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close video Sen. Eric Schmitt: We’ve seen the ‘weaponization’ of many government agencies

Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., joins ‘The Evening Edit’ to share his take on the Biden administration’s response to the Hunter Biden saga.

Following President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address Tuesday evening, Missouri Republican Sen. Eric Schmitt wasted no time giving the speech a reality check, calling it "completely out of touch" and "disconnected" from the truth.

"It's disconnected from reality. There's just no other way to put it," Sen. Schmitt told Fox News Digital Tuesday moments after the address. "It's like Groundhog Day. It's the same speech from last year, and nothing's gotten any better. Things have gotten worse for people. That's because this president is beholden to the radical left and their agenda that makes life more difficult for average Americans."

During his speech, the president touted various spending bills passed by Democrats over the last two years and even touted incorrect jobs numbers. Biden additionally claimed that Republicans want to take the economy "hostage."

At times, Biden also appeared to go off script, with Republican lawmakers in the chamber laughing at his claim that the U.S. will need fossil fuels for at least another decade despite his party pushing to ban gas-powered cars and appliances.

S.O.T.U.: BIDEN PUSHES FOR INSULIN COST CAPS

"It was completely out of touch," Schmitt said. "It was more of the same kind of stuff that's gotten us into this mess where the American people are paying $10,000 more a year for things than just a couple of years ago, that means at the pump, that means at the grocery store, utility bills. And it's because this president is addicted to spending money we don't have and declaring war on domestic energy production. There's a cost to that."

Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., called the president’s State of the Union address “tone deaf” on the economy, border crisis and national security. (Getty Images)

The Missouri senator further ripped the president for his "glossed over" comments on the border crisis and Chinese spy flight coming an hour into his speech, arguing that Biden "missed the mark."

"We don't have a secure southern border, and our airspace has been violated by a Chinese spy balloon that went over critical military installations," Schmitt said. "He is purposely undermining the policies that were working under President Trump like the 'Remain in Mexico' policy, Title 42, the border wall, all of those things. He's eviscerated."

Schmitt called out the president’s contradiction of taking aim at oil companies while stating oil and gas would be needed for years to come, saying Biden has created a "war on domestic energy production." close video Sarah Sanders delivers Republican rebuttal to President Biden’s SOTU address

Ark. Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders gives the Republican response to President Biden’s State of the Union speech.

"That is hurting the American people. He's talking about mining fossil fuels for another 10 years? This stuff is like a dispatch from Fantasyland," the senator said. "He's talking to the radicals on the left that have moved an agenda that moves our jobs overseas, forces us to buy oil from Saudi Arabia and Venezuela and ship our strategic petroleum reserves to China, have an open border, and, oh, by the way, not take China seriously."

"That's a disaster," he continued. "That is not what the American people want, and so I think his speech was the epitome of tone deaf… he didn't want to [level with Americans] because he knows that the world was watching, and he failed that test miserably."

Sen. Schmitt, who’s also chairman of the Jobs, Economic Development and Local Government Committee, noted the state of the U.S. economy is in "pretty bad shape," and Republicans will be left to clean it up.

"We have an inflation crisis, and that's a direct result of this president's policies. He said nothing tonight that would change that trajectory," he pointed out. "So, I think Republicans are going to have to be the grown-ups to move an agenda forward that empowers working-class families, not makes their lives tougher."

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE close video This is unprecedented: Eric Schmitt

Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt discusses Judge Bruce Reinhart ordering the DOJ to unseal the redacted version of the Mar-a-Lago affidavit on Mornings with Maria.

Summing up Tuesday’s State of the Union in one word, Schmitt called it "disconnected."

"I just think he gave a rosy, detached speech tonight. And Americans face a difficult reality every day of higher prices on everything, a wide open border and no clear end in sight," the senator said. "There's nothing he proposed that would actually address these issues that concern everyday working families. And his words were hollow."

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World

Inside Iran’s notorious Evin Prison – as Tehran says damage shows Israel targeted civilians

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Inside Iran's notorious Evin Prison - as Tehran says damage shows Israel targeted civilians

It is one of the most notorious and secret places in Iran.

Somewhere foreign journalists are never allowed to visit or film. The prison where dissidents and critics of Iran’s government disappear – some never to be seen again.

But we went there today, invited by Iranian authorities eager to show the damage done there by Israel.

Evin Prison was hit by Israeli airstrikes the day before a ceasefire ended a 12-day war with Iran. The damage is much greater than thought at the time.

Evin Prison, Iran

We walked through what’s left of its gates, now a mass of rubble and twisted metal, among just a handful of foreign news media allowed in.

A few hundred yards in, we were shown a building Iranians say was the prison’s hospital.

Behind iron bars, every one of the building’s windows had been blown in. Medical equipment and hospital beds had been ripped apart and shredded.

What Iran says was the hospital at the Evin Prison
Image:
Debris scattered across what Iran says was the prison hospital

It felt eerie being somewhere normally shut off to the outside world.

On the hill above us, untouched by the airstrikes, the buildings where inmates are incarcerated in reportedly horrific conditions, ominous watch towers silhouetted against the sky.

Evin felt rundown and neglected. There was something ineffably sad and oppressive about the atmosphere as we wandered through the compound.

The Iranians had their reasons to bring us here. The authorities say at least 71 people were killed in the air strikes, some of them inmates, but also visiting family members.

The visitor centre at Evin Prison after Israeli attacks
Image:
Authorities say this building was the visitor centre


Iran says this is evidence that Israel was not just targeting military or nuclear sites but civilian locations too.

But the press visit highlighted the prison’s notoriety too.

Iran’s critics and human rights groups say Evin is synonymous with the brutal oppression of political prisoners and opponents, and its practice of hostage diplomacy too.

British dual nationals, including Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe were held here for years before being released in 2022 in exchange for concessions from the UK.

Read more:
Iran: Still a chance for peace talks with US
Why Netanyahu wants a 60-day ceasefire – analysis

The main complex holding prisoners sits atop a hill
Image:
Inmates are held in building on a hill above, which has been untouched by airstrikes

Interviewed about the Israeli airstrikes at the time, Ms Zaghari-Ratcliffe showed only characteristic empathy with her former fellow inmates. Trapped in their cells, she said they must have been terrified.

The Israelis have not fully explained why they put Evin on their target list, but on the same day, the Israeli military said it was “attacking regime targets and government repression bodies in the heart of Tehran”.

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The locus of their strikes were the prison’s two entrances. If they were trying to enable a jailbreak, they failed. No one is reported to have escaped, several inmates are thought to have died.

The breaches the Israeli missiles made in the jail’s perimeter are being closed again quickly. We filmed as a team of masons worked to shut off the outside world again, brick by brick.

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Tesla prototype sparks speculation: a Model Y, maybe slightly smaller

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Tesla prototype sparks speculation: a Model Y, maybe slightly smaller

A new Tesla prototype was spotted again, reigniting speculation among Tesla shareholders, even though it’s likely just a Model Y, potentially a bit smaller, and the upcoming stripped-down, cheaper version.

Over the last few months, there have been several sightings of what appears to be a Model Y with camouflage around Tesla’s Fremont factory.

It sparked a lot of speculation about it being the new “affordable” compact Tesla vehicle.

There’s confusion in the Tesla community around Tesla’s upcoming “affordable” vehicles because CEO Elon Musk falsely denied a report last year about Tesla’s “$25,000” EV model being canceled.

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The facts are that Musk canceled two cheaper vehicles that Tesla was working on, commonly referred as “the $25,000 Tesla” in early 2024. Those vehicles were codenamed NV91 and NV92, and they were based on the new vehicle platform that Tesla is now reserving for the Cybercab.

Instead, Musk noticed that Tesla’s Model 3 and Model Y production lines were starting to be underutilized as the Company faced demand issues. Therefore, Tesla canceled the vehicles program based on the new platform and decided to build new vehicles on Model 3/Y platform using the same production lines.

We previously reported that these electric vehicles will likely look very similar to Model 3 and Model Y.

In recent months, several other media reports reinforced this, and Tesla all but confirmed it during its latest earnings call, when it stated that it is “limited in how different vehicles can be when built on the same production lines.”

Now, the same Tesla prototype has been spotted over the last few days, and it sent the Tesla shareholders community into a frenzy of speculations:

Electrek’s Take

As we have repeatedly reported over the last year, the new “affordable” Tesla “models” coming are basically only stripped-down Model 3 and Model Y vehicles.

They might end up being a little smaller by a few inches, and Tesla may use different model names, but they will be extremely similar.

If this is it, which is possible, you can see it looks almost exactly like a Model Y.

It’s hard to confirm if it’s indeed smaller because of the angle of the vehicle compared to the other Model Ys, but it’s not impossible that the wheelbase is a bit smaller – although it’s hard to confirm.

Either way, the most significant changes for these stripped-down, more affordable “models” are expected to be cheaper interior materials, like textile seats instead of vegan leather, no heated or ventilated seats standard, no rear screen, maybe even no double-panned acoustic glass and a lesser audio system.

As previously stated, the real goal of these new variants, or models, is to lower the average sale price in order to combat decreasing demand and maintain or increase the utilization rate of Tesla’s current production lines, which have been throttled down in the last few years to now about 60% utilization.

If this trend continues, Tesla would find itself in trouble and may even have to close its factories.

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Politics

US Senator Lummis’s crypto tax relief plan fuels DeFi momentum: Finance Redefined

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US Senator Lummis’s crypto tax relief plan fuels DeFi momentum: Finance Redefined

US Senator Lummis’s crypto tax relief plan fuels DeFi momentum: Finance Redefined

Increasing US regulatory clarity is enabling more traditional finance participants to seek out decentralized financial solutions.

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