Tag: hit

  • Border arrests hit lowest mark since last time Trump was in office

    Border arrests hit lowest mark since last time Trump was in office

    Apprehensions at the U.S. southern border hit a low mark not seen since the last time President Donald Trump was in office.

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) apprehended just 29,116 illegal immigrants along the southern border during the month of January, down from 47,000 in December and hitting a low mark not seen since May 2020, when 32,349 arrests were made at ports of entry, according to a White House press release.

    Overall, CBP apprehended 61,465 illegal immigrants at the southern border in January, down 36% from the prior month, the release notes, citing new CP data.

    NEW CARTEL THREATS AGAINST BORDER AGENTS: EXPLOSIVES, DRONES AND WIRELESS TRACKING

    The situation on the border turned markedly with the change of administration. (Getty Images)

    The numbers, which were shared with ABC News, shifted even more dramatically after Trump took office, with apprehensions falling 85% between Jan. 21 and 31, an 85% reduction from the same time period in 2024.

    The numbers continue a string of news showing reductions in attempted border crossings under Trump, including a Fox News report last week that revealed the daily average of known gotaways – illegal immigrants who enter the U.S. while avoiding arrest – have fallen to just 132 per day since the beginning of February, at 93% reduction from the highs seen under former President Joe Biden.

    Trump talking to Border Patrol chief at border wall

    President Donald Trump speaks with Border Patrol Chief Rodney Scott along the border wall in San Luis, Arizona, June 23, 2020. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

    BORDER PATROL AGENTS TO STOP WEARING BODY CAMERAS AFTER SOCIAL MEDIA POST REVEALS ‘SECURITY RISK’

    The improving numbers at the border seemingly began in the first few days of the Trump administration, including a 35% reduction in Border Patrol encounters during the first three days of the new administration compared to the final three days under Biden.

    Biden walking with border officials along border wall

    President Joe Biden speaks with a member of the Border Patrol as they walk along the US-Mexico border fence in El Paso, Texas, on Jan. 8, 2023. (Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images)

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    “During the previous administration, the average number of illegal aliens encountered at the southern border in January was 141,710 – the result of dangerous policies that ferried illegal aliens directly into our communities, where they were allowed to stay indefinitely,” reads the White House release. “Now, under President Trump, illegal border crossings are at record lows as illegal aliens are promptly arrested and sent home.”

  • Egg farmer hit hard by bird flu, results in 3 lost flocks

    Egg farmer hit hard by bird flu, results in 3 lost flocks

    Egg prices are continuing to rise, reaching levels not seen since inflation hit a high of 9% in 2022, hitting the wallets of consumers as well as America’s farmers.

    Outbreaks of the highly pathogenic avian influenza, or bird flu, are primarily to blame. Entire commercial flocks, consisting of more than 1,000 chickens, have been wiped out as a result of the virus. 

    Greg Herbruck, a third-generation farmer and the CEO of Michigan egg production company Herbruck’s Poultry Ranch, told FOX Business that the virus wreaked havoc on all three of the company’s farms, located about five miles from each other, forcing him to cull his entire supply. 

    The industry has been fighting bird flu since the outbreaks began in 2022. For Herbruck, it was the day before Easter 2024 when the company’s chickens contracted bird flu – a time he vividly recalls. 

    EGG PRICES AREN’T COMING DOWN ANYTIME SOON, EXPERTS SAY

    “It’s just like somebody takes a ball back to your gut,” said Herbruck, who wants officials to approve and fast track a vaccine that farmers can use to protect their flocks. “I’m just an egg farmer out here trying to say, ‘Hey, please, we need some help to fight this battle.’” 

    Herbruck said he went weeks without sleep, and by the time the third farm was infected, one of the company’s executives was crying in his office.

    “It was just awful… just the nightmare of that many dead chickens,” he said.

    Greg Herbruck, a third-generation farmer and the CEO of Michigan egg production company Herbruck’s Poultry Ranch, told FOX Business that the virus wreaked havoc on all three of the company’s farms. (Herbruck’s Poultry Ranch)

    This marks the fourth year that the virus has crippled farmers, with outbreaks continuing to emerge into early 2025. After the virus is detected, farms are instructed to kill their entire flocks to eradicate the disease, which significantly disrupts supply and raises the cost of eggs in the U.S. food system.

    US EGG PRODUCTION DROPS AS PRICES CONTINUE TO RISE ALONG WITH BIRD FLU CASES

    The process to rebuild the operation is not easy, as it takes several months to get to a point where a farm can start producing large eggs again.

    After getting clearance from the Agriculture Department, Herbruck said it takes about five months for a chick to reach maturity and to start laying a good number of large eggs.

    Eggs at Herbruck’s Poultry Ranch. Michigan’s largest egg producer, specializing in organic and cage-free eggs. (Herbruck’s Poultry Ranch)

    To expedite the process, farms purchase mature hens to begin laying eggs while simultaneously raising younger chicks. It can take up to two years for a farm to return to full production. In June 2024, Herbruck said the company began reintroducing birds to its farms, but are still operating at only 70% of their pre-outbreak capacity.

    Meanwhile, his workers have been taking extra precautions. For instance, they are transported to a remote area where they can change clothes. Some workers are even required to change twice to minimize the risk of contamination.

    BIRD FLU VACCINE: WHAT TO KNOW

    Herbruck expressed growing concerns as the virus has now been shown to infect mammals. In March 2024, the virus was first detected in cows and has since infected 968 dairy herds across 16 states, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

    The agency last month reported 66 confirmed human cases of bird flu in the U.S. since 2024, including one fatality. 

    Herbruck’s Poultry Ranch, Michigan’s largest egg producer, specializes in organic and cage-free eggs. (Herbruck’s Poultry Ranch)

    Humans can contract bird flu through contact with an infected animal’s body fluids, according to the Cleveland Clinic. Infection can also occur by inhaling small dust particles from animal habitats or by touching body fluids and then getting them into the eyes, nose or mouth.

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    However, Herbruck is more concerned if the disease is airborne, which has not yet been determined. 

    “It’s not even possible to filter out that virus or to disinfect the air. These barns that may have 150,000 birds, we typically change the air every 30 to 40 seconds… so the idea that we might be able to somehow disinfect that air is not even reasonable,” he said.

    In addition to the protocols farms are already taking, Herbruck said the tool that is still missing is a vaccine. While it is not perfect, “it’s something that can help us,” he said. 

  • East Coast battered by high winds as winter storms hit region

    East Coast battered by high winds as winter storms hit region

    Severe weather knocked out power for tens of thousands of homes and businesses in the eastern portion of the U.S. 

    More than 77,000 homes and businesses in Pennsylvania were without power as of 10 a.m. ET, according to PowerOutage.US. Over 37,000 in New Jersey, about 22,000 in New York and nearly 16,000 customers in Connecticut were without power on Monday morning.

    More than 55,000 people in Virginia and nearly 50,000 in Maryland were also affected. Over 16,000 in Kentucky and more than 17,000 people in Alabama were also out of power as of 9 a.m. Monday, according to the outage tracker.

    People walk along the Sixth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan as snow falls in New York City on Feb. 15, 2025. (CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

    TRIPLE THREAT OF SEVERE STORMS, EXTREME FLOODING AND SNOW THREATENS WIDE SWATH OF US

    The outages came as a powerful storm system brought severe weather – including snow, rain and strong winds, to the central and eastern U.S.

    In total, the National Weather Service (NWS) offices nationwide have issued cold weather advisories and extreme cold warnings for more than 58 million Americans from the U.S.-Canada border to Texas. However, the weather is expected to continue to hammer a significant part of the U.S. over the coming week. 

    The NWS office in State College, Pennsylvania, warned that strong winds would continue into Monday as freezing temperatures and “scattered snow showers” persist. 

    A Connecticut road is closed on Feb. 17 after strong winds toppled trees and knocked out power for thousands across the East Coast.

    A Connecticut road is closed on Feb. 17 after strong winds toppled trees and knocked out power for thousands across the East Coast. (Fox News Digital / Fox News)

    The NSW office in New York also posted on X that the area is in store for a “blustery and cold day” on Monday. It is projected that daytime temperatures will be in the upper 20s and low 30s. The office expects “blustery winds” of up to 50 mph that “will make it feel like it is in the teens.” A few flurries are also possible, the office said.  

    LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOODING LOOMS AS TORRENTIAL RAINS SOAK TENNESSEE, KENTUCKY

    The NWS office in Louisville, Kentucky, posted on X, that a winter storm watch is still in effect for the entire area, with snow accumulations between 2 and 6 inches expected Tuesday night and through Wednesday. It also warned travelers that “hazardous road conditions will negatively impact the Wednesday morning commute.” 

    Weather isn’t easing up in Alabama either. The NWS office in Birmingham posted a five-day weather outlook on X showing how colder weather will arrive through the week. 

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    Rain is expected from Tuesday into Wednesday. 

    “There’s also a small window of snow mixing in or switching over to snow in the early morning hours across the northern portions of Central Alabama,” the office posted on X.

    In Virginia, the NWS office warned that there could be “a significant winter storm” on Wednesday and Thursday. However, there is still uncertainty with respect to the exact magnitude and placement of the heaviest snow.

    FOX Weather contributed to this report

  • US hockey star Charlie McAvoy receives praise for big hit on Canada’s Connor McDavid in intense 4 Nations game

    US hockey star Charlie McAvoy receives praise for big hit on Canada’s Connor McDavid in intense 4 Nations game

    The 4 Nations Face-Off matchup between the U.S. and Canada had sports fans everywhere talking about the anthem booing and the three subsequent fights in the first 9 seconds of the game.

    Lost in that is what the U.S. had to overcome to win the matchup and advance to the final.

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    Connor Hellebuyck, #37 of Team United States, celebrates with Charlie McAvoy, #25, as Brock Faber, #14, looks on after their 3-1 win in the 4 Nations Face-Off game between the United States and Canada at Bell Centre on Feb. 15, 2025 in Montreal. (Andre Ringuette/4NFO/World Cup of Hockey via Getty Images)

    Canada’s Connor McDavid opened the scoring soon after when the electricity was at its highest. Canada hoped to steal one and send their fans home happy, but the U.S. looked to reset the tone immediately after, and the Americans believed Charlie McAvoy did just that.

    McAvoy put a big hit on McDavid in the first period, and 19 seconds later, Jake Guentzel got the equalizer past Jordan Binnington. Matthew Tkachuk said it was McAvoy’s hit that revitalized the team.

    “That also is a message-sending moment — probably one of the plays of the game,” the Florida Panthers star said. “They just scored a goal, the building was rocking and Charlie comes there and pops McDavid, like one of the hardest hits I’ve seen.”

    Conor McDavid and Sidney Crosby

    Canada’s Connor McDavid, #97, and Sidney Crosby, #87, talk during the third period of a 4 Nations Face-Off hockey game against the United States in Montreal on Saturday, Feb. 15, 2025. (Graham Hughes//The Canadian Press via AP)

    JUSTIN TRUDEAU SAYS HE’S ‘DAMN PROUD’ OF CANADA AS FANS BOO US NATIONAL ANTHEM, FACES ONLINE RIDICULE

    Tkachuk added that McAvoy’s teammates “followed” McAvoy’s aggressiveness afterward.

    “That hit Charlie threw on (McDavid) was kind of a game-changer,” U.S. defenseman Zach Werenski said. “He’s been known to do that. He’s great with his size, he’s really good defensively and I thought that was a perfectly timed hit to get our team going in the right direction.”

    Dylan Larkin put the U.S. up 2-1 in the second period, and Guentzel later put one in an empty net and the U.S. won the game.

    McDavid still held out hope Canada can bounce back and get to the final for a rematch.

    “It was fast, tight-checking, competitive, emotional,” he said, via The Athletic. “It had everything you would want in a hockey game. It sucks it didn’t go our way, but this thing’s far from over.”

    Charlie McAvoy hits Sidney Crosby

    Canada’s Sidney Crosby, #87, is checked by United States’ Charlie McAvoy, #25, as Vincent Trocheck, #16, looks on during first period 4 Nations Face-Off hockey action in Montreal on Saturday, Feb. 15, 2025. (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press via AP)

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    The U.S. will play Sweden and Canada will play Finland in the final games before the championship.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Eagles GM Howie Roseman bleeds from forehead after being hit with beer can during Super Bowl parade

    Eagles GM Howie Roseman bleeds from forehead after being hit with beer can during Super Bowl parade

    Philadelphia Eagles general manager Howie Roseman was bleeding from his forehead during the team’s Super Bowl victory parade Friday.

    Photos show a wide gash on the general manager’s forehead after the incident. 

    However, it didn’t seem to stop him from partying. 

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    “I laughed at him a little bit when it happened,” Eagles player Josh Sweat told NBC Sports Philadelphia. “And I know he’s mad at me. … When I saw it, I knew what happened, and I couldn’t contain my laugh. … I did not throw the can at him. But, hey, that’s part of it. They’re throwing full cans and bottles.”

    MICS CATCH SAQUON BARKLEY, FIANCÉE’S EMOTIONAL EXCHANGE AFTER EAGLES SUPER BOWL VICTORY: ‘SO PROUD’

    It was not clear who hurled the can that struck Roseman. 

    At the final destination of Friday’s parade, Roseman shouted to fans, “I bleed for this city!”

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    Roseman has been the Eagles’ general manager since 2010 and is largely credited as the architect of the team’s success since. Under Roseman, the franchise has reached three Super Bowls, winning two. 

    Under Roseman’s leadership, the Eagles have a 139-104 overall record and a 10-7 playoff record.

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  • Chocolate costs remain elevated as cocoa crops get hit by weather, disease

    Chocolate costs remain elevated as cocoa crops get hit by weather, disease

    Consumers with a sweet tooth will pay more for one of the most popular Valentine’s Day treats this year.

    Cocoa prices skyrocketed, compared with a year ago, due to crop conditions coupled with rising manufacturing costs, leaving some businesses with no option but to increase prices for different chocolate products.

    Ray Bitzel Jr., the owner of Bitzel’s Chocolate, an artisan chocolate factory in Suwanee, Georgia, has absorbed a hefty amount of the cost to keep customers. Still, the sweet treat shop had to raise prices to account for the increased costs. 

    “Chocolate prices from 18 months ago have basically nearly doubled,” Bitzel told FOX Business. “It’s that bad.” 

    COCOA PRICES CONTINUE TO SPIKE: WHAT’S DRIVING COSTS HIGHER?

    Wells Fargo Agri-Food Institute sector manager David Branch reported that the price of cocoa has more than doubled since the beginning of 2024, forcing industries that rely on the commodity to raise prices in order to remain profitable. Branch told FOX Business that “nearly all major candy manufacturers” indicated that they will have to raise their prices. 

    An assortment of chocolates from Bitzel’s Chocolate in Suwanee, Georgia. (Bitzel’s Chocolate)

    The issue, according to Branch, is that the production of cocoa has been hammered for several years as key cocoa-producing regions in West Africa face higher-than-normal temperatures, which poses risks to crop development. The prevalence of cocoa swollen shoot virus disease (CSSVD), one of the most devastating diseases on cacao that causes significant losses, has also exacerbated production issues.

    COCOA PRICES SURGE TO RECORD HIGHS DURING THE EASTER SHOPPING SEASON

    Branch cited data from The International Cocoa Organization, which projected that global cocoa production in 2023-2024 will fall by 13.1% year over year, resulting in a projected production deficit for the third year in a row. 

    Since January 2023, the price of cocoa beans is up more than 355%. From January 2024 to December 2024, it surged over 143%, hitting an all-time high of $12,565 per metric ton. 

    Year to date, cocoa deliveries from the Ivory Coast, the world’s largest producer of the commodity, are up 76% on an annual basis. But nearby futures prices for the November 2024 contract increased 33% in London and 26% in New York. While the market has expectations of a better crop than in the previous season, it appears that supply risk and the current supply deficit are still big concerns, the Wells Fargo report said.

    A chocolate made by Bitzel’s Chocolate in Suwanee, Georgia. (Bitzel’s Chocolate)

    Bitzel’s biggest concern is making sure he doesn’t raise prices too much. As an artisanal chocolatier, Bitzel said he uses fine-grade cocoa, which hasn’t seen a reduction in prices. 

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    Right now, Bitzel estimates that raw commercial-grade chocolate is around $8 a pound and $12 a pound for white chocolate. 

    “Our job is just to figure out how to make a really good, quality product, and not have to charge an absolute fortune for it,” Bitzel said. 

    He said that there is a price point where people stop buying, and they seek alternatives to chocolate. This year, the business is seeing more customers, which Bitzel attributes in part to Valentine’s Day falling on a Friday. However, each customer is buying less than usual, he said.

  • Chernobyl plant’s protective shell hit by Russian drone, Zelenskyy says damage ‘significant’

    Chernobyl plant’s protective shell hit by Russian drone, Zelenskyy says damage ‘significant’

    An alleged drone struck the protective shell covering the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine early Friday, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is pointing the finger at Russia. 

    The International Atomic Energy Agency reported on X that overnight Thursday, the IAEA team at the Chornobyl site heard an explosion coming from the New Safe Confinement.

    The site protects the remains of the nuclear reactor that exploded in Chernobyl in 1986 and was reportedly set ablaze after an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) struck the NSC roof. Zelenskyy said initial assessments show “the damage to the shelter is significant.” 

    Zelenskyy took to X stating that the incident occurred when allegedly a “Russian attack drone with a high-explosive warhead struck the shelter.”

    RUSSIA LAUNCHES FRESH DRONE ATTACK AGAINST UKRAINE SHORTLY AFTER TRUMP-PUTIN PHONE CALL

    Surveillance footage from his posts shows the moment the drone impacts the dome, causing an explosion.

    “The shelter at the Chernobyl NPP was damaged by this drone. The fire has been extinguished. As of now, radiation levels have not increased and are being constantly monitored,” Zelenskyy added. “According to initial assessments, the damage to the shelter is significant.”

    PUTIN VIEWED AS ‘GREAT COMPETITOR’ BUT STILL A US ‘ADVERSARY’ AS UKRAINE NEGOTIATIONS LOOM, LEAVITT SAYS

    While the incident is currently still under investigation, Zelenskyy claimed the alleged attack was the result of a terrorist threat.

    “This shelter was built by Ukraine together with other countries of Europe and the world, together with America – all those committed to real security for humanity,” Zelenskyy said in his post. “The only country in the world that attacks such sites, occupies nuclear power plants, and wages war without any regard for the consequences is today’s Russia. This is a terrorist threat to the entire world. The shelter at the Chornobyl NPP was damaged by this drone.”

    Russia has denied any involvement. 

    Teams assess the damage after what was said to be a drone struck the protective shell at the Chernobyl plant.  (@ZelenskyyUa)

    The IAEA said its fire safety personnel were able to respond in minutes and there was no indication of a breach in NSC’s inner containment.

    The agency also reported that there were currently no casualties, but are monitoring the situation and radiation levels inside and outside remain normal and stable. 

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    The explosion comes as world leaders are meeting in Munich, Germany on Friday for the Munich Security Conference where the future of Ukraine and its ongoing war with Russia will be the top item on the agenda. 

  • Trump funding freeze judge hit with impeachment threat by House lawmaker

    Trump funding freeze judge hit with impeachment threat by House lawmaker

    Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., is threatening to file articles of impeachment against a federal judge who blocked President Donald Trump’s federal funding freeze.

    “I’m drafting articles of impeachment for U.S. District Judge John McConnell Jr.,” Clyde wrote on X.

    “He’s a partisan activist weaponizing our judicial system to stop President Trump’s funding freeze on woke and wasteful government spending. We must end this abusive overreach. Stay tuned.”

    SCOOP: KEY CONSERVATIVE CAUCUS DRAWS RED LINE ON HOUSE BUDGET PLAN

    U.S. District Judge John McConnell, inset, is under fire by President Donald Trump’s allies after he blocked a federal funding freeze, (Getty)

    U.S. District Judge John McConnell filed a new motion Monday ordering the Trump administration to comply with a restraining order issued Jan. 31, temporarily blocking the administration’s efforts to pause federal grants and loans. 

    McConnell’s original restraining order came after 22 states and the District of Columbia challenged the Trump administration’s actions to hold up funds for grants, such as the Climate Pollution Reduction Grant and other Environmental Protection Agency programs. However, the states said Friday that the administration is not following through and funds are still tied up.  

    A three-judge panel on the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the Trump administration’s appeal of the order on Tuesday.

    Andrew Clyde

    Rep. Andrew Clyde, pictured here, pledged to work up articles of impeachment against U.S. District Judge John McConnell. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

    McConnell has come under fire by Trump supporters and conservatives who have accused him of being a liberal activist. 

    Clyde and others have cited a video of McConnell in 2021 saying courts must “stand and enforce the rule of law, that is, against arbitrary and capricious actions by what could be a tyrant or could be whatnot.”

    “You have to take a moment and realize that this, you know, middle-class, white, male, privileged person needs to understand the human being that comes before us that may be a woman, may be Black, may be transgender, may be poor, may be rich, may be — whatever,” McConnell said in the video, according to WPRI.

    Elon Musk wrote on X in response, “Impeach this activist posing as a judge! Such a person does great discredit to the American justice system.”

    BLACK CAUCUS CHAIR ACCUSES TRUMP OF ‘PURGE’ OF ‘MINORITY’ FEDERAL WORKERS

    Clyde confirmed he was preparing articles of impeachment when asked by Fox News Digital on Thursday.

    “For a federal judge to deny the executive their legitimate right to exercise their authority is wrong,” Clyde told Fox News Digital. “This type of judge, this political activist – this radical political activist – should be removed from the bench.”

    Elon Musk at Congress

    Elon Musk has called for that judge and others to be impeached. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    When reached for a response to Clyde’s threat, the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island said McConnell “often sits down with members of the media upon request” but did not comment on pending cases.

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    Trump’s allies have been hammering the judges who have issued a series of decisions curbing the president’s executive orders.

    Rep. Eli Crane, R-Ariz., threatened to prepare impeachment articles against another judge earlier this week, U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer of the U.S. Southern District of New York, for blocking Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency from accessing Treasury records.

  • NFL hit with lawsuit from fans as teams are ‘not allowed to’ join Bluesky: reports

    NFL hit with lawsuit from fans as teams are ‘not allowed to’ join Bluesky: reports

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    The National Football League was hit with an antitrust lawsuit by two fans who claim the league has refused to allow its teams to join Bluesky, according to multiple reports. 

    Patrick Brown, a Chicago Bears fan, and Collin Vincent, who roots for the Seattle Seahawks, filed a 14-page complaint in New York, alleging the league is restraining engagement between teams and players on the social media site. 

    “Where the teams meet their fans on social media is between the teams and the fans,” Thomas Burt, the plaintiffs’ attorney, told Front Office Sports. “The NFL does not have the legal right to inject themselves into that decision.”

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    The logo of social media platform Bluesky is displayed on a mobile phone and tablet in Paris on Nov. 12, 2024. (Ian Langsdon/AFP via Getty Images)

    Puck first reported the lawsuit.

    The fans feel that they should not be limited to platforms, most notably X, in order to engage with their teams.

    Fred Kirsch, the vice president of content for Kraft Sports & Entertainment, recently said on the “Patriots Unfiltered” podcast that the New England Patriots were “not allowed to” have a Bluesky account and were actually told by the NFL to delete their page.

    The site has amassed over 30 million new users, with most joining amid Elon Musk’s changes to then-Twitter, now known as X, and the billionaire’s involvement with the Trump administration.

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell talks to reporters

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell speaks during a news conference at the Caesars Superdome ahead of Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans on Feb. 3. (AP Photo/Matt York)

    CHIEFS PLAYER SPEAKS OUT AFTER PATRICK MAHOMES SKIPPED HIM WHILE GREETING TEAMMATES DURING SUPER BOWL LOSS

    The lawsuit says the NFL’s decision to bar teams on Bluesky is a “financial matter,” citing “published reports.” The Sports Business Journal reported last month that the league wants a paid partnership with Bluesky if teams were to join.

    The suit also says the NFL announced earlier this month that teams are not allowed on the platform, although no such announcement has been made public or even reported.

    The NFL did not immediately respond to an email for a request for comment.

    Roger Goodell poses with Vince Lombardi trophy

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell poses with the Vince Lombardi Trophy alongside Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs helmets at a press conference ahead of Super Bowl LIX at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans on Feb. 3. (Kirby Lee-Imagn Images)

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    No major sports team in North America has an account on the new app.

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  • ‘Wokest hospital in America?’: Top hospital hit with blistering ad exposing ‘political agenda’

    ‘Wokest hospital in America?’: Top hospital hit with blistering ad exposing ‘political agenda’

    FIRST ON FOX: Consumers’ Research, a leading non-profit dedicated to consumer information, is launching a campaign targeting the Cleveland Clinic over what it says is a history of the organization prioritizing woke politics over patients. 

    The campaign, dubbed “Cleveland Clinic Exposed”, asks the public whether the clinic is “the wokest hospital in America” and will involve an ad titled “Exposed,” which will run in Ohio during the Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Toronto Raptors game on Wednesday.

    “Is Cleveland Clinic the wokest hospital in America?” the 30-second ad asks. “They prioritize care based on skin color. Perform child sex changes. Push transgender propaganda on vulnerable kids. Insert DEI into everything they do.”

    “And spend millions on climate activism. The CEO admits it: Healthcare is only a part of their mission. Cleveland Clinic. Focused on a political agenda. Not what’s best for patients.”

    TRUMP ORDER RESTRICTING SEX-CHANGE PROCEDURES FOR MINORS IN LINE WITH ‘DO NO HARM,’ DOCTOR SAYS

    The Cleveland Clinic was hit with an ad this week alleging that the hospital is promoting a “woke” agenda. (Fox News Digital)

    The ad campaign will also be featured on ClevelandClinicExposed.com, and mobile billboards will be seen outside the Ohio state capitol building, Cleveland Clinic main campus and the Florida state capitol building. 

    Additionally, a targeted digital campaign and a “woke alert” is being sent out calling on the clinic to “stop injecting politics into patient care.”

    “Attention Floridians,” one of the alerts states. “Cleveland Clinic opened a sex change clinic in your backyard.”

    TRUMP SIGNS EXECUTIVE ORDER RESTRICTING ‘CHEMICAL AND SURGICAL’ SEX-CHANGE PROCEDURES FOR MINORS

    Man with doctor

    A senior Black man is sitting in his doctor’s office and listening as the doctor shows him something on a digital tablet. (iStock)

    The ad, in part, references a letter from Cleveland Clinic’s CEO suggesting that providing healthcare services is not the sole focus of the organization. 

    “Providing high-quality healthcare is only a part of our mission,” Cleveland Clinic CEO Tom Mihaljevic wrote in a post on the hospital’s website. 

    “We have an obligation to uplift the many communities we call home. We must improve our neighbors’ wellbeing, quality of life and opportunities to succeed. We must operate in sustainable ways that are good for our planet. We must embrace diversity, champion human rights and lead with humility and inclusiveness.”

    Cleveland Clinic has faced accusations of promoting a “woke” agenda in the past, including a complaint filed by the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty alleging, “race-based discrimination and segregation of patients.”

    Consumers’ Research

    Consumers’ Research, a leading non-profit dedicated to consumer information, is targeting the Cleveland Clinic with a new ad. (Fox News Digital)

    The Cleveland Clinic’s website also contains several posts promoting climate initiatives, including a plan for “greening” its operating rooms. 

    In 2022, the Cleveland Clinic hired Jacqui Robertson as chief of diversity and inclusion, and announced in a post that has since been deleted that she will “lead efforts that will further diversity and inclusion across the health system.” 

    Robertson stated in a 2023 interview, “I don’t believe that diversity and inclusion should ever be a standalone strategy. It has to be embedded in everything that we do. And so that’s our processes, that’s our metrics.”

    In a June 2023 post that also appears to have been deleted from the Cleveland Clinic website, the clinic explained “How To Support a Child Who’s Questioning Their Gender Identity.”

    Also in June 2023, the clinic put out a press release labeling racism as a “public health crisis.”

    “Cleveland Clinic is committed to addressing structural racism and bias in our community,” the organization said in a December 2020 press release announcing a plan to “join a coalition of 37 of the largest U.S. employers, to train, hire and promote one million Black Americans into family-sustaining jobs with opportunities for advancement.”

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    Cleveland, Ohio, skyline

    City skyline and the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland. (John Greim/Loop Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

    Despite past press releases and statements on the Cleveland Clinic’s website highlighting its agenda, a Cleveland Clinic spokesperson pushed back against the campaign.

    “The advertisement contains false statements, and we are concerned there are serious inaccuracies in their claims. Our services are available for everyone, and we do not discriminate based on race, gender or any other category,” the spokesperson said.

    “By its own shocking words and deeds, Cleveland Clinic has quite possibly become the wokest hospital in America,” Will Hild, Consumers’ Research executive director, told Fox News Digital in a statement. “The clinic’s leadership alarmingly proclaims that DEI ‘has to be embedded in everything that we do.’ Such a sentiment plagues the entire hospital system and should frighten every patient in need of its services.”

    “From unethical race-based care to transgender mutilation surgeries on kids to bowing at the altar of climate extremism, Cleveland Clinic seems hell-bent on satisfying every woke fixation while cost-reduction for patients is a distant afterthought. It is wrong when any company prioritizes woke objectives over its consumers, but it is especially disturbing when the perpetrator is a medical facility and consumers are patients. Cleveland Clinic must reverse course, shun woke radicalism, stop spending resources in the wrong places, and make affordable quality care its only focus.”