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Satirical publication The Onion buys Alex Jones’ Infowars at bankruptcy auction

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Alex Jones to liquidate personal assets


Alex Jones ordered to liquidate personal assets to pay Sandy Hook damages

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The satirical publication The Onion said it has bought Alex Jones’ Infowars at a bankruptcy auction for an undisclosed price, with the backing of the Connecticut families of eight victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting and one first responder.

Jones owes more than $1 billion in defamation judgments to the families for calling the massacre a hoax. In a statement from their attorneys, the families said the purchase is “putting an end to the misinformation machine that Jones used to defame the families and victims for years.”

The purchase was confirmed by conspiracy theorist Jones, who posted a video on X saying that The Onion bought his company. “The Connecticut Democrats with the Onion newspaper bought us,” he said in the post, describing the bidding as “competitive.”

The statement from the Sandy Hook families said the purchase includes Infowars’ intellectual property, which includes its website, customer lists and inventory, as well as some social media accounts and production equipment used by Jones to air his shows. 

“The Connecticut families agreed to forgo a portion of their recovery to increase the overall value of The Onion‘s bid, enabling its success,” according to the statement.

What will The Onion do with Infowars?

In a statement on the social media site BlueSky, The Onion CEO Ben Collins said his company has plans for Infowars. 

“We are planning on making it a very funny, very stupid website. We have retained the services of some Onion and Clickhole Hall of Famers to pull this off. I can’t wait to show you what we have cooked up,” he wrote.

This is a developing story and will be updated.



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Trump expected to nominate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for HHS secretary, three sources say

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Washington — President-elect Donald Trump is expected to nominate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, according to three sources familiar with the selection.

Kennedy has a long record of criticizing vaccines, including spreading misleading claims about their safety.

He has vowed to combat an “epidemic” of chronic diseases and believes that large drug and food companies are to blame for a broad swath of ailments. Kennedy has claimed a number of health issues have worsened due to federal inaction, including autism, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, sleep disorders, infertility rates, diabetes and obesity. He has also urged removing fluoride from drinking water.

Kennedy’s odds of clearing a Senate led by Democrats would have been low, given his long record of what the party called “anti-science, fringe public health stances,” but with Republicans in the majority come January, Trump’s nominees will have an easier path to confirmation. 

Trump promised to let Kennedy, a vaccine skeptic and former environmental lawyer, “go wild” on issues relating to health, food and medicine. 

“I’m going to let him go wild on health. I’m going to let him go wild on the food. I’m going to let him go wild on medicines,” Trump said in the final days before the election. “The only thing I don’t think I’m going to let him even get near is the liquid gold that we have under our feet … sometimes referred to as oil and gas.” 

As a co-chair of Trump’s transition, Kennedy has been vetting a slate of staffers who could fill top positions throughout the Trump administration. He has said he hopes “to have every nutritional scientist” across the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture “fired on Day One.”

Kennedy, who faced a costly and time-consuming process to appear on general election ballots as an independent candidate, ended his longshot bid for the White House in August and endorsed Trump. 

Kennedy said there were three issues that convinced him to endorse Trump: free speech, the war in Ukraine and what he called the “war on our children.” He said processed foods, chemicals and obesity were destroying the health of children in the U.S. 

At an August rally with Kennedy, Trump vowed to establish a panel to investigate chronic health problems and childhood diseases, as well as establish an independent presidential commission on assassination attempts that would be tasked with releasing all of the remaining documents related to President John F. Kennedy’s assassination. Kennedy is the nephew of the late president and the son of the late senator, attorney general and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy. 



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Can Gaetz get Senate confirmation to be Trump’s attorney general?

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Can Gaetz get Senate confirmation to be Trump’s attorney general? – CBS News


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Former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz will have to be confirmed by the Senate before he becomes President-elect Donald Trump’s attorney general. Some members of Congress are already having strong reactions to Trump’s pick. CBS News’ Olivia Rinaldi reports. Also, Zeke Miller, chief White House correspondent for the Associated Press, has more on the state of the House Ethics probe into Gaetz.

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Elon Musk’s DOGE is hiring. Here’s the kind of person he’s looking for.

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The new Department of Government Efficiency, a group created by President-elect Donald Trump with the task of identifying ways to cut federal spending and headed by billionaires Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, is already taking resumes. 

The request for job applicants was posted Thursday by the new X account for DOGE, which despite its heady mission isn’t an official government department. In his statement on Tuesday announcing the effort, Trump described Musk and Ramaswamy’s role as providing “advice and guidance from outside of government.” 

It’s unclear where the funding for DOGE will come from or the size of its budget, as well as whether Musk, the world’s richest person, and Ramaswamy, who has an estimated net worth of $1 billion, will be paid for their efforts. The Trump campaign didn’t respond to a request for information. 

In the meantime, DOGE is starting to hire, according to the post on X, the social media service (formerly known as Twitter) owned by Musk. The account already has 1.2 million followers on the platform. 

What qualifications is DOGE looking for?

The post didn’t disclose the specific educational or career experience it is looking for in applicants. Instead, it described the kind of person they want to hire: “We need super high-IQ small-government revolutionaries willing to work 80+ hours per week on unglamorous cost-cutting.”

It added that it doesn’t want “more part-time idea generators.”

How can people apply for a DOGE job?

The post said that interested applicants should send a direct message, or DM, to the account with their CV, although the DOGE account wasn’t open to messages when the job notice was first posted. 

“Off to a great start. ‘DM this account with an application’,” one person pointed out. “DMs not open.”

Even after the DOGE account opened to direct messages, not all X users could send their resumes because only verified accounts or accounts followed by DOGE are able to DM the account. The DOGE account currently doesn’t follow any other X users, and verification on the platform costs $84 a year.

Only the “top 1% of applicants” will be reviewed by Musk and Ramaswamy, the DOGE account added. The post didn’t specify how it will rank applicants. 

What does a DOGE job pay?

The post didn’t specify the salary range or benefits. 

What kind of response is the post receiving?

A mix of pointed questions, humor as well as support from fans of Musk and Trump. 

“Anything over 40 hours will be paid overtime right?” one person posted on X in response to the job post. 

Others posted tongue-in-cheek “qualifications,” with one person writing, “I’d love to join here’s my resume: – B+ in Science – JV soccer team (2 years) – Can eat >10 Oreos in one sitting – Owner of several Dogecoins – Can burp the alphabet – Can run fast (top 25% of class).”

Another touted his “104 IQ (4 points above highest score possible).”

Valentina Gomez, a Republican politician who posted a video of herself burning books in February, responded, “But I’m ready to cut & make a dent on that outstanding budget. TSI, IRS, ATF are the first to go.”



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