This guest contributor on the Fox News Will Cain Show, Janeshia Adams-Ginyard, stunt woman, actress, and professional wrestler, had this take on what is going on with Caitlin Clark and the rest of the WNBA.
“She is targeted for so many reasons- one, they’re bullies. They’re jealous. They’re envious. I believe there is some underlying racial energy there as well.
You have veteran players who have been in the WNBA for years and they feel like they didn’t get their recognition, they didn’t get their marketing…….. you have players that are mad at her (Caitlin Clark) status. But she earned it!”
Kudos to Janeshia for an honest opinion and the truth. 👏
This is what real news is. She didn’t pull any punches. She’s telling it like it is and how everyone sees it. It’s jealousy, it’s envy and it’s racial because she’s white. What we all know to be true. Period. 💯
Do you agree with Janeshia? Isn’t it refreshing to see someone tell the truth like she did?
Must read:
Article detailing the failures of Coach Stephanie White while at Vanderbilt University. Transfers-Season cancelled-
13 conference wins in 5 seasons.Entire starting lineup left during non-portal years.
Penalty for leaving was 1 yr off
Thanks Shira for sending along
I’m going to say this as calmly as possible:
Watching Caitlin Clark in the WNBA has become genuinely hard to stomach.
Not because she struggles sometimes. Not because she makes mistakes. Not because she gets criticized. That comes with being great.
It’s hard to stomach because it has become obvious that the league, the officials, the media, the players, and even her own organization have all decided that the most important thing is not letting Caitlin Clark become too big.
And that is insane.
This league was handed the most marketable, electric, revenue-generating player women’s basketball has ever seen, and instead of building around the moment, too many people seem obsessed with humbling her.
She gets fouled. Held. Hit. Cheap-shotted. Mocked. Targeted. Then when she reacts like a normal competitor, suddenly everyone wants to analyze her attitude.
No.
Her attitude is not the story.
The story is that a generational player is being treated like a problem by the very league she helped drag into mainstream relevance.
This reminds me of the worst kind of youth coach... the one who sees a special player, feels threatened by her talent, and slowly drains the joy out of her in the name of “teaching humility.”
That is what this looks like.
The freedom she played with at Iowa is disappearing. The fire is still there, but the joy looks damaged. The confidence looks weighed down. She looks like someone constantly fighting the refs, opponents, narratives, coaching decisions, jealousy, and a league culture that should be protecting its golden opportunity instead of resenting it.
And let’s be honest: Stephanie White has not helped.
Benching Caitlin Clark randomly when she is controlling the game tempo, or having your best shooter off the floor in critical game ending minutes when a victory is within reach is basketball malpractice. Limiting her rhythm, downplaying her greatness, benching momentum, and treating her like just another piece instead of the engine is absurd.
You do not take a player who changed the economics of your sport and manage her like you’re afraid her greatness might offend the room.
Nike deserves criticism too. Other players get signature shoes rolled out with urgency, while the biggest draw in women’s basketball is somehow still waiting on that signature shoe. That is not confusing. That is revealing.
Fans are not stupid.
They see the fouls.
They see the double standards.
They see the jealousy.
They see the media resentment.
They see the league benefiting from her popularity while refusing to fully embrace her.
And here is the part the WNBA better understand quickly:
People are not tuning in to watch Caitlin Clark be humbled.
They are tuning in to watch Caitlin Clark be great.
If she walked away tomorrow, the fans would follow her. The sponsors would follow her. The energy would follow her. The high salaries and the charter jets would follow her. And the league would be forced to confront the uncomfortable truth it keeps trying to avoid:
Caitlin Clark did not need the WNBA nearly as much as the WNBA needed Caitlin Clark.
At some point, her family, her agent, and her team need to ask a hard question:
How much longer do you let a league profit from her while allowing the culture around her to beat the spirit out of her?
Because from the outside looking in, this does not look like normal adversity anymore. It looks like abuse.
It looks like a league trying to break the very player who made millions of people care.
https://t.co/AAxFrO46Z4
I received a message this morning that stopped me in my tracks.
A hardworking Hoosier. A teacher. Fifteen years invested in shaping young lives. A master’s degree. A second job just to make ends meet.
And yet, after a 20% property tax increase, they’re being forced to leave the profession they love because they simply can’t afford to live anymore.
Let that sink in.
This isn’t just bad policy.
This is morally wrong.
Property taxes punish people not based on what they earn, but on what they own… often something they’ve already paid for, sacrificed for, and worked their entire lives to secure. Your home should be your sanctuary, not a perpetual bill from the government.
When the government can effectively tax you out of your home…
When it can force a teacher out of their calling…
When it demands more while giving no regard to your ability to pay…
That’s not just inefficient.
That’s unjust.
At its core, property tax says: you never truly own your property… the government does.
And that violates a basic principle of a free society and our God-given right to property.
We should be rewarding hard work, stability, and homeownership… not penalizing it.
No Hoosier should have to choose between staying in their home and staying in their profession.
This fight isn’t abstract anymore. It’s personal. It’s real. And it’s happening right now.
Enough is enough!
It’s time to rethink… and ultimately eliminate… a system that is pushing people out of their homes, their communities, and their callings.
Keep this in mind when you go to the polls tomorrow. The State Senate had a chance to fix this last year and they wouldn’t. Vote for new state senators and then we’ll get this fixed.
🚨TOMORROW is Election Day Across Indiana🚨
👉Vote for these State Senate candidates on May 5th👈
▪️Trevor De Vries - District 1
▪️James “Jay” Starkey - District 6
▪️Dr. Brian Schmutzler - District 11
▪️Darren Vogt - District 15
▪️Blake Fiechter - District 19
▪️Tracey Powell - District 21
▪️Richard Bagsby - District 22
▪️Paula Copenhaver - District 23
▪️Brenda Wilson - District 38
▪️Jeff Ellington - District 39
▪️Michelle Davis - District 41
From a Secret Service agent guarding President Trump:
🚨LATEST UPDATE | A Secret Service agent protecting Trump just said something that SHOCKED everyone: “Trump has RUINED me - I can never protect another President after him” - and before you think that’s criticism, wait until you hear what he actually MEANS by “ruined,” because his explanation about Trump is making the entire Secret Service agency emotional. Here’s what the agent meant by “Trump ruined me”: This Secret Service agent has protected multiple Presidents before Trump. He was trained professionally. Did his job perfectly. Protected each President the same way - with discipline, distance, and duty. Then he got assigned to protect Trump. And everything CHANGED. The agent explained: “Trump RUINED me for this job. Not because he’s difficult - but because he’s the OPPOSITE. Trump knows my NAME. Every other President called me ‘agent.’ Trump calls me by my actual name. Trump knows my WIFE’S name. My CHILDREN’S names. Asks about my son’s baseball games by name. Trump NOTICES when I’m tired after standing 8 hours and says ‘Sit down, you need rest.’ Trump orders EXTRA food during long days: ‘Make sure my guys eat first.’ Trump attended my FATHER’S FUNERAL when he passed. No cameras. No press. Just came to honor the man who raised the agent protecting him. After experiencing THIS - how can I go back to being called ‘agent’ by future Presidents? After Trump remembered my KIDS’ names, how can I protect someone who won’t even learn MY name? After Trump treated me like FAMILY, how can I go back to being treated like FURNITURE? Trump RUINED me.
He raised the bar so high for how Presidents should treat Secret Service that I can NEVER accept the old standard again. That’s what I mean by ruined.” Here’s what this confession proves: Trump didn’t just earn Secret Service protection - he RUINED them for protecting anyone else because once you’re treated like FAMILY, you can’t go back to being equipment. 😭🛡️🇺🇸 Drop 🫡 and type: TRUMP RUINED THE STANDARD. Comment: Once treated like FAMILY, can’t go back to FURNITURE - that’s Trump’s effect. Share so people understand: “ruined” = highest compliment. Follow if raising standards inspires. Ruined for good! 🛡️😭💙🇺🇸
Sometimes the good guys win.
That play will be Fernando Mendoza’s legacy.
I think the reason why Indiana won they had a 12th man on the field!!!! And his name was Jesus Christ!!! 🙏
The fact that his dad never stands because his wife can’t gets me every time and explains everything! ❤
History making 16-0 for the first time in the modern era.
130 schools said no.
He led the losingest program in college football history to a national championship anyway.
Fernando Mendoza was a 2-star recruit from Miami.
He tried to walk on at his hometown school. They passed.
So did FIU.
So did FAU.
So did everyone else.
At 17, he was sitting in his bedroom, crying over a silent recruiting inbox—after driving to 18 camps with his dad and sending highlights to more than 100 programs.
Not one FBS offer.
His only option? Yale. No scholarship. No NFL path.
Everyone told him to be “realistic.”
“Know your place.”
“Be grateful.”
He didn’t listen.
Because Mendoza understood something most people miss:
The worst outcome isn’t failing.
It’s never getting the chance to try.
Two weeks before signing day in 2022, his phone rang.
Cal needed a body. One offer. Out of 134 schools.
He took it.
He arrived as the third-string quarterback.
Spent a year on the scout team.
Lost his first four starts.
Got sacked 41 times behind a broken offensive line.
Still got up. Every time.
Then Cal brought in a transfer instead of building around him.
So Mendoza left the only school that had ever said yes.
He transferred to Indiana—the losingest program in college football history.
People laughed.
“Career suicide.”
“Graveyard program.”
“Nobody wins there.”
One coach told him something different:
“I’m going to make you the best Fernando Mendoza possible.”
That was enough.
Mendoza wasn’t just playing for football.
His mother has battled multiple sclerosis for 18 years.
Before every snap, he thought of her.
“My mother is my why.”
Indiana went 16–0.
Beat six Top-10 teams.
Won their first Big Ten title since 1945.
Mendoza threw 41 touchdowns.
Won the Heisman—first in school history.
First Cuban-American to ever do it.
Then came the title game.
Miami. Near his hometown.
Fourth-and-4. Season on the line.
Quarterback draw.
The kid 134 schools rejected spun through defenders and dove into the end zone.
Game over.
Indiana—national champions.
The losingest program became the best team in America.
All because a 17-year-old refused to believe “no” was the end.
Rankings don’t decide your ceiling.
Gatekeepers don’t write your ending.
Being overlooked isn’t a verdict—it’s a starting point.
Sometimes all you need is one shot…
and the courage to bet on yourself when nobody else will.
Don’t quit.
Credit: Barclay Mullins
#NEW U.S. home prices, as measured by the Zillow Home Value Index, rose +0.1% in calendar year 2025
You'd have to go back to 2011 to find a weaker year
We need to find a way, should be one of the top priorities for fellow Conservative Hoosiers. Hopefully a primary candidate emerges that can gain strong financial support. Past time to clean up these Democrat-Lite Republicans in the state house.
https://t.co/h5AMK0o3di
https://t.co/Y2RuUiOx5s
This is Rod Bray’s 2024 campaign finance report. He walked away with over $785,000 cash on hand.
Not trying to blackpill anyone, but “normies” simply can’t compete with that kind of money. The most realistic path forward is getting involved at the local party level with Morgan County, Johnson County, etc.
And yeah… good luck with that. The Johnson County GOP is dominated by Uniparty “Republicans” like Beth Boyce, which makes grassroots reform an uphill battle at best.