of cities and neighborhoods around the country," Walther remarked. "This is not a Scottsdale issue, this is not a Valley issue, this is not an Arizona issue. This is a national issue."

"We have to be willing to start asking some hard questions of our federal government about the visa waiver program," he added.

CNN reported that within the last year, suspected burglary tourists have also committed heists in Baltimore, Maryland; Raleigh, North Carolina; and Nassau County, New York.

Ventura County, California, officials estimate that there have been approximately 175 such burglary cases between 2019 and mid-2023.

DA Spitzer noted that the Chilean government has not been providing background information for citizens granted visa waivers despite a requirement to do so.

"If we don't know the criminal background of these individuals ... then we can't tell the judge anything or represent anything about the background," he stated. "Which means the person is released on no bail and they never come back again to answer for the charges."

Spitzer demanded that the Department of Homeland Security revoke Chile's participation in the visa waiver program "until they comply with providing criminal background checks."

"This is not a California problem; this is a national issue that is wreaking havoc on communities across the United States," Spitzer wrote in a post on X.

The DHS told CNN it is "deeply concerned with some individuals who travel to the United States and engage in criminal activity." However, it added, "Chilean officials have responded by improving operational cooperation with DHS to prevent travel ... by known criminal actors."

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

'Migrant criminal activity is a real problem,' police chief says after 6 charged for 2 heists from same Macy's on same day



The police chief of Oak Brook, Illinois — a western suburb of Chicago — said that "migrant criminal activity is a real problem" after six people were charged with felony burglary and felony theft in connection with two separate incidents at a Macy's on Tuesday.

What are the details?

The DuPage County State's Attorney's Office on Wednesday said police responded around 1:45 p.m. to a call about retail theft at Macy’s in 1 Oakbrook Center.

Officials said it's alleged that Elvis Rodriguez-Rubio, 28, Gabriela Salzar-Vasquez, 30, Victor Sevilla-Arteaga, 33, and Danielis Vasquez-Arteaga, 27 — all of Venezuela and all staying in Countryside — entered the store and went to the Tommy Hilfiger section where Vasquez-Arteaga and Salazar-Vasquez grabbed merchandise and took the items to the second floor.

Officials said the two females grabbed shoes, entered a fitting room, and then exited the fitting room wearing the merchandise, after which the four individuals departed the Macy's without paying for the items that totaled almost $928. Officials said it's alleged that a loss prevention officer confronted them.

Police just before 6:30 p.m. responded to another call of a retail theft at the same Macy's, officials said.

Authorities said it's alleged that Nicolas Paillacan-Bravo, 20, and David Saez-Vega, 34 — both of Chile and staying in Chicago — entered the store, used a magnet to remove anti-theft devices from merchandise, and placed 54 items worth just over $10,000 into two suitcases they grabbed from the luggage department.

Police officers confronted the pair after they exited the store, allegedly without paying for the items, officials said.

Judge Joshua Dieden on Wednesday denied the state’s motion to detain all six defendants pre-trial, authorities said, adding that all six were charged with one count of felony burglary (Class 2) and one count of felony retail theft (Class 3).

'Migrant criminal activity is a real problem'

Oak Brook Chief of Police Brian Strockis said he believes "six felony arrests in one day illustrates that migrant criminal activity is a real problem" and that the number of such arrests "that we have had in the last couple of months is significant and would be taxing for any police department."

DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin added that "contrary to popular belief, retail theft is not a victimless crime" and that it causes "significant financial hardship to businesses and their employees, which results in higher prices for shoppers and loss of investment and tax revenue for entire communities."

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Soros Funded House Democrats' ‘Socialist Sympathy Tour’ to South America, Records Show

The liberal billionaire George Soros’s philanthropy quietly funded a junket last month for five House Democrats to meet with left-wing Latin American leaders in what conservatives have derided as a "socialist sympathy tour."

The post Soros Funded House Democrats' ‘Socialist Sympathy Tour’ to South America, Records Show appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.