Vue lecture

Il y a de nouveaux articles disponibles, cliquez pour rafraîchir la page.

SUPER BOMBERMAN COLLECTION Free Download (v1.00.09)

SUPER BOMBERMAN COLLECTION Free Download PC Game Cracked in Direct Link and Torrent. SUPER BOMBERMAN COLLECTION – Party battle game "SUPER BOMBERMAN" is now available as a collection featuring a total of 7 titles with 12 versions across JP, EUR…

SUPER BOMBERMAN COLLECTION Free Download

CRACKEDFREE DOWNLOADTORRENT


Game Overview


 

developer Developer: RED ART GAMES

developer Publisher: KONAMI

release date Release Date: Feb 5, 2026

genre Genre: Action, Casual, Puzzle

 

Party battle game “SUPER BOMBERMAN” is now available as a collection featuring a total of 7 titles with 12 versions across JP, EUR and USA, including the long-awaited localised versions of the unreleased SUPER BOMBERMAN 4 and 5!

Including Boss Rush mode to time attack against all the bosses in each title, support functions, libraries and more!

【Included Titles】

① SUPER BOMBERMAN [Japanese Version / US Version / European Version]

Carat Diamond, the evil power-hungry tyrant, and scientist Dr. Mook! Defeat the robot army they command and thwart their ambitions!

② SUPER BOMBERMAN 2 [Japanese Version / US Version / European Version]

Our Bomberman has been captured by the sudden appearance of the vicious Bomber Quintet. For the sake of Earth’s peace and his own destiny, he must confront them!

③ SUPER BOMBERMAN 3 [Japanese Version / European Version]

SUPER BOMBERMAN COLLECTION Torrent Download

The evil Professor Bagura has revived the vicious Bomber Quintet, once defeated by Bomberman, and has begun his march towards cosmic conquest.

④ SUPER BOMBERMAN 4 [Japanese Version (English localised version available)]

Bomberman has been transported to different eras by the Four Bomber Kings. What is their purpose? And what is the mysterious entity lurking in the shadows?

⑤ SUPER BOMBERMAN 5 [Japanese Version (English localised version available)]

A mysterious man calling himself the Emperor of another world, ‘Terrorin’. He has freed eight ‘Vicious Bombers’ from prison and begun an invasion with them as his subordinates.

⑥ Bomberman [Japanese Version]

The commemorative work that laid the foundation for the series. Conquer all 50 stages!

⑦ Bomberman II [Japanese Version]

The sequel to Bomberman. The work that implemented versus play.

SUPER BOMBERMAN COLLECTION PC Crack


DOWNLOAD LINKS


All links are interchangeable, you can download different parts on different hosts
Request a game or request re-upload, visit Game Request
If you need help a problem, visit F.A.Q

 

Link SUPER BOMBERMAN COLLECTION TORRENT:
Download SUPER BOMBERMAN COLLECTION Torrent Link

 

Link MegaUp.net:
Download HERE

 

Link Mega.nz:
Download HERE

 

Link 1Fichier:
Download HERE

 

Link GoFile:
Download HERE

 

Link MixDrop:
Download HERE

 

Link Rapidgator:
Download HERE

 

Link Bowfile:
Download HERE

 

Link SendCM:
Download HERE

 

Link Clicknupload:
Uploading…

 

 

(See instructions if you don't know how to install: Instructions on how to install)

1.  Extract/Install.
2.  Crack if needed.
3.  Play game.
4.  Have fun ^^.
5.  (OPTION) Install the update version if they have the future in the link below:

 


System Requirement


 

Minimum:

  • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
  • OS: Windows10 64bit
  • Processor: Intel Core i5 6400
  • Memory: 16 GB RAM
  • Graphics: HD 630 GT740
  • DirectX: Version 12
  • Storage: 2 GB available space

Recommended:

  • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
  • OS: Windows11 64bit
  • Processor: Intel Core i5 8400
  • Memory: 16 GB RAM
  • Graphics: GTX1050Ti
  • DirectX: Version 12
  • Storage: 2 GB available space

The post SUPER BOMBERMAN COLLECTION Free Download (v1.00.09) appeared first on Install Guide Games.

HumanitZ Free Download

HumanitZ Free Download PC Game Cracked in Direct Link and Torrent. HumanitZ is an isometric, open-world sandbox survival game set in a world ended by a zombie outbreak. Survive alone or with friends by scavenging, crafting, building, and fighting…

HumanitZ Free Download

CRACKEDFREE DOWNLOADTORRENT


Game Overview


 

developer Developer: Yodubzz Studios

developer Publisher: indie.io

release date Release Date: 6 Feb, 2026

genre Genre: Survival, Open World, Shooter, RPG, Horror, Action, Adventure

 

A zombie outbreak wiped out civilization as we know it. Hordes of zeeks gnawed their way to the top, becoming the world’s apex predator. Regular humans are now an endangered species, with isolated pockets struggling to survive in this new, unforgiving world.

Welcome to HumanitZ, an isometric, open-world, sandbox survival game, where you can try to make a difference and put humanity back where it belongs – at the top of the food chain.

Will you gamble on cities and scavenge loot, knowing hordes of zeeks might be around the corner? Or do you try to survive off the land in the country, through hunting, fishing, and farming?

Survive in an Open Sandbox World

A vast, cruel world stretches from untamed wilderness to dense urban cities, with each location offering resources and risk. Exploration is rarely safe and never predictable as you face infected wildlife, zeek hordes, and hostile survivors roaming the landscape. Drivable vehicles become essential tools for survival, allowing you to cross dangerous territory, haul supplies, carry companions, and push farther into hostile environments. Will you find aid and trade at survivor camps, or violent confrontation as you take over enemy bandit bases?

HumanitZ Torrent Download

If the infected and other survivors aren’t enough, hunger, exposure, and a dynamic weather system constantly threaten your chances of making it through another day. For those willing to keep moving forward when others stop, the path leads to The Island, and the truth behind the outbreak and its terrors left undiscovered.

Live off the Land!

Pick through the ruins of the old world and scavenge resources to survive, or retreat to the hills to avoid the shambling remnants of humanity. Set up a farm, forage, hunt wildlife, or fish to sustain yourself. Each choice can mean the difference between lasting another day or becoming part of the ruins.

Solo, Co-op & Online Play

Survive your way. Play solo, cooperatively, or online in PvE and PvP modes with dedicated servers and proximity voice chat. Whether you face the apocalypse alone or with friends watching your back, the choice is yours.  In a desolate world, even solo survivors learn quickly that befriending a dog or horse companion can mean the difference between life and death.

HumanitZ PC Crack


DOWNLOAD LINKS


All links are interchangeable, you can download different parts on different hosts
Request a game or request re-upload, visit Game Request
If you need help a problem, visit F.A.Q

 

Link HumanitZ-RUNE TORRENT:
Download HumanitZ-RUNE Torrent Link

 

Link MegaUp.net:
Part 1Part 2

 

Link Mega.nz:
Part 1Part 2

 

Link 1Fichier:
Part 1Part 2

 

Link GoFile:
Part 1Part 2

 

Link MixDrop:
Part 1 – Part 2

 

Link Rapidgator:
Part 1 – Part 2

 

Link Bowfile:
Part 1 – Part 2

 

Link SendCM:
Part 1 – Part 2

 

Link Clicknupload:
Uploading…

 

 

(See instructions if you don't know how to install: Instructions on how to install)

1.  Extract/Install.
2.  Crack if needed.
3.  Play game.
4.  Have fun ^^.
5.  (OPTION) Install the update version if they have the future in the link below:

 


System Requirement


 

Minimum:

  • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
  • OS: Windows 10
  • Processor: Intel Core i5-8600K
  • Memory: 16 GB RAM
  • Graphics: Nvidia GTX 1060
  • Storage: 20 GB available space

Recommended:

  • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
  • OS: Windows 10
  • Processor: Intel Core i7-9700K
  • Memory: 16 GB RAM
  • Graphics: Nvidia RTX 2060
  • Storage: 20 GB available space

The post HumanitZ Free Download appeared first on Install Guide Games.

Telly’s Plan For ‘Free’ Ad-Based TV Revolution Runs Into Quality Control Problems

Back in 2023 we noted how a company named Telly proclaimed it had come up with a new idea for a TV: a free TV, with a second small TV below it, that shows users ads pretty much all of the time. While the bottom TV could also be used for useful things (like weather or a stock tracker), the fact it was constantly bombarding you with ads was supposed to offset any need for a retail price.

But apparently there’s been trouble in innovation paradise.

Shortly after launch, Telly proclaimed that it expected to ship more than half a million of the ad-laden sets. Within a few months it had announced it had already received 250,000 pre-orders. But a recent report by Lowpass indicates that only 35,000 of the sets had made it to peoples’ homes.

What was the problem? Ars Technica, Lowpass and The Verge note that the problems began with a substandard shipping process that resulted in a lot of TVs showing up broken to folks who pre-ordered. Reddit is also full of complaints about general quality control issues, like color issues, ads being played too loudly, odd connectivity issues, remote controls randomly unpairing, and more.

Still, there’s evidence that the idea might still have legs, as the premise itself appears profitable:

“The investor update reportedly said Telly made $22 million in annualized revenue in Q3 2025. This could equate to about $52 in advertising revenue per Telly in use per month ($22 million divided by 35,000 TVs divided by 12 months in a year is $52.38).

That’s notably more than what other TV companies report, as Lowpass pointed out. As a comparison to other budget TV brands that rely heavily on ads and user tracking, Roku reported an average revenue per user (ARPU) of $41.49 for 2024. Vizio, meanwhile, reported an ARPU of $37.17 in 2024.”

The TV industry had already realized that they can make more money tracking your viewing and shopping behavior (and selling that information to dodgy data brokers) long term than they do on the retail value of the set. This just appears to be an extension of that concept, and if companies like Telly can get out of their own way on quality control, it’s likely you’ll see more of it.

In one sense that’s great if you can’t afford the newest and greatest TV set. It’s less great given that the United States is too corrupt to pass functional consumer privacy protections or keep its regulators staffed and functional, meaning there are increasingly fewer mechanisms preventing companies like this from exploiting all the microphone, input, and other data collected from users on a day-to-day basis.

I personally want the opposite experience; I’m willing to pay extra for a dumb television that’s little more than a display panel and some HDMI inputs. A device that has no real “smart” internals or bloated, badly designed GUI made by companies more interested in selling ads than quality control. Some business class TVs can sometimes fit the bill, but by and large it’s a segment the industry clearly isn’t interested in, because there’s much, much more money to be made spying on and monetizing your every decision.

Lauren Boebert voted against reopening the government because it might help trans kids

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) voted against a $1.2 trillion 5-bill minibus to reopen the government after a nearly four-day partial shutdown. Boebert said the minibus included $1.3 billion for “child transgender surgeries.”

The minibus package, which also included a continuing resolution to fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) until February 13, narrowly passed the U.S. House in a 217-214 vote. Trump signed it into law on February 3.

Related

Meet the mastermind behind Trump’s definition of “woman”

However, in an X social media post posted that same day, Boebert wrote that the package included “$1.3 BILLION in earmarks funding woke facilities that provide late-term abortions & child transgender surgeries.”

I voted NO on the 5-bill minibus. Republicans have the trifecta and we should fund DHS at Trump levels for strong border security—not continue the Biden-Schumer budget.

The bill also includes $1.3 BILLION in earmarks funding woke facilities that provide late-term abortions &…

— Rep. Lauren Boebert (@RepBoebert) February 3, 2026

Never Miss a Beat

Subscribe to our newsletter to stay ahead of the latest LGBTQ+ political news and insights.
Subscribe to our Newsletter today

It’s not entirely clear which earmarks Boebert is referring to. However, Rep. Ralph Norman (R-NC) claimed that the package included “$3 million to Denver Health & Hospital Authority to provide transgender surgeries… and more than $3 million to Hennepin Healthcare to operate a kids’ gender clinic.”

In a January 22 House floor speech, Rep. Norman told his congressional colleagues, “I don’t know whether you realize it or not, but we’re $39 trillion in debt and counting,” and then claimed that the minibus package provides $1.5 million for an eastern Maine healthcare system that operates a pediatric gender clinic, funding for the The Ann and Robert H. Lurie Foundation’s children’s hospital of Chicago which provides transgender health care, and funding for the Temple University Hospital of Pennsylvania which provides gender-affirming care for trans adults.

Norman sought to introduce an amendment to remove all earmarks from the bills funding the Departments of Labor and Health and Human Services, but his amendment was reportedly voted down.

Despite Boebert and Norman’s claims, it’s possible that the minibus merely contains federal funding for these hospitals in general rather than for their trans programs specifically. While many hospitals nationwide, including Denver Health, have stopped providing gender-affirming care to youth (amid the federal government’s pledge to prosecute and end funding for organizations that provide such care), other hospitals, like Hennepin Healthcare, have continued to offer it.

Heritage Action for America — the sister organization of the massively influential right-wing think tank, The Heritage Foundation — criticized Republicans who voted for the package, accusing them of “direct[ing] taxpayer funds to entities engaged in practices that most GOP voters find abhorrent.”

The partial government shutdown occurred over Democrats’ opposition to funding for the Department of Homeland Security amid the numerous illegal and lethal actions taken by federal immigration agents. The congressional funding feud is likely to resume as the DHS’ funding nears its end on February 13.

Subscribe to the LGBTQ Nation newsletter and be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.

L'April propose le pacte du logiciel libre à l'occasion des élections municipales et communautaires de 2026

À l'occasion des élections municipales et communautaires des 15 et 22 mars 2026, l'April propose aux personnes candidates de signer le Pacte du Logiciel Libre afin de marquer leur engagement, si elles sont élues, à promouvoir et défendre une priorité aux logiciels libres et aux formats ouverts au sein de leurs collectivités.

Le pacte du logiciel libre est une initiative de l'April qui remonte à l'élection présidentielle de 2007. À l'occasion des élections locales à venir, le pacte a évolué pour être plus représentatif des enjeux actuels.

En complément du pacte, l'April propose une liste d'exemples d'actions concrètes que les collectivités peuvent mettre en place dans la poursuite de ces objectifs.

Le pacte est disponible sur le site de la campagne.

En plus du format PDF classique, Le pacte est également disponible en mode « brochure », de manière à pouvoir l'imprimer et le plier dans un format 4 pages, par exemple pour être distribué sur les marchés en échange d'un tract électoral ;).

Le pacte pour les élections municipales et communautaires de mars 2026 est construit autour de trois objectifs complémentaires :

  • Donner la priorité aux logiciels libres et aux formats ouverts, qui est l'ambition historique de l'April. Avoir recours à des logiciels privateurs doit rester une exception dûment justifiée, dans le respect d’une stricte procédure de définition des besoins. Une priorité qui est compatible avec le droit de la commande publique – chose confirmée par le Conseil d'État depuis 2011 – et matériellement possible puisqu'il existe à présent des logiciels libres en mesure de répondre à la majorité des besoins des collectivités.
  • Défendre et promouvoir une informatique émancipatrice. Le logiciel libre participe à la préservation des libertés fondamentales dans une société informatisée, au partage du savoir et à l'accès éclairé au numérique pour toutes et tous. Que ce soit dans les écoles dont elles ont la charge, comme dans l'ensemble des lieux d'accueil du public qu'elles peuvent être amenées à gérer, les collectivités ont un rôle important de sensibilisation et d’accompagnement à exercer.
  • Contribuer à la pérennité des logiciels libres utilisés. Les collectivités doivent contribuer au maintien, à la documentation et au développement des solutions qu’elles utilisent. Un travail et un investissement mutualisables, notamment avec d'autres collectivités, au bénéfice de toutes et tous, d’autant plus pertinent et durable qu’ils s’inscrivent dans une politique formalisée de contribution et de partage.

Le pacte s'adresse à l'ensemble des personnes candidates qui souhaitent marquer leur attachement à agir pour le logiciel libre au sein de leur collectivité et pour les libertés informatiques des habitantes et habitants. Il s'adresse également aux listes candidates qui souhaitent collectivement marquer, comme élément de leur programme, leur engagement à mettre en œuvre une politique en faveur du logiciel libre si elles obtiennent la majorité.

Nous invitons toutes celles et ceux qui le souhaitent à contacter leurs candidates et candidats, qui ont déjà pu se manifester, pour les encourager à signer le Pacte du Logiciel Libre et profiter de l'occasion pour les sensibiliser aux enjeux des libertés informatiques.

Commentaires : voir le flux Atom ouvrir dans le navigateur

Suicide de Caroline Grandjean : l’Éducation nationale reconnaît des défaillances, sans désigner de responsable

Caroline Grandjean, directrice d’école dans le Cantal, est décédée en septembre 2025 après des années de harcèlement lesbophobe. Son histoire met en lumière les lacunes de l’Éducation nationale dans la protection des personnels LGBTQIA+.

L’article Suicide de Caroline Grandjean : l’Éducation nationale reconnaît des défaillances, sans désigner de responsable est apparu en premier sur Association STOP homophobie.

Anti-trans Democrat group sues Illinois to use the word “Democrat” in their name

Claiming a violation of their free speech rights, a group of Democrats is suing the state of Illinois for the right to call themselves Democrats while being transphobic.

Democrats for an Informed Approach to Gender (DIAG) is a nonprofit group of current and former Democrats who think that the party is wrong to support transgender rights. The group coalesced online during the COVID pandemic as a social network of liberal parents whose children had come out as trans.

Related

Swedish skier Elis Lundholm will make history as the first out trans athlete in a Winter Olympics

DIAG promotes its members as “Liberals guiding our party back to reason and reality” under the banner, “Biology, not ideology,” a mantra similarly embraced by the Trump administration in its crusade against trans people.

DIAG’s staff includes a “GenZ detransitioner” and “a lifelong progressive Democrat/agnostic feminist,” among others listed on its website, and says it supports the LGB community only. The group opposes “efforts to ‘fix’ gay and gender nonconforming youth through gender-medicine interventions” and rejects “clinicians who profit by pathologizing typical adolescent discomfort.”

Never Miss a Beat

Subscribe to our newsletter to stay ahead of the latest LGBTQ+ political news and insights.
Subscribe to our Newsletter today

Over two years, the group became a nationally registered nonprofit and has solicited donations in 37 states.

Now, an obscure law in Illinois is being used to challenge DIAG’s ability to fundraise and promote their views in the state by denying them use of the word “Democrat” in their name.

In December, Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias (D) rejected DIAG’s application to incorporate as a nonprofit in Illinois, citing an Illinois law known as the Party Name Provision, which prohibits nonprofits from using names that include words associated with established political parties unless the party consents. 

DIAG is suing the state over the denial, claiming that enforcing the law prevents the group from exercising its First Amendment rights. 

FIRE, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, a nonpartisan civil liberties group, is representing DIAG in the case, Democrats for an Informed Approach to Gender v. Alexi Giannoulias.

“The all-volunteer organization believes it offers a unique voice by explaining that the current Democratic consensus contradicts ‘core liberal values‘ that the party espouses, like protecting women and supporting the scientific process. To advance its mission and political goals, DIAG wants to solicit charitable contributions in Illinois. The Supreme Court has placed charitable solicitation ‘in a category of speech close to the heart of the First Amendment,'” FIRE said in a statement detailing the suit.

DIAG board secretary Jenny Poyer Ackerman asserted the group’s work is rooted in fundamental Democratic values.  

“The surprising thing is that the Democratic Party has come to such different conclusions because we feel that our work reflects the core liberal values,” Ackerman told the National Review. “Critical thinking, freedom from religion, women’s rights, and a hesitancy to lavish the pharmaceutical industry with our money and our trust. So it really feels like we’re not doing anything inconsistent with the principles of our party.”

DIAG applied to incorporate three times in 2025, but the secretary of state’s office rejected all of the applications, according to the suit. In all three, DIAG chose not to seek the Democratic State Central Committee’s permission, claiming the requirement amounts to an unlawful prior restraint on speech.

“The Democratic and Republican parties don’t have a monopoly on the concepts of what is democratic or republican,” FIRE attorney Daniel Zahn told the Chicago Tribune. “When the government tries to give them that monopoly, it’s absurd and unconstitutional.”

“Illinois can’t get around the First Amendment by outsourcing censorship to party bosses,” he added. “No American — Republican, Democrat, or independent — should have to bend the knee before a political party to participate in the political system.”

Subscribe to the LGBTQ Nation newsletter and be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.

Driving Sim Handbrake Based on Load Cell

Simulator-style video games are designed to scale in complexity, allowing players to engage at anything from a casual level to highly detailed, realistic simulation. Microsoft Flight Simulator, for example, can be played with a keyboard and mouse, a controller, or a huge, expensive simulator designed to replicate a specific airplane in every detail. Driving simulators are similar, and [CNCDan] has been hard at work on his DIY immersive driving sim rig, with this hand brake as his latest addition.

For this build, [CNCDan] is going with a lever-style handbrake which is common in motorsports like drifting and rallying. He has already built a set of custom pedals, so this design borrows heavily from them. That means that the sensor is a load cell, which takes input force from a lever connected to it with a spring mechanism. The signal is sent to an Arduino for processing, which is set up to send data over USB like any joystick or controller. In this case, he’s using an Arduino that was already handling inputs from his custom shifter, so he only needed to use another input and add some code to get his handbrake added into his sim.

[CNCDan] built a version of this out of laser-cut metal parts, but also has a fully 3D printable one available as well. Plenty of his other videos about his driving rig are available as well, from the pedal assembly we mentioned earlier to the force-feedback steering wheel. It’s an impressive set of hardware with a feel that replicates racing about as faithfully as a simulator could. Interestingly, we’ve also seen this process in reverse as well where a real car was used instead as a video game controller.

ANTHEM#9

#6487 ANTHEM#9


Genres/Tags: Logic, Puzzle, Side, 2D, Japanese
Companies: koeda, Shueisha
Languages: ENG/MULTI5
Original Size: 1.9 GB
Repack Size: 771 MB

Download Mirrors (Direct Links)

Download Mirrors (Torrent)

Discussion and (possible) future updates on CS.RIN.RU thread

Screenshots (Click to enlarge)



Repack Features

  • Based on ANTHEM9-TENOKE ISO release: tenoke-anthem9.iso (1,987,387,392 bytes)
  • 100% Lossless & MD5 Perfect: all files are identical to originals after installation
  • NOTHING ripped, NOTHING re-encoded
  • Significantly smaller archive size (compressed from 1.9 GB to 771 MB)
  • Installation takes one minute
  • After-install integrity check so you could make sure that everything installed properly
  • HDD space after installation: 1.8 GB
  • Language can be changed in game settings
  • Repack uses XTool library by Razor12911
  • At least 2 GB of free RAM (inc. virtual) required for installing this repack
Game Description
Match gems to activate skills and destroy foes with a flurry of combos!

Creating a deck that unleashes maximum damage and triggers high-speed combos within a limited time window is the key to victory.

ANTHEM#9 delivers strategic depth and a kinetic rush as a Gem-Match roguelite experience that’s both cerebral and thrilling.

Game Features

  • Higher the combo, the greater the thrill of battle! – Match three colors of gems like in a match 3 puzzle style game to activate powerful skills. Chain combos to ramp up damage – and satisfaction. Choose the optimal order to trigger explosive sequences and crush bosses with style!
  • Trust your instincts and aim for the ultimate deck! – In randomly generated dungeons, collect Attack Skills and “Blessings”, and build your deck that tips the scale of battle in your favor… Customize which colored gems your skills require, fine-tune your strategy, and take down formidable foes as you climb deeper into the dungeon.
  • High-Difficulty Endgame Content Awaits! – Clear the standard modes “Mission 1” through “Mission 4” to unlock the high-difficulty mode “Extra Mission”! Complete “Extra-1” to unlock “Extra-2,” and with each increasing number, enemy stats are drastically enhanced and new restrictions are imposed on players to make clearing even more challenging. Exclusive skills and abilities that only appear here provide exceptional replay value! Will you be able to clear it all…!?

The post ANTHEM#9 appeared first on FitGirl Repacks.

Right-wing broadcaster bizarrely worried Super Bowl LX logo is secretly queer

Greg Kelly, an anchor on the right-wing Newsmax media outlet, said he will not watch the NFL Super Bowl game this Sunday, and that the game’s logo looks “a little bit LGBT queer-ish” to him.

“The colors, a little bit. I’m sorry. I think it is,” Kelly said in a Thursday broadcast, according to Media Matters. “And that’s whatever. I think it has nothing to do with football. Straight, gay, whatever. Why is that, kind of, in big ways, explicit ways and subliminal ways, it always seems to be a thing?”

Related

Far-right host bizarrely praises Trump boat strike because it has “nothing to do with transgender”

Kelly — who has accused drag queens of harming his constitutional rights — then complained about Bad Bunny, a Puerto Rican LGBTQ+ ally, performing at the Super Bowl halftime show. The anti-LGBTQ+ conservative organization Turning Point USA is broadcasting an all-white country rock halftime show as an alternative.

Right-wingers have long claimed that the Super Bowl, its halftime show, and TV ads indoctrinate viewers with subliminal “satanic” and LGBTQ+ content. Our sibling site, Outsports, noted that Super Bowl LX will feature several different LGBTQ-friendly players and coaches from the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots.

DOJ’s Frivolous Boasberg Complaint Dismissed—While Nobody Can Explain How DOJ Got The ‘Evidence’ It Never Provided

Back in August, we wrote about the Department of Justice’s unprecedented decision to file a judicial misconduct complaint against D.C. Chief Judge James Boasberg. The complaint, which Attorney General Pam Bondi tweeted about in what was itself likely a violation of the law governing such complaints, accused Boasberg of violating judicial ethics by… privately expressing concerns to other judges that the Trump administration might not comply with court orders.

Concerns that, as we noted at the time, turned out to be entirely justified.

Let’s back up and explain what happened. The DOJ’s complaint centered on comments Boasberg allegedly made at a private Judicial Conference meeting on March 11, 2025, where he supposedly “push[ed] a wholly unsolicited discussion about ‘concerns that the Administration would disregard rulings of federal courts, leading to a constitutional crisis.'” The complaint cited “Attachment A” as evidence of what Boasberg said.

There was just one small problem: the DOJ never actually provided Attachment A with the complaint. Actually, there were many, many problems, but we’ll get to those.

The complaint has now been fully resolved, and it went about as well for the DOJ as you might expect. Sixth Circuit Chief Judge Jeffrey Sutton, to whom Chief Justice Roberts transferred the complaint, dismissed it in a brusque seven-page ruling that reads like a judge who is deeply unimpressed with having his time wasted.

As court-watcher Steve Vladeck put it in his detailed breakdown of the ruling:

Chief Judge Sutton’s ruling is not just a tour de force in how a judicial ruling can persuasively give the back of its hand to a claim; it is, or at least ought to be, a humiliating smackdown for the Department of Justice—which bungled every single aspect of its misconduct complaint, from publicly announcing it to making spurious arguments about what the alleged misconduct actually was (the distinction between “public” and “private” really shouldn’t be hard, nor should the fact that March 11 is prior to March 15) to refusing to provide the very evidence on which the complaint purported to rest.

Vladeck also noted, in discussing how the DOJ never actually followed through on the steps it would obviously take if it were a legitimate complaint,that this proved how it was all political in the first place:

It turns out, it was never about adjudicating Boasberg’s behavior; it was about making splashy headlines and fueling right-wing attacks on the judiciary without regard to whether DOJ’s specious charges would withstand meaningful scrutiny.

Besmirching a long-time judge… for the memes.

The problems with the DOJ’s complaint were numerous, but let’s start with the most embarrassing one mentioned above: the DOJ never actually provided the evidence it claimed supported its accusations.

The Department identified one source of evidence, Attachment A, for the judge’s statement and for the setting in which it occurred. The complaint, however, did not include the attachment. The D.C. Circuit contacted the Department about the missing attachment and explained that, if it failed to submit the attachment, the circuit would consider the complaint as submitted. The Department did not supply the attachment.

In the absence of the attachment, the complaint offers no source for what, if anything, the subject judge said during the Conference, when he said it, whether he said it in response to a question, whether he said it during the Conference or at another meeting, and whether he expressed these concerns as his own or as those of other judges. Later in the complaint, to be sure, the Department refers to a Fox News clip discussing the same allegation. But it does not identify any source, contain any specifics, or answer any of the above questions. A recycling of unadorned allegations with no reference to a source does not corroborate them. And a repetition of uncorroborated statements rarely supplies a basis for a valid misconduct complaint

So the DOJ filed an unprecedented misconduct complaint against a sitting federal judge, made a huge public spectacle of it, and then when asked to actually produce the evidence supposedly supporting its claims… just didn’t. Vladeck’s assessment is appropriately blunt:

DOJ’s failure to produce Attachment A is, frankly, mind-boggling…

But even putting aside the DOJ’s failure to provide any actual evidence, Sutton methodically demolished every other theory in the complaint.

On the claim that Boasberg’s comments at the Judicial Conference were somehow improper, Sutton pointed out that this is literally what the Judicial Conference is for:

A key point of the Judicial Conference and the related meetings is to facilitate candid conversations about judicial administration among leaders of the federal judiciary about matters of common concern. In these settings, a judge’s expression of anxiety about executive-branch compliance with judicial orders, whether rightly feared or not, is not so far afield from customary topics at these meetings—judicial independence, judicial security, and inter-branch relations—as to violate the Codes of Judicial Conduct. Confirming the point, the Chief Justice’s 2024 year-end report raised general concerns about threats to judicial independence, security concerns for judges, and respect for court orders throughout American history

(For what it’s worth, as someone who had the privilege a couple years back of being invited to a judicial conference to give a talk, I can confirm firsthand that there were many fascinating informal conversations that occurred over the course of a few days among judges comparing notes and thinking through larger issues that might impact the judiciary).

On the DOJ’s claim that Boasberg’s comments constituted an improper “public comment” on a pending case, Sutton noted two rather obvious problems: the comments were private, not public, and the case the DOJ was concerned about hadn’t even been filed yet:

The alleged comment does not refer to a case, and the J.G.G. action was not filed until four days later: March 15, 2025. Because the judge did not refer to a case, that all but guarantees that his comments did not “violate[] Canon 3A(6), Canon 2A, or the Judicial–Conduct Rules.” In re Charges of Jud. Misconduct, 769 F.3d 762, 788 (D.C. Cir. 2014). The comment at any rate was not a “public” one, as it was made in a closed-door meeting in which the communications are off the record and confidential. The complaint, notably, does not claim that the judge made public what was said in private at the Conference or its related meetings.

As for the DOJ’s argument that Boasberg’s subsequent handling of the J.G.G. case (involving the shipping of Venezuelans to a Salvadoran concentration camp) somehow proved bias, Sutton wasn’t having that either. The complaint, he noted, “does not explain how a Supreme Court ruling about a prior action by the judge necessarily shows willful indifference when the judge addresses a distinct set of circumstances in a later ruling.”

Furthermore, Sutton points out that if the DOJ doesn’t like Boasberg’s rulings in a particular case, its remedy is… to appeal. Not claim misconduct:

When the executive branch’s deep convictions about the law meet the judicial branch’s deep convictions about the law in a trial court, the answer is to invoke the appellate process, not the misconduct process, to resolve the dispute.

And then, almost as an afterthought, Sutton reminded the DOJ that even if it had prevailed, the judicial misconduct process can’t do what the DOJ apparently wanted it to do:

To the extent the complaint asks that the underlying case be reassigned to another judge, that is not a form of relief available through the complaint process.

In other words:

  1. the DOJ filed a complaint
  2. that was based on misleading evidence
  3. which it never produced
  4. alleging misconduct that (even if true) wasn’t actually misconduct
  5. propped up with claims of bias based on actions that occurred later
  6. which could not be signs of bias, and finally
  7. sought relief that wasn’t even available.

If the DOJ were capable of embarrassment, this would be the time for it.

In his initial post on the complaint last year when it was filed, Vladeck had noted that the entire complaint was supposed to be a warning to other judges to shut up about any concerns about the Trump admin. One hopes that this ruling by Judge Sutton will reverse that and embolden more judges to do what’s right.

But wait, there’s more.

Because we now have even more evidence of just how absurd this whole episode was, thanks to a FOIA lawsuit seeking the mysterious Attachment A that the DOJ never produced. And thanks to that lawsuit, we’ve learned something remarkable: neither the DOJ nor the judiciary can actually explain how the DOJ came to possess this document in the first place.

In a declaration filed in that case, DOJ Senior Counsel Vanessa Brinkmann reveals some truly remarkable details about this document that was supposedly central to the DOJ’s case against Boasberg. First, the DOJ confirms the document exists and describes what it is:

Upon initial review of the document identified in this action as “Attachment A,” OIP observed that the document is a memorandum that bears the markings of a United States Court, is authored by a Federal Judge, and discusses matters internal to the Judicial Conference of the United States.

So it’s a document created by the judiciary, for the judiciary, about internal judiciary matters. And what does the judiciary think about the DOJ having this document? They’re not happy:

AOUSC Counsel conveyed to OIP, in no uncertain terms, the Federal Judiciary’s strenuous objection to the Department’s release of “Attachment A.” AOUSC Counsel further articulated that “Attachment A” was created to be an internal Judiciary document, for a specific Judiciary audience, concerning confidential Judiciary matters and is not now, nor was it ever an Executive Branch document. In sum, AOUSC Counsel advised OIP that it is the position of the AOUSC that “Attachment A” remains under the control of the Judicial Branch, is confidential, and is not subject to disclosure pursuant to the FOIA.

But here’s where it gets really interesting. How did the DOJ get this internal judiciary document in the first place? Apparently, nobody knows:

AOUSC Counsel further stated that the Judiciary made efforts to identify how “Attachment A” ended up in the possession of the Department and has not been able to identify a source of transmission of “Attachment A” from within the Judiciary to the Department. AOUSC Counsel additionally articulated that the Judiciary did not officially transmit or authorize the transmission of “Attachment A” to the Department or any external recipient. Specifically, AOUSC Counsel explained that, given the privileged nature of the document, the Judicial Conference at large would be the only entity that could approve its official release, and that it is the view of the AOUSC that the document is not an Executive Branch record subject to FOIA disclosure, but rather, a judicial record that remains under the control of the Judicial Branch.

And the DOJ’s own investigation into how it acquired this document?

Searches conducted of DOJ leadership office officials’ Departmental email accounts using e-discovery software revealed no electronic trail indicating transmission of “Attachment A” into the Department, nor has OIP’s point of contact within OAG been able to identify how “Attachment A” was received by the Department.

So let’s recap again:

  1. the DOJ filed an unprecedented judicial misconduct complaint against a sitting federal judge based on a document that
  2. it never actually provided as evidence
  3. was created by the judiciary for internal purposes
  4. the judiciary never authorized to be shared with the DOJ, and
  5. neither the DOJ nor the judiciary can explain how the DOJ obtained in the first place.

This is the same DOJ that Attorney General Bondi claimed was acting to protect “the integrity of the judiciary.”

All of this suggests that perhaps one of Vladeck’s theories for why the DOJ refused to hand over Attachment A may have some weight behind it. He theorized that either Attachment A doesn’t actually say what the DOJ claims or that they got it “through means that it’s unwilling to have to identify—even confidentially as part of the judicial misconduct process.” The declaration in the FOIA case would seem to bolster that last point.

As Vladeck notes, Sutton’s dismissal should be the final word on this matter:

The outcome here should be seen for what it is: how a sober-minded jurist actually views these charges, versus how they’re manipulated and broadcast by the Department of Justice and right-wing mouthpieces to serve partisan political ends.

As for the less sober-minded among the commentariat:

Anyone who continues to claim at this point that Chief Judge Boasberg has done anything worthy of further investigation and/or impeachment is telling on themselves.

But of course, that would require the people pushing this narrative to care about things like facts, evidence, and the rule of law. Based on the DOJ’s conduct in this case, that seems like a lot to ask.

“Your time is up!”: Out mayor publicly shuts down religious homophobic troll

Out San Antonio Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones took a stand on Thursday evening in defense of the LGBTQ+ community, shutting down a homophobic gadfly who disparaged her recent appointment of a gay man to the city’s Ethics Review Board.

“We’re not going to tolerate hate speech here,” she told the religious conservative. “Your time is up. Thank you.”

Related

Out veteran Gina Ortiz Jones elected mayor of San Antonio after campaigning on kindness & compassion

Jones was elected as the Texas city’s first out gay mayor last June.

She was reacting to a minutes-long screed from the 73-year-old retiree, Jack M. Finger, who used his public comment time at a City Council meeting to smear Eric Alva, a gay Marine veteran of the Iraq War who was the first seriously injured U.S. combatant in the conflict. He lost a leg after stepping on a land mine.

Alva was among the veterans and lawmakers who stood by President Barack Obama as he signed the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” in 2011, and was active in the campaign to end the anti-LGBTQ+ military policy.

“Unfortunately, Mr. Alva has been an advocate for the homosexual agenda,” Finger told the chamber. “He’s a member of the homosexual community. And by definition, that means you engage in homosexual acts. We have real problems with a person who engages in homosexual acts being part of an ethics committee.”

Insights for the LGBTQ+ community

Subscribe to our briefing for insights into how politics impacts the LGBTQ+ community and more.
Subscribe to our Newsletter today

Thirty seconds before his time was up, Jones cut him off, the San Antonio Express-News reports.

“Madam mayor, we still don’t want it,” Finger replied to Jones.

“Thank you,” Jones repeated, before looking toward a guard in chambers.

“Security.”

“Thank you,” Finger snapped. He returned to his seat.

It wasn’t the first time Alva has been disparaged at a council meeting.

In 2013, he spoke about an LGBTQ+ anti-discrimination measure under consideration. He was roundly booed by an overflow crowd of religious conservatives.  

“Well, I just left city council chambers and I feel like crying,” Alva posted to Facebook in the aftermath. “Such disrespect as they preach the word of God.”

After Finger took his seat, councilmember Jalen McKee-Rodriguez, the first out gay man elected to the council, echoed — and amplified — Jones’ sentiments.

“You come up here several times a month,” McKee-Rodriguez said to Finger. “We laugh and we giggle about some of the things that you say that are really hateful in nature. I want you to know that sometimes when people become figures that are routine at City Council, that the day that they pass we remember them and we think about all the great times we had up here.”

“When you pass, I don’t think that will be happening,” he said. “I think we will remember every single hateful thing that you said, every person that you hurt, and that will be your legacy.”

Jones’ stand in defense of Alva and the LGBTQ+ community follows criticism in November of how she handled orders from the Texas Department of Transportation to dismantle a rainbow crosswalk in the city.

While community activists were primed for a fight over the Pride intersection, Jones seemed to have moved on.

“There’s a number of ways we can show our pride, make sure our community feels seen and heard, and we are not inviting unneeded retribution against the most vulnerable in our community,” Jones told an underwhelmed crowd at a celebration designating San Antonio’s gayborhood as a cultural district.

“My pride is not tied to this paint,” she said. “You know why? Because it’s in my heart and in my head. No one is going to take away who we are, what we have contributed to this city, to this state, and to this country. It doesn’t matter what they say. We will move forward. We know our worth. We’ll just figure out a different way.”

Subscribe to the LGBTQ Nation newsletter and be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.

Kubernetes Deep Health Checks

Des devs ont mis des health checks Kubernetes qui vérifient toutes les dépendances d'un service au lieu de juste vérifier si le pod peut répondre. Résultat : si un truc pète quelque part, tout le cluster s'éteint en cascade comme un château de cartes 💥. La solution ? Un health check doit juste dire "je peux répondre", pas "tout mon écosystème est en vie".

Thread HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38942276

Archive: http://web.archive.org/web/20260110033932/https://encore.dev/blog/horror-stories-k8s


Permalien

L’exception espagnole qui dérange - POLITIS

L'Espagne montre que la gauche peut gouverner sans se trahir, en boostant le SMIC, régulant le travail précaire et régularisant des centaines de milliers de sans-papiers, pendant que le reste de l'Europe fait semblant de ne pas voir. Un truc qui dérange parce que ça marche, malgré les crises et les fachos locaux 😤.

Archive: http://web.archive.org/web/20260128105627/https://www.politis.fr/articles/2026/01/parti-pris-lexception-espagnole-qui-derange/


Permalien
❌