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Monday, May 4, 2026

Iran War Exposes NATO Readiness Gaps as Alliance Confronts Russia Threat Timeline

From missile shortages to naval weaknesses and political fractures, defense officials warn NATO must accelerate modernization before 2029


BRUSSELS | The ongoing conflict involving Iran has become more than a regional flashpoint—it is now a strategic stress test for NATO, exposing critical vulnerabilities that could shape the alliance’s ability to deter or respond to aggression from Russia.

While NATO has remained formally outside the U.S.-Israeli military campaign, defense officials and analysts say the war has revealed five key operational gaps that raise urgent questions about alliance readiness—particularly as European intelligence assessments warn Moscow could be positioned to challenge NATO territory by 2029.

French Air Force leadership and allied defense experts emphasize that lessons from both Ukraine and the Middle East are converging, forcing a reassessment of future warfare doctrine, capability development, and coalition cohesion.

1. Ammunition Shortages Strain Sustained Combat Readiness

The Iran conflict has underscored a persistent issue across NATO: insufficient munitions stockpiles.

High-end air defense systems such as Patriot interceptors have been consumed at significant rates, while European missile inventories—including Aster and Mica systems—have faced rapid depletion. Defense manufacturers like Rheinmetall and MBDA have warned of surging demand and production constraints.

Military analysts caution that in a high-intensity conflict with Russia, NATO could exhaust critical missile reserves within weeks, particularly as Moscow continues large-scale drone production.

VA Secretary Doug Collins Signals Major Overhaul as Claims Backlog Plummets, Reform Push Accelerates

Exclusive: Collins details aggressive modernization effort aimed at cutting wait times, expanding outreach, and restoring trust across the Department of Veterans Affairs


WASHINGTON |
In a sweeping push to modernize one of the federal government’s largest and most scrutinized agencies, Doug Collins says the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is undergoing a fundamental transformation—one already yielding measurable results for millions of veterans.

In an exclusive interview with 'TELL IT LIKE IT IS' Defense News, Collins outlined a reform agenda that has slashed the VA’s disability claims backlog by more than half—from over 260,000 cases to fewer than 100,000—while simultaneously processing more than 3 million claims in the past year alone.

For a system long criticized for delays and bureaucratic inefficiencies, the numbers represent a significant operational shift. But Collins argues the deeper story is cultural.

“The VA only exists if a veteran walks in,” Collins said, underscoring a renewed focus on a “veteran-first” mission that is reshaping internal priorities and frontline decision-making.


Sunday, May 3, 2026

No. 12 Michigan Upsets No. 17 Florida, Punches Ticket to NCAA Third Round

Lily Jones rallies from slow start to clinch 4-2 victory as Wolverines advance to face North Carolina

ANN ARBOR, Mich. | The Michigan Wolverines women's tennis is moving on — and doing it with grit.

In a high-stakes NCAA Tournament showdown, No. 12 Michigan knocked off No. 17 Florida Gators women's tennis 4-2 on Sunday at the Varsity Tennis Center, advancing to the third round for the fourth consecutive season.

The hero? Lily Jones.

With the match hanging in the balance after Florida trimmed Michigan’s lead to 3-2, Jones delivered a dramatic comeback at No. 1 singles. After dropping the first set and falling behind 2-0 in the second, she flipped the script in dominant fashion — winning 12 of the next 13 games to secure the clinching point in a 3-6, 6-2, 6-1 victory.

Doubles Drama Sets the Tone

Michigan’s path to victory began with a gritty doubles point that showcased its resilience under pressure.

After Florida struck first at No. 2 doubles, the Wolverines responded in dramatic fashion. The No. 3 duo of Piper Charney and Emily Sartz-Lunde battled through a tense tiebreak to win 7-6 (2), while Jessica Bernales and Jones sealed the point at No. 1 with a marathon tiebreak victory — converting on their ninth match point to give Michigan a 1-0 lead.

UC San Diego Softball Sweeps Doubleheader, Secures No. 6 Seed in Big West Championship

Tritons surge past CSU Bakersfield behind clutch hitting and dominant starts, setting stage for postseason push in Fullerton


SAN DIEGO |
The UC San Diego Tritons softball closed the regular season with authority Saturday, sweeping a doubleheader against the CSU Bakersfield Roadrunners softball to clinch the No. 6 seed in the Big West Softball Championship.

With a 7-4 comeback win in game one and a commanding 7-2 victory in game two at SDSU Softball Stadium, UC San Diego improved to 23-26 overall and 12-15 in conference play — peaking at the right time as postseason action looms.

Game One: Tritons Rally Behind Explosive Third Inning

After falling behind 3-0 in the opening inning, UC San Diego wasted little time responding. Maalia Cherry jumpstarted the offense with a solo home run — her 15th of the season — before Tori Hinostro added an RBI single to cut the deficit.

The turning point came in the third inning, when the Tritons erupted for five runs in a decisive rally. Zara Wasserman’s sacrifice bunt tied the game, while Lily Hermosillo and Jackie Tremper delivered back-to-back clutch hits, including a two-RBI double that flipped momentum firmly in UC San Diego’s favor.

The Tritons added an insurance run in the sixth, and their pitching staff shut the door to secure the 7-4 win.

Game Two: Early Fireworks Seal the Sweep

UC San Diego carried that momentum into game two — and this time, there was no comeback needed.

The Tritons exploded for five runs in the first inning, highlighted by Dylan Kunkle’s first career grand slam — a towering shot to left-center that instantly put the Roadrunners on their heels.

UC San Diego continued to apply pressure in the second inning, with Cherry and Wasserman delivering RBI hits to extend the lead to 7-0. CSU Bakersfield managed just two runs across the final innings, unable to recover from the early deficit.

Tritons Trending at the Right Time

The sweep not only secured postseason positioning but underscored a team finding its rhythm when it matters most. Haley Garcia led the charge across both games, tallying four hits, three runs scored, and a stolen base in a standout all-around performance.

With confidence building and the lineup producing in key moments, UC San Diego now turns its focus to the postseason.

The Tritons will open Big West Championship play Wednesday against UC Santa Barbara Gauchos softball in Fullerton, with first pitch set for 4:00 p.m. at Cal State Fullerton.

For a team that battled through a challenging regular season, the message is clear: UC San Diego is entering the tournament battle-tested — and dangerous.


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-- By Michael R. Thomas

© Copyright 2026 JWT Communications. All rights reserved. This article cannot be republished, rebroadcast, rewritten, or distributed in any form without written permission.

No. 1 Auburn Women’s Tennis Dominates Miami 4-0, Advances to NCAA Super Regional

Tigers extend win streak to eight, remain unbeaten at home as historic postseason run continues in Auburn


AUBURN, Ala. |
The nation’s top-ranked Auburn Tigers women's tennis delivered a statement performance Saturday, sweeping Miami Hurricanes women's tennis 4-0 to clinch the NCAA Auburn Regional and punch their ticket to the Super Regional for the second consecutive season.

In front of a spirited home crowd at the Yarbrough Tennis Center, Auburn showcased its dominance from the opening serve, capturing the doubles point decisively before rolling through singles play to secure the shutout victory.

“It was an amazing atmosphere today,” Auburn head coach Jordan Szabo said post-match. “The Auburn Family showed up and made a really big difference for us… We had our best doubles point of the year.”

The Tigers wasted no time setting the tone. The No. 3 doubles pair of Ekaterina Khairutdinova and Ashton Bowers cruised to a 6-1 win, while Ava Esposito and DJ Bennett rallied to win six straight games on the top court, clinching the doubles point and energizing the home crowd.

From there, Auburn’s momentum proved unstoppable.

Senior standout Angella Okutoyi delivered a commanding straight-sets victory, improving her dual-match record to 19-2 and giving Auburn a 2-0 lead. Bowers followed with another dominant performance, completing a perfect weekend and setting a new program record with 62 combined wins during the 2025–26 season — the most in a single year in Auburn history.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

RFK Jr.’s Unsupported Claims About Tylenol-Autism Study He Called ‘Garbage’

Researchers defend large-scale findings published in JAMA Pediatrics as experts warn political rhetoric risks undermining public trust in science


During an April 17 congressional hearing, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. called for retraction of a new Danish study that didn’t find a link between Tylenol and autism, repeatedly calling it “garbage” and baselessly suggesting that it was industry-generated and “fraudulent.”

There is no evidence of fraud or industry involvement, and the criticism Kennedy made was a limitation the authors of the paper acknowledged — not legitimate grounds for retraction, according to scientists.


Definition of ‘86’ at the Heart of Comey Indictment

Prosecutors argue slang implied a threat against Donald Trump, while legal experts say ambiguity could undermine the case and raise First Amendment concerns

A federal indictment against former FBI Director James Comey hinges on the meaning of “86.” The Department of Justice said it indicates a threat of physical harm, while the more common dictionary definition is to throw out or get rid of something. 

Legal experts have said the ambiguity of the meaning will make this a difficult case for the DOJ.

In May 2025, while walking on the beach in North Carolina, Comey said he came across shells arranged to spell out “86 47” — Donald Trump is the 47th president — and he shared the image on Instagram.

According to the online Merriam-Webster dictionary, “eighty-six” is a slang term most commonly used to mean “to throw out,” “to get rid of,” or “to refuse service to.” More recently, though, and sparsely, Merriam-Webster says, it has also come to mean “to kill.” And that’s the definition the Department of Justice relies upon.

According to a two-page indictment announced on April 28, Comey “did knowingly and willfully make a threat to take the life of, and to inflict bodily harm upon, the President of the United States” by posting the image of the shells that “a reasonable recipient who is familiar with the circumstances would interpret as a serious expression of an intent to do harm to the President of the United States.”

The indictment includes two charges: threatening the president and “transmitting a threat in interstate commerce” (via Instagram). Combined, the charges carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

“Threatening the life of the president of the United States will never be tolerated by the Department of Justice,” acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said at a press conference announcing the indictment.

“James Comey disgracefully encouraged a threat on President Trump’s life and posted it on Instagram for the world to see,” FBI Director Kash Patel said in a press release. In the press conference, Patel said the grand jury was presented with the fact that “shortly after posting that threat, he deleted that threat and then issued an apology.”

Providing Context for Leavitt’s Examples of ‘Violent Rhetoric’


Two days after an armed man tried to enter the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt cited rhetoric from Democrats that she said is “inspiring violence” against President Donald Trump and other Republicans. But several of the statements she quoted were stripped of their original context, a point that House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries made in a rebuttal.

In prepared remarks in the April 27 press briefing, Leavitt called out a number of congressional Democrats, and a late-night television host, for “hateful and constant and violent rhetoric directed” at Trump. On April 25, security prevented the armed man from accessing the WHCA dinner, which the president and top administration officials attended. After Leavitt’s briefing, the man was charged with attempting to assassinate the president.

For example, the press secretary said: “As the first lady of the United States pointed out this morning, just two days prior to the shooting, ABC’s late-night host, Jimmy Kimmel, disgustingly called first lady Melania Trump an expectant widow. Who in their right mind says a wife would be glowing over the potential murder of her beloved husband?”

Later, Leavitt said she had “a whole host of examples” of “despicable statements” from Democratic lawmakers that she could share. “Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, just this April, this month, said we are in an era of maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time,” she said.


Alabama Launches Two-Month Grocery Tax Holiday as Gov. Kay Ivey Touts Consumer Relief

New law suspends state grocery tax through June and introduces overtime income tax deduction, signaling broader push for cost-of-living relief

MONTGOMERY, Ala. | Alabama residents will begin seeing immediate relief at the checkout line as the state’s grocery tax holiday officially takes effect, a move Gov. Kay Ivey says underscores Alabama’s ongoing effort to ease financial pressure on working families.

The temporary tax suspension, which runs through the months of May and June, eliminates the state’s portion of the grocery tax, offering consumers a direct reduction in food costs during a period of persistent inflation and elevated household expenses.

“When we can cut taxes in Alabama and provide some relief to the hardworking people of this state, I am all for it,” Ivey said in a statement Friday. “This two-month holiday on the state grocery tax will provide direct relief.”

The initiative stems from House Bill 527, legislation signed earlier this month by the governor and carried by Rep. James Lomax and Sen. Arthur Orr. The bill represents a continuation of Alabama’s incremental rollback of grocery taxes, an issue that has drawn bipartisan attention in recent years as food prices have surged nationwide.

Beyond the immediate tax holiday, the legislation also includes a provision allowing an income tax deduction of up to $1,000 for qualified overtime compensation. Lawmakers say the measure is designed to reward additional work while helping households keep more of their earnings amid rising living costs.

Gov. Kay Ivey Calls Special Legislative Session as Alabama Redistricting Battle Intensifies

Move follows U.S. Supreme Court activity and emergency filings by Attorney General Steve Marshall, positioning Alabama for rapid action if court-ordered map restrictions are lifted


MONTGOMERY, Ala. |
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey on Friday announced a special session of the Alabama Legislature, signaling a renewed push in the state’s ongoing legal battle over congressional redistricting and election maps.

The governor’s decision comes amid shifting legal developments at the national level, including a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Louisiana v. Callais, which Ivey described as “encouraging” for Alabama’s pending litigation. While the state remains under a federal court order barring the use of newly drawn congressional maps until after the 2030 census, state leaders are moving to ensure readiness should judicial conditions change.

“By calling the Legislature into a special session, I am ensuring Alabama is prepared should the courts act quickly enough,” Ivey said in a statement, emphasizing the need for swift legislative action if the current injunction is lifted.

According to the governor’s official proclamation, the special session will convene at the Alabama State House in Montgomery at 4:00 p.m. on May 4, 2026, to consider legislation tied specifically to election procedures in districts affected by potential court-ordered changes. 

The session’s primary focus will be legislation enabling special primary elections for the U.S. House of Representatives and the Alabama State Senate in districts where boundary lines may be altered by judicial action. The proclamation limits the scope of the session strictly to this issue, requiring a two-thirds vote for consideration of any additional legislation. 

Friday, May 1, 2026

Governor Kay Ivey Backs Intensified Crime Crackdown as MACS Unit Reports Major Gains in Montgomery

State leaders cite hundreds of arrests, seized firearms, and school intervention cases as evidence of progress—while pledging sustained enforcement and prevention efforts in Alabama’s capital.


MONTGOMERY, Ala. |
Alabama Governor Kay Ivey reaffirmed her administration’s commitment to combating crime in Montgomery following a high-level briefing this week on the performance of the Metro Area Crime Suppression (MACS) Unit, a multi-agency initiative launched to curb violent crime in the state’s capital.

The meeting brought together senior leadership from the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency (ALEA), including Secretary Hal Taylor and State Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher Inabinett, along with field commanders overseeing MACS operations and SWAT deployments. Officials presented a detailed operational review highlighting both statistical outcomes and on-the-ground interventions credited with preventing potential acts of violence.

“Public safety remains a top priority for this administration, and that begins and ends with our Capital City,” Ivey said. “The MACS Unit is absolutely necessary to maintaining positive trends, and our work will continue throughout the remainder of my term.”

Since its launch in June 2024, the MACS Unit has emerged as a central pillar in Alabama’s crime reduction strategy. According to ALEA, the unit has conducted approximately 6,000 traffic stops, executed nearly 1,400 arrest warrants, and made 697 arrests—including 43 involving juveniles. Authorities have also seized 555 firearms, including 179 illegal machine gun conversion devices, recovered 92 stolen vehicles, and carried out more than 200 drug-related seizures.

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James Thomas, Owner JWT Communications

James Thomas, Owner JWT Communications
James W. Thomas Radio Broadcaster | Media Executive | Creator & Host of “TELL IT LIKE IT IS” James W. Thomas is a seasoned radio executive, broadcaster, and media strategist with more than 25 years of experience in broadcasting, media sales, and multi-platform programming. He is the creator and host of the talk program “TELL IT LIKE IT IS,” a news-sports-talk platform built on the philosophy: “Be Informed. Not Influenced.” Thomas began his radio career in Detroit, where the foundation for TELL IT LIKE IT IS was developed at WWJ Newsradio 950 (CBS Radio) in 2000. At WWJ and later with Radio One Detroit, he earned a reputation as both a dynamic on-air personality and a high-performing Senior Account Executive, delivering strategic media solutions across radio, television, and digital platforms. His work combined consultative advertising strategy, strong community relationships, and a deep understanding of broadcast marketing. In 2008, Thomas expanded his leadership role at Clear Channel Radio (now iHeartMedia) in Beaumont, Texas, where he continued to drive revenue growth, client acquisition, and team mentorship while strengthening his broadcast presence. Since 2009, Thomas has served as General Manager and On-Air Host at WTLS Radio in Alabama, where he oversees all station operations including programming, sales, marketing, budgeting, regulatory compliance, and long-term strategic development. Under his leadership, WTLS has strengthened its multi-platform media presence and community engagement. As host of “TELL IT LIKE IT IS,” Thomas delivers compelling News-Sports-Talk programming built on research, preparation, and meaningful conversation. His show features interviews with political leaders, policy experts, athletes, and community voices while providing analysis of national and regional issues affecting listeners. In addition to his broadcasting leadership, Thomas maintains active professional involvement within the media and entertainment industry. He is a: Member – SAG-AFTRA (Screen Actors Guild – American Federation of Television and Radio Artists) Regional EMMY® Awards Judge – National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS) Certified Radio Marketing Consultant (CRMC) – Radio Advertising Bureau Certified Digital Marketing Consultant (CDMC) – Radio Advertising Bureau Content Creators Certified Radio Marketing Consultant (CRMCCC) – Radio Advertising Bureau These certifications recognize advanced expertise in broadcast marketing strategy, audience development, digital media integration, and revenue growth for media organizations. From Detroit to Texas to Alabama, James W. Thomas has built a respected career defined by leadership, credibility, and a commitment to informative, engaging media. TELL IT LIKE IT IS BE INFORMED. NOT INFLUENCED.

The Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation

The Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation
Founded in 1962, The Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation is the nation’s oldest and largest provider of need-based scholarships to military children. For 54 years, we’ve been providing access to affordable education for the children of Marine and Navy Corpsman attending post-high school, under-graduate and career technical education programs. In that time, we have provided more than 37,000 scholarships worth nearly $110 million.

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