Republicans Take Control of the House of Representatives

USA - Republicans are projected to take control of the House of Representatives, giving the party a trifecta as Republicans also took control of the Senate and the presidency. Decision Desk HQ projected that the Republicans had won enough seats for them to take control of the House. Republicans were projected to have secured a 218-209 majority. The news that the Republicans had won the majority in the House comes a week after the presidential election in which President-elect Donald Trump won the election over Vice President Kamala Harris after he secured a pathway to over 270 votes in the Electoral College.

 
Donald Trump brands climate change 'big hoax'

USA - Donald Trump is set to pull the United States out of the Paris climate agreement for the second time - even quicker than during his first term in office. Donald Trump is understood to be poised to pull the United States out of the Paris Agreement for the second time - after declaring climate change is “all a big hoax”. The US President Elect’s clear vow to withdraw is set to once again leave America as one of the only countries not to be a party to the 2015 pact, in which nearly 200 governments have made non-binding pledges to reduce their planet-warming pollution. Climate scientists have warned that the US’s absence from the deal will mean other countries are forced to make bigger reductions to their pollution. But it will also inevitably raise questions from some countries as to how much more effort they should put in when the world’s second-largest greenhouse gas polluter is walking away.

 
Germany’s Scholz May Have To Call for Early Elections

GERMANY - In the immediate aftermath of Donald J Trump’s victory in the American Presidential Election, the German governing coalition collapsed when Chancellor Olaf Scholz fired Finance Minister Lindner from the FPD party over irreconcilable differences about an economic plan. Without FDP support, Scholz has to call for a vote of confidence to try to lead a minority government, which he is widely expected not to get – let’s remember he is the least popular German Chancellor in recorded history. When he loses the confidence vote, early elections will be called. The thing is: Scholz wants to delay this process until next year, a move that generated strong reactions both from the opposition and from inside his own crumbling coalition. Scholz wants to have these months to ram through legislation to have any chance in the upcoming election.

 
Germany: Move to ban AfD may come before new elections

GERMANY - With the German government collapsing, one of the main proponents of an Alternative for Germany (AfD) ban, CDU politician Marco Wanderwitz, is pushing for a speedy procedure right before new elections. In order to submit a motion to ban the AfD, he needs 37 fellow MPs, or 5 percent of the Bundestag MPs, to vote with him. No matter what happens, a ban on the AfD could take years. Any final ban would have to be approved by the Federal Constitutional Court, and the burden for such a ban is supposed to be very high. Notably, the AfD party routinely polls between 16 and 20 percent of the national vote, and is the second most popular party in the nation. The courts have never banned such a popular party, setting the stage for a potential national crisis should the motion go through. Another wild card in a potential AfD ban is Donald Trump and Elon Musk. Musk has come out as a quasi-supporter of the party on his X platform. Any move on democratic backsliding in Germany, including a ban on a major opposition party, could result in US sanctions and increased tensions with a Trump-led United States.

 
Oxbridge’s ‘self-appointed morality crusades’

UK - Alexander Rogers took his own life after being shunned by his peers – his death highlights the dangers of ‘righteous’ censorship.

Course on Beyoncé to be offered at Yale University

USA - New class is latest to explore a pop icon’s impact, with other universities offering courses on Taylor Swift and Lady Gaga. Brook’s Beyoncé class will be offered by multiple departments, including those of African American studies, women’s gender and sexuality studies and American studies and music. Students at Yale University are getting the chance to take a class entirely devoted to Beyoncé, school officials have announced. The class – titled Beyoncé Makes History: Black Radical Tradition History, Culture, Theory & Politics through Music – will be taught by the African American studies and music professor Daphne Brooks beginning in the upcoming spring semester.

 
Philippines set to be hit by fifth major storm in less than a month

PHILIPPINES - The Philippines issued new weather warnings on Tuesday as the fifth major storm in three weeks bore down on the archipelago, days after thousands were evacuated ahead of Typhoon Toraji. Now a weakened tropical storm, Toraji blew out to sea overnight after causing relatively limited damage and no reported deaths. But Tropical Storm Usagi was now just two days away from the country’s northeast coast, the national weather agency said. The government said it had evacuated more than 32,000 people from vulnerable areas in the northern Philippines ahead of Toraji’s Monday landfall, weeks after Severe Tropical Storm Trami, Typhoon Yinxing and Super Typhoon Kong-rey killed a combined 159 people.

 
Conflicts in the Middle East and Europe are part of 'one global war'

ISRAEL - The seemingly separate conflicts in the Middle East and Europe are in fact different parts of a single global war, experts said last night. It follows Israel’s recent and successful attack on Iran, which has neutralised Tehran’s ability to deliver new missiles and drones to Russia for use in Ukraine, and threatened its ability to export large quantities of oil to China. Israel’s sophisticated 25 October attack was “without question the most sophisticated use of air power in the history of air warfare”, said Professor Gwythian Prins, a former advisor to Nato and the UK’s chiefs of staff. With sophisticated intelligence assets on the ground, Israel’s air force “obliterated the eyes and teeth” of Iran’s air defence capabilities including radar systems as far afield as Iraq, Abadan and the Indian Ocean coast.

Russia and Ukraine Launch Biggest Drone Attacks of War Yet

RUSSIA - Russia and Ukraine both launched record drone attacks on each other overnight, as the Kremlin said it saw "positive signals" from US President-elect Donald Trump over his desire to strike a deal to end the conflict. Trump's election to the White House has the potential to upend the almost three-year conflict and has thrown into question Washington's multi-billion-dollar support for Kyiv, crucial to its defense. The Republican said on the campaign trail that he could end the fighting within hours and has indicated he will talk directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin — a major break from the approach adopted by President Joe Biden. Trump will not be inaugurated until January and for the moment on the battlefield and in the skies, the conflict shows no signs of subsiding. "At least he's talking about peace, and not about confrontation. He isn't talking about his wish to inflict a strategic defeat on Russia — that distinguishes him from the current administration," Peskov added.

 
Whisper it, but the Middle East may be on the brink of peace

MIDDLE EAST - Trump’s first term as president was notably successful in reconciling Israel with its Arab neighbours. While much of the world’s attention is focused on the incoming Trump administration’s approach to the Ukraine conflict, another of Donald Trump’s key foreign-policy priorities will be to bring peace and stability to the Middle East. The region afforded the president-elect some of his more notable foreign-policy achievements during his first spell in the White House. They include spearheading the campaign to destroy Islamic State’s so-called caliphate in Syria, and negotiating the Abraham Accords, the groundbreaking peace deal that saw several Arab states normalise relations with Israel.

‘Forever Chemicals’ in US Drinking Water

USA - Formally identified as perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a group of manmade chemicals known as PFAS are found in everything from soil and food to common household items and water. An overabundance of these compounds has been detected in US drinking water and that of other industrialized nations, sparking discussion on control and mitigation among experts. Exposure to PFAS has been linked to serious chronic health issues such as increased risk of certain cancers, fertility problems, and immune system challenges. Unlike some industrial chemicals, PFAS don’t break down and are difficult to destroy, thus earning the moniker “forever chemicals.” With more than 7,200 public water systems affected, water and waste professionals say tackling America’s contaminated water is no easy task.

 
The Economy Of Germany Will Collapse

GERMANY - An obsession with green energy has the German economy on the brink of collapse. Germany has foolishly been chasing a dream of achieving net greenhouse gas neutrality by 2045, and this has taken a very heavy toll on the German economy. German GDP contracted in 2023, and it appears that it will contract again in 2024. The manufacturing sector is dealing with the greatest crisis that it has faced since the 1940s, the big banks are struggling, and the coalition that was running the government has collapsed.

Farmers warn Labour’s net zero ‘fertiliser tax’ will push up food prices

UK - Labour has been accused of dealing another Budget blow to farmers with its so-called “fertiliser tax”. In the Budget, Chancellor Rachel Reeves confirmed plans to introduce a levy on key agricultural imports such as fertiliser in order to meet net zero goals. The carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), due to begin in 2027, will tax carbon-emitting imports such as fertiliser, cement, aluminium and products from the hydrogen and steel industries. It comes amid outrage over the Chancellor’s £1 million cap on agricultural property relief, nicknamed the “family farm tax”, also introduced in the Budget. The carbon tax on fertiliser is expected to be set at around £50 to £75 per tonne. Government sources said they expect the impact on farmers to be modest and for there to be no effect on food prices. But farmers disagree. "If you tax fertiliser, you make it more expensive. We’re going to use less of it. That means we’ll produce less food. We’re not going to eat less food in this country, so we’re just going to import it from a country that doesn’t tax fertiliser.”

 
Farmers could soon take direct action

UK - Labour’s total ignorance of the reality of a farmer’s life will undoubtedly lead to mass protest. The Labour Government’s Budget reforms – in particular a new 20 per cent levy on farmers passing on assets worth more than £1 million from April 2026 – is stirring them to take their tractors beyond their own estates or contracted farms; to steer their combines and heavy machinery onto our motorways and to London. If the Government ploughs on with its seemingly anti-farming policy then there may be protests. And chances are they’ll be farm-like ones: noisy and stinky. “The £1 million cap to APR [Agricultural Property Relief] shows how little this Government understands the sector,” said Tom Bradshaw, the president of the National Farmers’ Union. “Just because a farm is an asset, it doesn’t mean those who work it are wealthy.” He added that “farmers have been left reeling” and demanded the changes be “overturned and fast”. He didn’t add, “or else”, but that’s the feeling among many farmers.

 
‘God is not a white man’ declare Church of England clergy

UK - Church of England clergy have declared that “God is not a white man” and are working to make images of Jesus more diverse. Dioceses across the country are reviewing how biblical figures should be depicted as part of a drive for “racial justice”. Clergy have been urged to question whether images of Jesus truly “reflect diversity”. One diocese has declared that “God is not a white man” and moved to ensure it used “correct images” that better reflected diversity. This was relayed to the Church’s new racial justice unit and included in a 2024 report into how dioceses are meeting diversity and inclusion targets. These targets were set in 2021 by the Archbishops’ “anti-racism taskforce”, which advocated for affirmative action for jobs within the Church.

 

Disclaimer:
The views expressed in this section are not our own, unless specifically stated, but are provided to highlight what may prove to be prophetically relevant material appearing in the media.

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Today we find the Church of God in a “wilderness of religious confusion!”

The confusion is not merely around the Church – within the religions of the world outside – but WITHIN the very heart of The True Church itself!

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Listen to Me, You who know righteousness, You people in whose heart is My Law: …I have put My words in your mouth, I have covered you with the shadow of My hand, That I may plant the heavens, Lay the foundations of the earth, and say to Zion, “you are My people” (Isaiah 51:7,16)