Tucker Carlson just gave men some straight, uncomfortable truth about marriage:
Communication between husband and wife is only about 75% effective because men and women are fundamentally different — and pretending we’re the same is “the biggest lie I ever told.”
He says it’s so easy for a man to dismiss his wife when she gets emotional — to think she’s “crazy,” shut down, and walk away. A lot of men do it. He’s seen it. He’s done it.
But if you keep doing that, you will destroy your marriage.
His advice: As the husband, you have to be the leader in the home. Not a dictator or boss, but the one who stays in the conversation, listens until he truly understands what she’s really saying, and helps make the call when needed.
She wants that from you. If you keep shirking it, she’ll resent you for it.
It’s a hard pill, but it rings true.
Married guys — does this hit home?
Mehdi Hasan just demolished the sacred “Israel has a right to exist” argument.
He exposed it for exactly what it is: classic Israeli propaganda designed to shut down all criticism and dodge accountability.
No state has a divine “right to exist.”
Nations exist through power, history, and recognition not magical immunity from scrutiny.
Stuck in that bullshit debate?
Mehdi drops three killer counter-arguments that flip the script every single time.
🔥 The Creed They Buried With Him
‘Never stop asking questions.’ That was Charlie Kirk’s creed. He taught a generation that truth doesn’t come from power—it comes from persistence.
And yet, when he was murdered, the first command wasn’t “find who did this.” It was “stop asking questions.”
They told us inquiry was disloyal. They told us doubt was disrespect. They guilted the curious and sanctified the silent. They turned his widow’s grief into a gag order and his legacy into a slogan.
Charlie stood for the idea that truth is oxygen—that when it’s gone, tyranny breathes easy. If we stop questioning to keep people comfortable, then they didn’t just kill a man—they killed what he stood for.
The only proper tribute to Charlie Kirk is not flowers, not hashtags, not speeches about unity.
The only proper tribute is to keep asking questions. Even when they tell you not to. Especially then.
The moment Charlie Kirk got through to Bill Maher and made him realize how “generous” Jesus Christ is.
KIRK: “Judgment is getting what you deserve. Mercy is getting less than what you deserve. Grace—”
MAHER: “Wait, wait. Mercy is getting less than what you deserve?”
KIRK: “Yeah, so we believe Jesus gives us grace. So you get a prison sentence, you get judgment, you get mercy, you get less of a prison sentence. Grace would be Jesus serving that prison sentence for you so you could live life eternal.”
MAHER: “Well, how is he serving that? Oh, you mean like in the big picture?”
KIRK: “Well, because we believe him living a perfect life and then suffering the death that he did on the cross was him atoning for our sins. The sins of humanity. Which is a big claim, albeit a very compelling one, which we also believe to be true. Because it redeems all of humanity of our short-falling of the glory of God.”
MAHER: “I gotta say, it’s really picking up the check for the whole table. I mean, you gotta give it to your boy. For all of our sins? It’s a very generous thing. Very generous!”