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Tuesday, June 23, 2026

How Can We Restore Trusted Elections?

  by Christian Milord via The Epoch Times,

It's mind-boggling that elections and election results take so long to complete, especially in a developed nation such as the United States.

A person votes in the Virginia redistricting referendum at Lyles-Crouch Traditional Academy, Tuesday, April 21, 2026, in Alexandria, Va. AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson

It's inexcusable that our modern society can't establish firm timelines and expedite tabulation when many nations, both developed and developing, announce results on the same day as the election or within a day or two. Many of those countries lack the election technologies that the United States takes for granted.

In the case of very close elections similar to the George W. Bush vs. Al Gore in 2000, there was a need to proceed slowly as the razor thin election boiled down to the state of Florida. There was a recount wherein punch-card ballots were checked for chads and hanging chads to ensure the count was accurate. After five weeks, the election was finally certified by a few hundred votes in favor of Bush by Florida's Secretary of State Katherine Harris and the Supreme Court.

A number of reforms could be rolled out in order to speed up our election system so that results are accurate, timely, and can be trusted by the electorate. Voting is an important earned right that can't be handed out to non-citizens or be taken lightly.

First, voters should have a valid ID to vote, and a valid signature must be written, whether voting is by mail or at a polling location. More than 80 percent of voters favor a valid ID for citizens to vote, since an ID is required for many minor activities that don't rise to the level of importance as a citizen's right to vote. That is why the SAVE Act is so critical at this time as the midterms approach in November. Valid addresses, IDs, and signatures can reduce potential abuse and doubts regarding election integrity.

Second, eliminate the primary system in which a number of candidates vie for elected positions at the local, state, and national levels. It costs untold millions to campaign, mail out ballots, run polling stations, and tabulate votes. Why not have candidates compete for positions every two, four, or six years and hold the elections at specified times in the fall without the need for primaries?

Third, only mail out ballots to voters who request them. Millions of dollars are spent mailing ballots to every registered voter, even though many voters prefer to vote in person at polling locations. One can understand mailing out ballots to American voters who are working overseas. It makes sense to send it to these voters early to allow time for them to complete their ballots and return them to the United States. Unlimited mailing can result in unused ballots and could lead to some ballot harvesting.

Moreover, ballots shouldn't be mailed out so early in the election "season." Those who request ballots should receive them only a few days before an election, not weeks beforehand. Early mail-outs can lead to lost ballots, tossed ballots for those who vote at the polls, and possible ballot harvesting. Likewise, completed ballots postmarked on election day should not be accepted many days after election day. It can generate uncertainty for candidates and voters.

Fourth, make it unlawful for signature collectors or anyone else to pay folks to register to vote or sign on to potential legislation. According to The Epoch Times, this activity has occurred several times in California and elsewhere. Anyone who is concerned with the workings of government shouldn't receive compensation to vote for candidates and issues. No one, regardless of political party, should coerce or entice someone to vote in a partisan direction either. It taints fair and free elections.

Fifth, voter rolls ought to be purged regularly because people pass away, move out of the county, or move into the county as residents and register to vote. Mailing ballots to everyone can be a waste if rolls aren't kept up to date to reflect the current registered voters who still reside in a particular county. If the rolls aren't updated regularly, it can also lead to ballots being stolen or open the floodgates for people to vote twice or for someone else.

Sixth, although mandates wouldn't be effective at shortening the campaign season, they might help to make the campaign trail less drawn out. In most nations, campaign season runs for a few weeks or a month or two. In America, campaigning seems to roll on forever, and elections can feel anticlimactic. By the time one election is concluded, the next election arrives quickly on the horizon. Candidates even campaign while they are in office and constantly keep an eye out for the next election.

Prolonged political campaigning can be a distraction from carrying out the duties of representing the people and solving pressing problems that affect their lives. Media outlets can play a role in discussing critical issues more objectively instead of sensationalizing every minor action by political opponents or supporters.

Constant campaign mode can devolve into self-interest rather than the more important national interest. Americans need fewer promises from politicians and more delivery in the spheres of free markets, the protection of liberty, just laws, and national security.

Common sense informs us that in tight elections, tabulating must be checked carefully at a slower pace than when a candidate or initiative/referendum wins by a larger margin. For the most part, elections can be trusted if they are properly managed and results are released in a timely manner. If the process is lengthy, it can breed cynicism, and many voters might not bother to vote.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/how-can-we-restore-trusted-elections

"We Must Act": TotalEnergies CEO Joins Calls To Rewire Gulf Energy Flows Around Hormuz

 The Strait of Hormuz was disrupted or nearly closed for roughly three and a half to four months, offering Gulf states aligned with the U.S. one clear message: energy flows - or tanker transits - must be rewired through pipeline networks that bypass the maritime chokepoint.

By creating alternative pipeline export routes through the UAE, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Syria, Oman, or Turkey, regional producers can reduce the risk that Tehran can once again use Hormuz as a leverage tool to disrupt tanker traffic through one of the world’s most critical maritime chokepoints. 

TotalEnergies SE CEO Patrick Pouyanne is the latest to signal the urgent need for Gulf producers to prioritize building pipelines that bypass the Strait of Hormuz, according to Reuters.

Speaking at an energy conference in Paris on Tuesday, Pouyanne said, "The reality is that the Strait of Hormuz represents a genuine threat, so we must act. To ensure it doesn't remain a threat, there is only one solution: we must invest in pipelines to bypass the strait, which is an absolute priority."

Pouyanne identified alternative export routes in the UAE and Iraq, as well as through Syria. He continued, "When you are in Iraq and need to reach the sea, you can go down through Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, or head towards Syria or Turkey." 

He referenced TotalEnergies' discovery of oil in Iraq in 1928, which led to an Iraq-Syria pipeline that took six years to build and allowed the French energy giant to load crude in the Mediterranean and feed refineries in southern France.

"If our predecessors did it 100 years ago, I believe we should be capable of doing it again today," he added.

Pouyanne's comments to bypass Hormuz come days after the UAE's Minister of Foreign Trade Thani Al Zeyoudi told Bloomberg in an interview that "zero Hormuz dependency" is essential for survival, adding, "It's going to open and we hope that will happen quickly, but we will not stop the new plan."

The plan includes major investments in pipelines, rail, and road links from UAE ports in the Persian Gulf to Dibba, Fujairah, Khor Fakkan and at least one new harbor on the Gulf of Oman coast.

Earlier this month, Sheikh Khaled Ahmad Al-Sabah, managing director of international marketing at Kuwait Petroleum, said Kuwait is among the countries that have reportedly held talks with Saudi Arabia and the UAE about potential cross-border pipelines that could connect Gulf oil production to buyers without relying on tanker transits through Hormuz.

In the first month of the conflict, Saudi Arabia's Hormuz-bypassing East-West pipeline ramped up to its full capacity of 7 million barrels a day, allowing the Kingdom to divert flows from Persian Gulf loading terminals to those at Yanbu on the Red Sea.

There is a growing consensus among Gulf producers and global energy giants that a pipeline network must be expanded at lightning speed to bypass the Hormuz chokepoint. That logic is simply because it would drastically reduce the region’s dependence on the chokepoint and simultaneously shatter Tehran’s ability to use tanker flows as a leverage tool in any future spat with Washington.

Related:

Earlier today, Eurasia Group senior analyst Gregory Brew wrote on X that Iran's regional leverage is eroding: "This may be Iran's first misstep—and proof that its leverage isn't total. Iran announced the strait was closed, but it didn't *close* the strait. Without the credible threat of force, Iran's sway over the waterway has limits."

https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/we-must-act-totalenergies-ceo-joins-calls-rewire-gulf-energy-flows-around-hormuz

DHS demands Hochul, Mamdani honor ICE retainer for illegal convicted of raping corpse on subway

 The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) blasted New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani over “sanctuary” policies, demanding the two honor an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainer for an illegal migrant convicted of raping a corpse.

Felix Jeronimo-Rojas, 44, was sentenced to five years in prison on Wednesday for sexually assaulting and raiding the pockets of 37-year-old Jorge Gonzalez while he sat dead on the R train near Lower Manhattan’s Whitehall Street station, according to the New York Post.

The Mexican national pled guilty to the charges.

“This sicko robbed and raped the corpse of a dead man on a New York City subway,” said Lauren Bis, acting assistant secretary for public affairs at the DHS. “ICE lodged a detainer asking Gov. Kathy Hochul and New York sanctuary politicians to commit to not releasing this criminal illegal alien after his prison sentence. We need cooperation from sanctuary politicians to ensure depraved criminals like this are not released into our communities.”

On April 8, 2025, Gonzalez boarded the train at around 7:52 p.m., according to the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office. Authorities said he stayed in the same spot for several hours before losing consciousness at around 10:48 p.m. Jeronimo-Rojas got on the train several minutes later and at 11:45 p.m., he began violating Gonzalez while he was unresponsive, prosecutors said.

Felix Jeronimo-Rojas was sentenced to five years in prison on Wednesday for sexually assaulting and raiding the pockets of deceased 37-year-old Jorge Gonzalez.Steven Hirsch

DHS lodged an immigration detainer for Jeronimo-Rojas on April 30, 2025, the agency exclusively told Fox News Digital. The department is continuing to demand that this detainer is honored by New York state and city officials at the conclusion of his sentence.

Fox News Digital reached out to the offices of Hochul and Mamdani for additional comment.

Hochul oversees state laws that limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement, while Mamdani is responsible for how city agencies, including the New York Police Department and the Department of Correction, implement the city’s sanctuary policies.

DHS is demanding that Kathy Hochul and Zohran Mamdani honor an ICE detainer for Jeronimo-Rojas.Andrew Schwartz / SplashNews.com

In a statement to Fox News Digital, DHS said New York state released 6,947 illegal immigrants that were convicted of crimes last year between Jan. 20 and Dec. 1.

Jeronimo-Rojas has illegally entered the United States four times between 1998 and 1999, according to DHS. Each time, he voluntarily returned to Mexico after encounters with U.S. Border Patrol.

Jeronimo-Rojas then re-entered the country “for FIFTH time at an unknown date and location,” DHS said.

Roughly three weeks after committing the crime, Jeronimo-Rojas turned himself in to the NYPD. Per The Post, Jeronimo-Rojas acknowledged he was caught on surveillance footage but denied the rape and the robbery.

Jeronimo-Rojas violated the dead body on the R train near Lower Manhattan’s Whitehall Street station.DCPI

Jeronimo-Rojas did not speak at his sentencing hearing and took a plea deal that will include 15 years of supervised release after his initial five-year prison sentence.

Gonzalez, his victim, came to the U.S. about 20 years ago to work and support his loved ones in Mexico, his family told The Post.

“He wasn’t just a random person, he was a father, he was a family man, he cared about his family in Mexico,” his 38-year-old wife Teresa told the outlet.

“He did construction, he worked in kitchens, he worked as a waiter, he was a busboy. You know, anything you really could do to try to get ahead,” said Teresa, who was separated from him for six years.

https://nypost.com/2026/06/23/us-news/dhs-demands-hochul-mamdani-honor-ice-retainer-for-illegal-migrant-convicted-raping-corpse-subway/

Popular pain supplement glucosamine linked to faster Alzheimer’s decline — and death

 Pain is temporary, but a pain relief pill could have detrimental effects on the brain.

About 42% of Americans will experience dementia after the age of 55 — nearly the same amount of older adults with arthritis.

But while many turn to a popular supplement to ease joint pain, new research suggests it could actually speed up cognitive decline as well as increase the chances of death in those with Alzheimer’s.

A thoughtful senior man with grey hair sits on a sofa in a living room, looking upwards with his hand on his forehead.
Millions of older adults turn to a common supplement for joint pain that could speed up Alzheimer’s and cognitive decline.LIGHTFIELD STUDIOS – stock.adobe.com

More than 40 million Americans take glucosamine — composed of glucose and the amino acid glutamine — each year to slow the breakdown of cartilage in the joints, which may relieve pain and swelling.

A study published in Nature Metabolism, though, found that people with Alzheimer’s who took glucosamine supplements were 25% more likely to die within five years than those who didn’t.

The widely used supplement also affected those with mild cognitive impairment, or the early stages of dementia, and they were more likely to progress to full Alzheimer’s.

The researchers also found that mice with Alzheimer’s-like symptoms that were given glucosamine ended up with worse memory.

On the other hand, blocking the enzyme that makes sugars like glucosamine actually improved dementia symptoms, such as short-term memory loss.

A hallmark of Alzheimer’s is the accumulation of toxic protein clumps in the brain, known as tau, that interfere with cognitive function.

However, another lesser-known issue with the degenerative disease is the extra sugar coating brain cells and proteins that builds up.

Healthy brain cells normally carry short chains of sugars called N-glycans that help proteins attach to each other.

White pills spilled out of a white medicine bottle on a gray background.
Used for arthritis, glucosamine supplements were linked to a 25% higher chance of early death in those with Alzheimer’s.sosiukin – stock.adobe.com
In those with Alzheimer’s, the chains pile up in places they shouldn’t.

This causes proteins in the brain not to work properly, causing memory issues and cells to die, a condition called hyperglycosylation.

Earlier research has shown that regular glucosamine use is linked to lower dementia risk, but this was in adults with healthy cognitive function.

Since the findings of the most recent study were based on patient records, they only show an association between cognitive decline and use of glucosamine supplements — not a causation. And one doctor says it’s not all that it seems.

“This does not mean that glucosamine caused the increased risk of dementia,” said board certified internist and pain specialist Jacob Teitelbaum. “In my opinion, the conclusion of the study is unsound because patients with arthritis commonly exhibit cognitive decline over time. It is far more likely that the chronic arthritis pain caused the increased dementia, NOT the glucosamine.”

He also points to other research that found that regular glucosamine supplementation correlates with a 15% to 39% lower risk of death from all causes.

“Increased risk of dementia is especially prominent in arthritis pain. Effectively treating pain is a critical part of decreasing Alzheimer’s risk, and this can be achieved by treating four key components of pain,” he said.

Currently, researchers are exploring compounds that block the N-glycan molecule and reduce the buildup of sugars on brain cells to see the effects on Alzheimer’s progression.

And while not in supplement form, several studies have also suggested that a diet rich in sugar and saturated fat can contribute to inflammation in the brain, potentially damaging brain cells and raising the risk of dementia.

https://nypost.com/2026/06/23/health/widely-used-supplement-can-speed-up-alzheimers-decline-death/

Kratom 'legal $13 ‘natural’ high,' led to addiction and 91 deaths: ‘Soccer moms are on it’

 Stay-at-home mom Bari Sinoyannis thought she was buying a natural, plant-based alternative to pain relievers when she picked up kratom powder at a North Carolina smoke shop in 2022.

“The fact that it’s labeled as a natural alternative to pain medication was why I fell for it. I was like, you know what? I’m gonna try it. And pretty much immediately I was addicted,” the 37-year-old told The Post. “I was like, oh, this is a miracle drug. This is curing my pain. This is curing my depression. Everything’s better now. Until it wasn’t.”

What Sinoyannis didn’t know is that, even though it can be casually picked up at a convenience store, gas station, or smoke shop, kratom is a highly addictive substance that can cause severe withdrawals and catastrophic side effects.

Bari Sinoyannis says she hit rock bottom during her addiction to kratom.

The psychoactive plant extract from Southeast Asia is sold in powder, drinks, gummies, capsules, teas and energy shots. It is advertised for its purported pain-relieving ability and as a natural aid for depression and anxiety and it can make people feel alert, energetic, and more talkative.

But it can also have catastrophic downsides.

Over the course of the next several years, Sinoyannis gradually became so addicted to kratom, she needed to take doses all day and through the night just to feel normal, costing her up to $600 a week. Over time, she upgraded from kratom powder to 7-OH, a derivative compound found in the kratom plant that is highly potent and more concentrated.

“If I didn’t wake up a million times throughout the night to dose, I would go through withdrawal in the morning,” she explained.

Kratom is made from a Southeast Asian plant, which is ground into a powder for consumption.AFP via Getty Images

Kratom can cause withdrawal symptoms, such as sweating, restlessness, nausea, anxiety, and an inability to sleep, according to Johns Hopkins.

“It didn’t matter how much I took, I was still going through withdrawals. Between doses, I would be on the floor vomiting,” Sinoyannis admitted. “My kids had to witness me going through withdrawals every few days. My husband almost left me because of it. They had to go to the neighbor’s house when the ambulance had to come get me.”

In January, she decided enough was enough and enrolled in a 32-day rehab program. Over the course of her detox, three roommates also addicted to kratom dropped out because the withdrawal was so intense. Now that she’s enjoyed a few months of sobriety, Sinoyannis can’t help but wonder why such a life-changing drug was so readily available.

“The fact that you could buy it literally anywhere was part of why I trusted it,” she said. “At least with heroin and fentanyl, you have to buy it on the street, and you know what you’re taking is bad. With this stuff, soccer moms are on it because they thought it was natural.”

Bari Sinoyannis has been sober from kratom since going to rehab in January.

Because it’s so readily available, people who consume kratom often assume it’s not a particularly dangerous substance. A 2026 survey by the University of Michigan found that more than five million Americans have used kratom, including 100,000 children aged 12 to 17.

One popular brand of Kratom-infused drinks, Feel Free, bragged in a press release about selling a quarter of a billion dollars worth of their product in the US in 2025. A two-serving bottle currently costs about $13 on their website.

Kratom products are popular enough to be sold at 7-11 stores in many states. Retail scanning service SPINS found that in-store kratom sales jumped by 21% from 2023 to 2024, to reach $441 million nationwide.

Industry estimates place the total number much higher when internet sales and other avenues are included, claiming it is an eye-watering $2 billion industry annually.

Kratom is not regulated under the Controlled Substances Act, meaning it’s up to local jurisdictions to ban it.

So far, only seven states have done so: Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Indiana, Louisiana, Vermont, and Wisconsin. Tennessee will join them on July 1. Their reasons for banning are because the compound can quickly lead to dependence and cause potentially life-altering side effects.

Matthew Farmer figured that kratom was safe because it was “everywhere,” he said.

Kratom can cause nausea, dizziness, sweating, vomiting, and weight loss. It can also cause confusion, psychosis, and delusions — and even lead to death. Between July 2016 and December 2017, the CDC identified 152 overdose deaths in individuals who had kratom in their system at the time. Kratom was positively deemed the cause of death for 91 of them by medical examiners.

Still, Matthew Farmer assumed kratom wasn’t a huge deal because it seemed so socially validated.

“It was everywhere you go, and I was kind of looking for an escape,” Farmer, 32, of Fredericksburg, Virginia, told The Post. “The clerk may not even know what they’re doing, but they’re basically giving people a bag of dope.”

Within a couple months, he was using daily. People around him started to notice something was off, as he began to struggle with depression, brain fog, and loss of appetite.

Kratom can be purchased at marijuana dispensaries and is often lauded for being natural and plant-based.Stefano Giovannini

“People can tell when you are not yourself, even when you don’t notice it as much at the time,” Farmer, who works at a convenience store, said. “My social life horribly suffered for it. At work, at the first possible moment, I would just straight up walk off and go to the bathroom and take some kratom, because I always had it in my pocket.”

“It was just dehumanizing. It was embarrassing. I knew it was hurting me, but I was still doing it,” Farmer, who has now been sober for just over a month after spending six months weaning off, said.

Kratom can even be found in bars that bill themselves as “sober” or “alcohol-free.”

In 2020, Pasha Kalachev ventured into one such bar around the corner from his Bushwick apartment, where he tried a kratom-infused drink billed as a healthy alternative to alcohol. He felt a mild high and a rush of productivity.

Pasha Kalachev first consumed kratom at a non-alcoholic bar in Brooklyn.

“I was like, oh, this is a fantastic feeling, and I can stay productive, and there’s no hangover,” the 35-year-old software engineer said. “It doesn’t feel like you are consuming anything heavy. It can really feel like a free lunch in that sense.”

The city has quietly cracked down on such bars over the past several years, but still at least 300 exist across the United States, according to one directory. Kalachev, a software engineer, started heading to the bar once a week for kratom until COVID-19, when he found himself stuck in his apartment and ordering kratom to his home in bulk.

He tried cutting out kratom, realizing its benefits were shrinking as his tolerance grew, but quickly learned he couldn’t.

“Within 24 hours, I fell into the most painful state of physical agony that I’ve ever been in. I thought I had poisoned myself,” he recalled. “I was afraid I had broken my body. I really thought that I manipulated the chemistry of my brain to the point that kratom is now this inexorable part of me that I have to consume it to just exist.”

Chris Oflyng has been battling an addiction to kratom for years.Courtesy of Chris Oflyng

It was the beginning of a long struggle to break kratom addiction that only ended last year. Chris Oflyng, 28, hasn’t been so lucky. The Wisconsin lawn care specialist has been struggling with kratom addiction on and off since learning about the compound in a YouTube video when he was just 19.

“There was an excuse, like, oh, well, I’m not using harder drugs. I would take it a lot. I would take it instead of drinking,” he told The Post. But soon he couldn’t even make it through a short flight without sneaking a hit.

“I started struggling with the paranoia of keeping the substance with me,” he said. “I’m just spending all this f—king money on kratom,” he recalled, estimating that he’s spent as much as $150 a day on the product.

“I got off of it for a while, and then I got addicted to it again. I would throw it away, and then I’d, like, go and get it again,” he said. “I love life so much. That’s what’s so heartbreaking about it.”

Chris Oflyng estimates that he has spent as much as $150 a day to keep up with his addiction.Courtesy of Chris Oflyng

Kratom has also been promoted as a way to break addictions to other potentially more dangerous substances, including opioids like heroin, fentanyl, oxycodone, and morphine.

Destiny Torgerson decided to try kratom on a friend’s recommendation while pregnant in 2020 to help stave off her cravings for heroin after a few months of sobriety from that substance.

“Everyone really pushed that it was safe and good,” the 29-year-old from Iowa said. “They would tell me it’s just like coffee. It’s just a plant.” But, after giving birth, she realized she was addicted to the kratom itself.

“It wasn’t even 10 hours without a dose before I was sweating and sick and shaky,” she said. “I wasn’t able to stop.”

Destiny Torgerson started using kratom as a way to stave off heroin cravings.

Though it did help her curb her heroin cravings, it was causing a whole new collection of cognitive issues. Her memory practically disappeared, as she found herself trailing off mid-sentence, forgetting what she wanted to say. She locked her keys in her car eight times in just one week.

Again and again, she failed to quit kratom despite her best efforts. In 2024, after four years, she begged her doctor for help, and was only able to get off the substance with help from prescription medications like gabapentin and Suboxone.

Looking back, she thinks that breaking her kratom addiction was even more difficult than stepping away from heroin.

“I was able to successfully wean off heroin on my own [without prescriptions], but not kratom,” she said. “A lot of people that I know personally switched one addiction for another, like I did.”

https://nypost.com/2026/06/23/health/miracle-drug-kratom-turned-out-to-be-a-deadly-addictive-substance-current-and-former-users-say/