Hegseth: "Manufactured story" that U.S. faces munitions stockpile shortage
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth testified before the Senate Armed Service Committee earlier this year that replenishing the stockpile could take "months and years."

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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth testified before the Senate Armed Service Committee earlier this year that replenishing the stockpile could take "months and years."
President Donald Trump said that Israel should stop attacking Lebanon as he tries to preserve a peace deal with Iran that he said would be signed on Sunday.
Last month, another family requested I play "It Is Well with My Soul" for their loved one’s funeral.After nearly 50 years of playing the piano for funeral services, I've lost count of how many times I've played that hymn.The sorrows like sea billows are a given. They arrive for all of us eventually. The question is not whether suffering comes. The question is what we have been taught to do when it arrives.Those years at the piano have provided an unusual vantage point. Most people attending a funeral spend the service looking toward the front of the sanctuary or chapel. They see the pastor, the flowers, the family, and the casket. Sitting at the piano, however, I've spent much of my life looking in the opposite direction.I see the faces. I've watched businessmen, ranchers, physicians, pastors, politicians, mechanics, celebrities, schoolteachers, and grieving children. I've seen estranged family members share a pew for an hour. I've seen old wounds temporarily set aside. I've watched tears fall from people who spent a lifetime convincing the world they didn't cry.It's hard to lie during a funeral service. The face and eyes give it away.For a brief moment, the distractions of life are suspended in the face of death. Everyone in the room is confronted with the same reality: Life is fragile, time is limited, and something had the final word over a life that may have loomed very large only days before.When I offer to help select the music, I often ask the family’s favorite hymn. “It Is Well with My Soul” almost invariably stands out.This year marks 150 years since Philip Bliss set Horatio Spafford's words to music. Ever since, grieving families have continued reaching for that hymn.After hearing it and performing it for a lifetime, I've become convinced that something happens in the fifth measure where the word "sorrows" lands on the first minor chord of the hymn.I leave room for that chord.When I play the hymn, I take my time. I've had music ministers try to conduct me faster through it. I politely ignore them. Grief does not benefit from haste.Not because I am trying to showcase the music, but because I have watched what happens in the room when people hear it. Heads lower. Shoulders sag. Eyes fill with tears. In that moment, the hymn permits grieving people to tell the truth.The sea billows are rolling.RELATED: What we lose when we rush past pain iStock/Getty ImagesSometimes, when I invite the congregation to sing, I watch people exhale. Some simply mouth the words. Others sing through tears. Some stand motionless and stare straight ahead. I've watched grieving fathers, mothers, and spouses raise their hands heavenward as tears run down their faces.Occasionally, I stop playing altogether on the last chorus and let the congregation carry the hymn themselves. There is something profound about hearing a room full of grieving people give collective grief a collective voice.The hymn was written from within great sorrow. It never hurries people through it. It doesn't offer clichés or pretend pain isn't pain.It acknowledges sorrow while refusing to grant it the final word.Then comes the line that has occupied my thoughts more than any other: “Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say ...”Taught me.The sorrows like sea billows are a given. They arrive for all of us eventually. The question is not whether suffering comes. The question is what we have been taught to do when it arrives.What do we reach for when things around us feel so unsteady?I've played this hymn for people who sang it with confidence and for people who could barely get the words out. I've watched some sing it as testimony and others sing it as prayer. Some seemed to embody it. Others seemed to aspire to it.Yet, the requests keep arriving.After nearly 50 years at the piano bench, I've never lost my sense of wonder at what happens when a room full of grieving people stand together and sing: It is well with my soul.
‘The closer you get to Down syndrome, the less scary the diagnosis becomes.’
NJ Transit and the New Jersey state government has been under fire after announcing that round-trip tickets to the Meadowlands would cost $98 for the World Cup.
A decade of diplomatic maneuvering, global intrigue and trilateral deal-making — and how it all ended up in one president’s hands.
Dana White likes to say he sells "holy sh*t moments for a living." Sunday night, the UFC CEO will attempt his magnum opus on the biggest stage in combat sports history.Why it matters: The UFC and President Trump have forged one of the most successful cultural alliances in modern politics, carrying mixed martial arts (MMA) from the fringe of American sports to a starring role in the country's 250th anniversary.Zoom in: For Trump, the UFC was a lifeline after the 2020 election and Jan. 6 left him radioactive to corporate America.White brought Trump cageside — reintroducing him as an anti-establishment icon to the young, male-heavy audience that would help power his 2024 comeback.Trump's instinct at moments of maximum legal vulnerability was to return to the Octagon: days after his first indictment in 2023, he appeared at UFC 287 in Miami; two days after his 2024 guilty verdict, he made his first public appearance at UFC 302 in Newark, N.J.For the UFC, Trump's return has coincided with a cascade of rewards: a $7.7 billion rights deal with Paramount, new partnerships with the FBI and State Department, and now a fight night on the White House's South Lawn.UFC parent company TKO says the event — complete with a massive fan viewing experience on the Ellipse — will cost the UFC more than $60 million and lose money on paper.Still, TKO president Mark Shapiro has called the first professional sporting event ever held at the White House "the greatest earned marketing tool of all time." Photo: Aaron Schwartz/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesThe big picture: UFC Freedom 250 has been cloaked in controversy and curiosity since well before construction began on the 92-foot-tall steel "Claw" now towering over the South Lawn.1. The sport: To fans, MMA is what Joe Rogan calls "high-level problem solving with dire physical consequences" — a full-body chess match that fuses boxing, kickboxing, wrestling, jiu-jitsu and pain tolerance into a brutal test of skill, will and nerve.The champions fighting on Sunday, from Georgian-Spaniard Ilia Topuria to Brazil's Alex Pereira, embody the sport's global rise, technical sophistication and cinematic capacity for sudden, fight-ending violence.To critics, MMA remains a bloody spectacle tied to the ugliest strains of hypermasculinity, making its arrival at the White House feel jarring even as the sport has gone mainstream.2. The promotion: The UFC built a global sports empire by functioning as the ultimate market gatekeeper, yielding immense corporate profits even while weathering antitrust lawsuits and allegations of suppressed wages.Beyond the balance sheets, the UFC's internal fairness is routinely warped by executive favoritism — a system of handpicked title shots and corporate protection that fans openly mock as "Dana White privilege."This transactional playbook has long aligned the UFC with authoritarian regimes that use combat sports for image laundering, adding a sharp layer of irony to a company now wrapped in the flag of American pageantry.3. The event: White insists the card will be patriotic, not political, promising to "tell the story of America" through historical vignettes between fights. But almost every logistical and financial detail points back to one man.The rare Sunday fight, a break from the UFC's patented Saturday rhythm, will fall on Flag Day — which happens to be Trump's 80th birthday.It's branded through Trump's Freedom 250 universe and accompanied by commemorative coins bearing his face, priced up to nearly $12,000. Trump personally controls roughly 1,400 of the 4,300 South Lawn seats.Asked why MMA is the first sport to make it to the White House, White told reporters: "It's one of the president's favorite sports, so that helps." Trump with UFC fighters (from left) Alex Pereira, Ilia Topuria, Justin Gaethje and Cyril Gane. Photo: Scott Taetsch/Zuffa LLCBetween the lines: The public isn't sold: A YouGov poll found 51% of Americans disapprove and just 17% approve of UFC Freedom 250.A watchdog group has sued to stop the event, arguing the administration approved a private spectacle on federal parkland without proper review. Even within the UFC's Trump-friendly fan base, the alliance is showing cracks: Fans have flooded promotional posts with complaints about Israel, the Epstein files and other perceived populist betrayals by Trump.The bottom line: The UFC's journey to the White House lawn mirrors the president's own improbable rise.In 1996, the late Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) urged all 50 U.S. governors to ban the "barbaric" UFC in its infancy, likening the sport to "human cockfighting."At the time, Trump was a casino mogul and tabloid fixture, refining the same instincts for provocation, spectacle and survival that would later vault him to the presidency.White has long cast Trump as one of the few powerful figures who saw value in the UFC when polite America recoiled: "Nobody took us seriously," White often says. "Except Donald Trump."
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said Thursday evening that President Trump’s account of the state of negotiations to end the Iran war “lacks a lot of credibility.” Trump earlier in the day threatened ramped up strikes on Tehran but later canceling them with a promise that Iran’s supreme leader had approved a deal to reopen the…