Saturday, May 23, 2026

15 YEAR OLD GIRL CHARGED WITH PLOTTING TO MURDER CLASSMATE TYPICALLY BLAMES EVERYONE ELSE

New York Post

 

Girl, 15, charged with plot to kill classmate blames internet for making her a ‘horrible person’

By Patrick Reilly

Published May 22, 2026, 12:54 p.m. ET

 

A disturbed Florida teen accused of plotting to kill a classmate to bizarrely “resurrect” Sandy Hook monster Adam Lanza penned a sob story to the judge in her case — blaming the internet for making her a “horrible, horrible person.”

 

Isabelle Valdez, 15, had initially cracked jokes with accused co-conspirator Lois Olivios Lippert, 14, after their arrest, saying they would become famous for their hot mugshots and go on to be a “lesbian couple in jail.”

 

But Valdez changed her tone this week, sending the judge in her case a three-page handwritten note claiming that being “isolated from people, the internet” since her arrest in January left her “remorseful.”

 

“I was exposed to the internet at a very young age, and all that was bad stemmed from it,” Valdez told the judge in the letter filed in Seminole County Court.

 

“The internet made me a horrible, horrible person.”

 

She also insisted she was “not the same girl I was those three months ago,” when she was accused of plotting to ambush a male classmate in the school bathroom to stab him in the stomach or cut his throat — then leave flowers and smoke a cigarette.

 

“I’ve been thinking about my life and my choices and I please beg and ask of you to please have some sympathy on me for as I want to change and I’m changing as a person,” Valdez wrote in the letter.

 

Valdez wrote that she became an active member of the twisted True Crime Community online — which glorifies school shootings like Columbine and the Sandy Hook massacre — in 2022-2023.

 

She felt “seen” in the group, she wrote, “but in reality it was deteriorating me.”

 

“I got groomed in this community further into believing that violence was good, the people that were my so-called friends only ever wanted me to harm myself or others,” she wrote.

 

She also described her struggles with being bullied, and claimed she’s been suicidal since the age of 7.

 

Valdez and Lippert, from Altamonte Springs, were arrested on Jan. 22  after a tipster told police about their sick plans to murder a classmate at Lake Brantley High School, officials said.

 

The victim reminded Valdez of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooter Adam Lanza, who murdered 20 children and six adults in 2012 — and she thought killing the boy “would resurrect him from the dead,” according to court documents.

 

After they were arrested, Valdez and Lippert were caught on camera cracking cringey jokes about the murder plot in the back of a police car.

 

Valdez told her best friend she wanted to wear makeup to look attractive in her mugshot, but couldn’t find any that morning, according to court documents.

 

“Valdez then said ‘At least they will see me in the mugshot some way or another’” — suggesting that they would become famous in the true crime community, according to the report.

 

They also joked about becoming a “lesbian couple in jail.”

 

Both teens are charged with attempted first-degree murder.

MEDIA-RELATED STUFF: THE PAST AND THE PRESENT

Here's late former  Canadian TV talk show host Bob McLean on 1250 CHWO Oakville from 1998. Had no idea the 1250 version of what is now Zoomer Radio at 740 played any kind of contemporary music as opposed to just standards.


Glad to find out KTVA-TV Anchorage is back.


Didn't realize Durham Radio changed the call letters of Country 105 Peterborough from CKQM to CKXP.


Hope Bell doesn't screw up digitizing its archives like it seems to everything else.

WEIU-TV SIGNS OFF FROM BROADCAST TV, MAY 15, 2026

Here are the final 23 minutes of the over-the-air existence of the Eastern Illinois University station. Hopefully, as Mr. Rogers said, this will indeed be a new beginning. 

TV-RELATED STUFF: MORE OLD COUNTRY SHOWS

From 1954, here's the syndicated "Town and Country Time", hosted by Jimmy Dean, who, less than a decade later would star in a variety show under his own name. 


From August 18, 1956, here's "Purina Opry." Seems odd today to think of a TV show airing only once a month.


Some Canadian content now with CBC's "Country Time" from June 20, 1970 with special guest Stompin Tom.

Friday, May 22, 2026

EDINBURGH INTERNATIONAL BOOK FESTIVAL TO HOST HEADS OF TWO OF CANADA'S LARGEST BOOK EVENTS

This August, the Edinburgh International Book Festival will welcome Roland Gulliver, Director of Toronto International Festival of Authors, and Shelley Youngblut, CEO & Creative Ringleader of Wordfest (Calgary), to Edinburgh as part of Global Ink 2026, its international forum bringing together leading literary festival directors from across the world. 

As heads of two of Canada’s most established and internationally recognised literary festivals, Gulliver and Youngblut will join peers from Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Australasia for a global exchange focused on readership, international writing and the evolving role of festivals in an increasingly connected literary landscape. 

Global Ink takes place 17–19 August 2026 during the Edinburgh International Book Festival (15–30 August), bringing together 18 festival directors for closed‑door director sessions, public‑facingconversations and industry exchange, and reflecting the festival’s long‑term commitment to international collaboration and cultural dialogue.  

A forum built for lasting collaboration

 

Global Ink was established to create the conditions for long‑term relationship‑building between people doing similar work in very different contexts. The programme combines industry discussions with public‑facing events, structured around shared learning, partnership development and long‑term impact. Delegates do not only meet in formal sessions, but are embedded in the wider life of the Festival - attending events with Scottish writers, experiencing the city’s cultural institutions and Edinburgh as the world’s first UNESCO City of Literature, and sharing informal social moments, including a traditional ceilidh, that help create lasting partnerships.

 

It takes place at a moment of growing international appetite for translated writing and cross‑border cultural exchange. Marking its tenth anniversary in 2026, the Booker Prize Foundation reports that sales of translated fiction in the UK have doubled since the International Booker Prize, in its current form, was first awarded in 2016, with UK print sales reaching a record £26m in 2023 alone. Nearly half of those buyers are now under 35 – an age profile that inverts the wider fiction market.

 

For the Edinburgh International Book Festival, this momentum builds on decades of international work. The Festival has hosted writers in translation and embodied internationalism as a core part of its programme for generations, increasingly with the support of international consulates and embassies. Through Global Ink, that long‑standing commitment is extended into structured peer exchange, while also creating opportunities to platform Scottish writers and creatives to an international network of festivals, stages and audiences.

 

Global Ink 2026 is supported by the Scottish Government and Creative Scotland, the national public body for the arts, through the Festivals EXPO Fund. Alongside this, the Edinburgh International Book Festival is currently working with the Scottish Government to shape joint opportunities involving delegates throughout this global forum, strengthening international connections and cultural exchange rooted in Scotland.

 

In August 2026, Global Ink will run alongside both Publishing Scotland’s international fellowship and the British Council‑supported Momentum programme (delivered by Festivals Edinburgh and Creative Scotland), maximising opportunities for collaboration and underlining Edinburgh’s role as a truly international cultural city that month. 

 

Jenny Niven, Director of Edinburgh International Book Festival, said: 
“When Global Ink began three years ago, our ambition was to build something more durable than a conference - a network of trust between people doing similar work in very different contexts. What’semerged is broader than a festival network alone. Global Ink is also about recognising the many partners, organisations and individuals involved in making literature international, and the collective effort behind international exchange. Seeing this year’s group come together - from Kraków to Kerala to Calgary – it feels like that shared momentum is really taking hold.”

 

Global Ink 2026: Confirmed delegates

 

Oceania

Ann Mossop - Sydney Writers’ Festival (Australia)

Rosemarie Milsom – Adelaide Writer’s Week (Australia)

Lyndsey Fineran - Auckland Writers Festival Waituhi o Tāmaki (Aotearoa New Zealand)

 

North America

Roland Gulliver - Toronto International Festival of Authors (Canada)

Shelley Youngblut - Wordfest, Calgary (Canada)

Jodi Pincus - San Miguel Writers’ Conference & Literary Festival (Mexico)

Amanda Bullock - Literary Arts / Portland Book Festival (USA)

Marianne DeLeón - Texas Book Festival (USA)

 

South America

Daniela Ini — FILBA (Argentina)

 

Europe

Lucie Campos Mitchell - Villa Gillet / Littérature Live (France)

Perdita Maria Luise Krämer - Bremer Krimifestival CRIME TIME (Germany)

Aimée van Wylick - International Literature Festival Dublin (Ireland)

Judith Uyterlinde - Writers Unlimited International Literature Festival, The Hague (Netherlands)

Marit Borkenhagen - Norwegian Festival of Literature (Norway)

Carolina Pietyra - Kraków Festival Office / UNESCO City of Literature (Poland)

Oskar Ekström - Gothenburg Book Fair (Sweden)

 

Middle East

Ahlam Bolooki - Emirates Literature Foundation / Emirates Airline Festival of Literature (UAE)

 

Asia

Govind Deecee - Kerala Literature Festival / DC Books (India)

Janet DeNeefe - Ubud Writers & Readers Festival (Indonesia)

Beijing International Book Fair (China)

 

At a glance

Dates: 17–19 August 2026

Location: Edinburgh International Book Festival (15–30 August 2026) at Edinburgh Futures Institute

Delegation: 20 festival directors from 17 countries across five continents

Supported by: Scottish Government and Creative Scotland (Festivals EXPO Fund)

NORTH KOREAN CONSTITUTION NOW REQUIRES NUCLEAR MISSILE STRIKE IF KIM JUNG UN IS KILLED BY FOREIGN POWER

New York Post

 

North Korean constitution now requires nuclear missile strike if Kim Jong Un is killed by foreign power

By Emily Crane

Published May 10, 2026, 9:20 a.m. ET

 

North Korea’s constitution now calls for an immediate retaliatory nuclear missile strike if leader Kim Jong Un is killed by a foreign power.

 

The change, believed to have been adopted earlier this year, was made soon after Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was wiped out in the US-Israeli strikes, the Telegraph reported. 

 

“If the command-and-control system over the state’s nuclear forces is placed in danger by hostile forces’ attacks … a nuclear strike shall be launched automatically and immediately,” the revised Article 3 of North Korea’s nuclear-policy law now reads. 

 

The revision, likely agreed on by the Supreme People’s Assembly, was only made public at a South Korean government intelligence briefing last week.

 

While the North Korean dictator already has control of the country’s nuclear forces, the update to the constitution makes clear what should occur if he is assassinated.

 

“This may have been policy before, but it has added emphasis now it has been enshrined in the constitution,” said Andrei Lankov, a professor of international relations at Kookmin University in Seoul, South Korea.

 

“Iran was the wake-up call,” Lankov said. “North Korea saw the remarkable efficiency of the US-Israeli decapitation attacks, which immediately eliminated the greater part of the Iranian leadership, and they must now be terrified.”

 

As part of the constitution revisions, Pyongyang also made tweaks to define its territory as bordering South Korea and tp remove references to reunification.

 

The change to Article 2 marks the first time North Korea has added a territorial clause to its constitution.

 

The new Article 2 now says North Korea’s territory includes land “bordering the People’s Republic of China and the Russian Federation to the north and the Republic of Korea to the south,” as well as territorial waters and airspace based on that land.

 

The clause adds that North Korea “will never tolerate any infringement” of its territory.

10 WAYS TO SPOT THE CLOSETED CONSERVATIVE WORKING AT STARBUCKS

Babylon Bee

 

10 Ways To Spot The Closeted Conservative Working At Starbucks

Sponsored

Jul 14, 2022 · BabylonBee.com

 

Being a conservative working at Starbucks is more dangerous than being a Navy Seal behind enemy lines. If you want to play a fun game, try looking for the closeted conservative at your local Starbucks. There's usually at least one. Just don't out them, or you may ruin their lives!

 

Here's how to spot that closeted conservative hiding in plain sight:

 

Wears only one pride pin: Doing the bare minimum. It's like he doesn't even care about LGBTQ+ rights.

 

Has fewer than 13 piercings: Also, be on the lookout for normal-colored hair.

 

Drops everything and stands at attention whenever Trump's face comes on the TV screen: Could also just be attracted to Trump. Sometimes it's hard to distinguish the two.

 

Kills spiders for all the liberal male employees: So manly.

 

Says the conservative code words, "Merry Christmas": The modern-day secret handshake.

 

Gives you a respectful nod when you order black coffee: The official drink of red-pilled white cis-males.

 

Spells names correctly: Sure sign of a quality classical homeschool education!

 

Won't let transients defecate on the restroom walls: Where does he want them to go? THE TOILET?! This is oppression!

 

Doesn't seethe when you assume his gender: Also, it's possible to assume his gender quite easily.

 

Refuses to make you a Unicorn Frappuccino: Have a little dignity, for goodness sake.

 

Share this list with your friends and turn your next Starbucks visit into a fun game!