US News
Candace Owens Claims Macron Plotted Her Assassination, Says Show Taken Off-Air Amid Explosive Allegations
US commentator asserts White House received her report accusing French President Emmanuel Macron of orchestrating a murder plot, while legal battles with the Macrons intensify
US political commentator Candace Owens has sparked another wave of controversy after announcing that her show will not air this week, claiming she has received confirmation that French President Emmanuel Macron allegedly attempted to orchestrate her assassination. The claims, shared publicly on social media, have intensified an already growing storm surrounding Owens, who is currently facing a defamation lawsuit filed by Emmanuel and Brigitte Macron.
Owens posted an update on X (formerly Twitter), stating that both the White House and US counterterrorism agencies had “confirmed receipt” of her report, which allegedly ties the French President to a murder plot against her. She further repeated her unverified claims linking the September killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk to French foreign legionnaires.
Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA, was shot and killed while delivering a speech at Utah Valley University on September 10, 2025. Owens has publicly suggested that his death was politically motivated and connected to France, though no official investigation has validated her accusations.
Owens doubles down on assassination claims
In her post, Owens wrote, “Our show will be off the air this week,” before adding that her allegations had reached the highest levels of government.
“As an update, both the White House and our counterterrorism agencies have confirmed receipt of what I reported publicly: Emmanuel Macron attempted to organize my assassination, per a source close to the first couple,” she stated.
Owens also suggested that the Macrons “were involved in Charlie Kirk’s assassination,” adding that they “did not act alone.”
She challenged skeptics, saying, “For all of you who doubted my claims, you can now look to the President of the United States and our intelligence communities to issue a statement to confirm whether I am telling the truth.”

No official comment has yet been issued by the White House or federal agencies regarding Owens’ assertions.
Legal battle with the Macrons intensifies
Owens’ statements come as she faces a high-profile lawsuit filed by the French President and First Lady. The lawsuit was prompted by Owens’ repeated claims that Brigitte Macron was born male and later transitioned, a rumor that has circulated online but has been repeatedly dismissed as false.
The lawsuit cites an eight-part series published by Owens in which she accused Brigitte Macron of assuming another woman’s identity and undergoing gender reassignment surgery.
“These claims are demonstrably false, and Owens knew they were false when she published them,” the lawsuit states. “Yet, she published them anyway. And the reason is clear: it is not the pursuit of truth, but the pursuit of fame.”
According to the filing, Owens continued to repeat the claims despite multiple requests from the Macrons’ legal team to retract them.

Macrons respond
In a statement accompanying the lawsuit, the Macrons said they were pursuing legal action to stop what they called a deliberate campaign of harassment.
“Ms. Owens’ campaign of defamation was plainly designed to harass and cause pain to us and our families and to garner attention and notoriety,” their lawyers wrote. “We gave her every opportunity to back away from these claims, but she refused. It is our earnest hope that this lawsuit will set the record straight and end this campaign of defamation once and for all.”
As the accusations escalate, Owens’ claims remain unverified, and no official confirmation has been released by US authorities. Meanwhile, speculation around her show’s sudden pause continues, raising questions about whether the controversy will impact her media presence going forward.
US News
USCIS Just Made the H-1B Visa Process Significantly Harder — Here’s Everything That Changed From April 1st and What It Means for You…
The updated I-129 form is now mandatory, older versions are no longer accepted, and employers must now disclose far more than before — from minimum job qualifications to the immigration history of every applicant. The rules of the game have quietly shifted.
If you are an employer who hires foreign workers, an immigration attorney, or someone whose entire career path runs through the H-1B visa system — you need to stop and read this carefully.
US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has quietly but significantly tightened the H-1B visa process, introducing a revamped version of its non-immigrant worker petition form — the I-129 — with changes that took effect from April 1st, 2026.
And unlike many bureaucratic updates that exist mostly on paper, these changes carry real, immediate consequences.
The Old Form Is Gone — No Exceptions
The first thing to understand is simple and non-negotiable. USCIS will no longer accept the previous version of the I-129 form. From April 2nd, 2026 onwards, petitioners must submit only the new version.
There is one narrow exception — if your petition was filed before March 31st, 2026, the older version will still be considered. If it wasn’t? The new form is the only option. No grace period, no workarounds.
What Is the H-1B Visa — A Quick Refresher
For those less familiar, the H-1B visa is the primary mechanism through which US employers hire foreign workers on a temporary, nonimmigrant basis — typically in specialty occupations requiring at least a bachelor’s degree in a relevant field. It is the backbone of how companies in Silicon Valley and across corporate America access global tech and engineering talent.
Which is precisely why changes to the process carry such significant weight.
What Has Actually Changed — The Key Updates
1. Stricter Mandatory Disclosures
This is where the real teeth of the new rules lie. Employers filing H-1B petitions will now be required to disclose considerably more information than before, including the minimum qualifications for the job being offered, salaries being paid, the wage level as per industry standards or the Labour Condition Application (LCA), specific work locations, and the employment arrangement in place.
Crucially, employers must also now provide mandatory disclosure about the immigration history of the employee being petitioned for. Applications will face significantly stricter scrutiny across the board.
2. The New Wage Lottery System
The modifications to the H-1 classification section of the form are being introduced under a new wage lottery system, applicable from fiscal year 2027. The intent appears to be ensuring that H-1B slots go to higher-wage positions — a shift that could fundamentally alter which employers and which roles benefit most from the program.
3. F-1 Students Locked Out
One of the more significant and immediately impactful changes — US employers will no longer be permitted to hire F-1 students under the H-1B program. For international students studying in America and hoping to transition from a student visa to a work visa through this route, this closes a door that many had been counting on.
The new form does still permit students to file for a transition from study visa to work visa — but not under the H-1B classification.
Which Visa Categories Are Affected Beyond H-1B?
The ripple effects of the updated I-129 form extend well beyond the H-1B. The same form is used to petition across a wide range of non-immigrant worker categories, including H-2A, H-2B, H-3, L-1, O-1, O-2, P-1, P-2, P-3, Q-1, and R-1.
Applicants can also use the updated form to extend or change visa status to E-1, E-2, E-3, H-1B1, TN, and other classifications — meaning the reforms touch virtually every major employer-sponsored non-immigrant visa pathway into the United States.
Who Will Feel This the Most?
USCIS itself has acknowledged that the major impact of these reforms will be felt most acutely by employers and nations that supply high-skilled labor to perform services, training, and work in the United States.

Countries like India — which has historically dominated H-1B visa approvals, with Indian nationals receiving the lion’s share of petitions annually — will feel these changes profoundly. So will the major IT services and consulting companies that rely heavily on this pipeline to staff client projects across America.
The Bigger Picture
These changes don’t exist in a vacuum. They arrive at a moment when the H-1B program is under intense public scrutiny — with high-profile layoffs at companies like Oracle raising uncomfortable questions about whether the visa system is being used to replace American workers rather than supplement them.
The tighter disclosures, the wage lottery system, and the stricter scrutiny all point in one direction — an attempt to make the H-1B program function more as originally intended, focused on genuine specialty occupations at competitive wages, rather than as a tool for accessing cheaper labor at scale.
Whether these changes achieve that goal — or simply create more paperwork without changing the underlying incentives — remains to be seen. But one thing is certain: the H-1B process as of April 2026 is meaningfully different from what it was just weeks ago.
US News
Oracle Filed 3,000+ H-1B Visa Requests — Then Laid Off 16,000 Workers With a 6 AM Email. People Are Furious…
The tech giant’s mass layoff via a cold, corporate email has ignited a firestorm — but it’s the H-1B visa filings happening at the same time that have pushed public outrage to an entirely different level.
There are bad ways to fire someone. And then there is what Oracle did.
The software giant terminated 16,000 corporate employees via a single email — sent at 6:00 in the morning. No meeting. No warning. No in-person conversation. Just a message in your inbox before most people have had their first cup of coffee, telling you that today is your last day.
That alone would have been enough to spark outrage. But then came the report that made it so much worse.
3,126 H-1B Petitions — Filed Around the Same Time
According to a New York Post report citing data from US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), Oracle filed approximately 3,126 H-1B visa petitions for foreign workers during fiscal years 2025 and 2026. Of those, 436 petitions were filed this year alone.
To be clear about what H-1B visas are — the US Department of Labor defines the program as one that “applies to employers seeking to hire nonimmigrant aliens as workers in specialty occupations.” In plain English, it is the mechanism American companies use to bring in skilled workers from abroad — most commonly in tech, engineering, and IT roles.
The timing of these filings, set against the backdrop of laying off 16,000 American employees, is what has ignited a level of public fury that shows no sign of cooling down.
Social Media Explodes
The reaction online has been swift, emotional, and — in some corners — genuinely volcanic.
One user wrote — “Maybe it is time to ban all products from companies that have laid off US workers and replaced them with H-1B visa workers or outsourcing all labour overseas. As we observe the finances of CEOs swell over several billion, it is time to reevaluate our investments.”
Another was more personal — “This is sickening. No loyalty to the workers who helped build that company. I hope they get exactly what they paid for.”
A third commenter put it in human terms that cut through the corporate noise — “The workers getting laid off have names and dreams. The ones being brought in do too. The only one without a face in this story is Oracle’s bottom line — and that’s exactly who’s making the decisions.”
And a fourth went further still — “These treasonous CEOs will keep doing this until they are arrested and their bank accounts and stock holdings are wiped clean to zero. That’s how you fix that problem.”
These are not fringe views. They are representative of a broader anger that has been building in America around the intersection of mass layoffs and foreign worker visa programs — and Oracle has now become the face of that frustration.
The Email That 16,000 People Woke Up To
Perhaps the most clinical aspect of this entire story is the layoff email itself — a document so sanitized and impersonal that it reads almost like a parody of corporate communication, except it was very real for the people who received it.
“We are sharing some difficult news regarding your position. After careful consideration of Oracle’s current business needs, we have made the decision to eliminate your role as part of a broader organizational change. As a result, today is your last working day.”
It then immediately pivoted to paperwork — instructing employees to submit a personal email address to receive separation documents, warning them that access to their computers, email, voicemail, and files would be “deactivated soon,” and reminding them they were “prohibited from downloading, copying or retaining any Oracle confidential information.”
The email closed with — “Thank you for your contributions to our organization. Oracle Leadership.”
Sixteen thousand people. One email. Sent at dawn. Signed by “Leadership” — a word that, in this context, many would argue is being used very loosely.

The Bigger Question Nobody Wants to Answer
What this Oracle story has forced back into the public conversation is a question that Silicon Valley and corporate America have long preferred to keep quiet — are large tech companies systematically using H-1B visas not to fill genuine skill gaps, but to replace higher-paid domestic workers with cheaper foreign labor?
Oracle, led by billionaire founder Larry Ellison — one of the wealthiest people on the planet — has not publicly addressed the juxtaposition of the layoffs and the H-1B filings. The company has not explained whether the roles being filled through H-1B petitions overlap with the roles being eliminated.
That silence, for tens of thousands of people watching this story unfold online, is an answer in itself.
What Happens Now
For the 16,000 people who woke up to that 6 AM email, the immediate priority is navigating severance paperwork and figuring out what comes next. For the wider tech community, this story has become a rallying point — a symbol of what workers fear most about the direction corporate America is heading.
And for Oracle — a company with a market capitalization in the hundreds of billions — the reputational damage from this week may take considerably longer to process than any severance agreement.
US News
Trump Admits His ‘Favourite Thing’ in the Iran War Is ‘Taking the Oil’ — and He’s Already Eyeing Kharg Island to Do It…
The US President has openly said what no commander-in-chief has dared say before — and now the world is watching to see if he actually follows through.
There are things world leaders think. There are things they say in closed rooms. And then there are things Donald Trump says — out loud, on the record, to the Financial Times.
In a stunning interview published Sunday, the US President made a confession that decades of American foreign policy had carefully avoided: the real prize in the Iran war isn’t security, it isn’t nuclear deterrence — it’s the oil.
“To be honest with you, my favourite thing is to take the oil in Iran,” Trump told the Financial Times, adding with characteristic bluntness, “but some stupid people back in the US say: ‘why are you doing that?’ But they’re stupid people.”
That’s not diplomatic language. That’s not spin. That’s a sitting US President casually announcing what critics have alleged for generations — that American military might in the Middle East has always had an energy agenda lurking beneath the surface.
A Dream 38 Years in the Making
What makes this moment even more striking is that Trump has been thinking about Kharg Island — Iran’s primary oil export hub — since before most of his current staff were born. Way back in 1988, he told The Guardian: “I’d do a number on Kharg Island. I’d go in and take it.” Nearly four decades later, he’s the Commander-in-Chief with the Marines and the warships to actually try.
The island — a five-mile-long coral outcrop sitting less than 20 miles off Iran’s coastline — handles more than 90% of the country’s oil exports, making it the economic jugular of the Islamic Republic. NBC News
On March 13, Trump announced that the US had already bombed Kharg Island, targeting its most critical oil terminal in a strike that Tehran warned would escalate the conflict. The Washington Post But crucially, the oil infrastructure itself was left untouched — for now.
‘We Could Take It Very Easily’
Trump’s Sunday comments went further than a mere bombing. He suggested a ground seizure of the island was on the table. When asked about Iranian defences there, he shrugged it off: “I don’t think they have any defence. We could take it very easily.”
Military experts aren’t quite so breezy about it. Francis Galgano, a military geography specialist at Villanova University, told CNBC that seizing and holding the island would require moving approximately 5,000 ground combat troops into the region.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has refused to rule out ground forces in Iran, though he has insisted the US would not get “bogged down” in the country.
Meanwhile, one source with knowledge of White House thinking put it in stark terms: “We need about a month to weaken the Iranians more with strikes, take the island and then get them by the balls and use it for negotiations.”
The Venezuela Comparison
Trump compared his Iran ambitions directly to what the US is already doing in Venezuela. After the capture of Nicolás Maduro in January, Washington intends to control Venezuelan oil “indefinitely.” For Trump, Kharg Island appears to be the Persian Gulf version of that playbook.
He also revealed that Iran had made a gesture of goodwill — offering 20 boatloads of oil to be shipped to the US, which Trump said would begin arriving “tomorrow,” as Tehran attempts to signal it is serious about negotiations.
The Stakes for the World

This isn’t just a US-Iran issue. The ripple effects are being felt globally.
Goldman Sachs projects that if the war stretches on five or six more weeks, it will lead to a 14% contraction of the GDP of Qatar and several other Gulf countries — a domino effect that analysts compare to the global economic shock of COVID-19.
Oil prices have already surged dramatically. Brent crude has risen above $116 a barrel, near its highest point since the conflict began on February 28.
Analysts at JPMorgan warned that if Kharg Island were disabled, the loss of Iran’s storage buffer could put as much as half of the country’s national oil output at risk, with no viable export alternatives available to fill the gap.
Gulf allies, meanwhile, are privately sounding the alarm. A senior official from a Gulf country, speaking anonymously, said Iran was “not weak enough yet” for a US takeover of Kharg, warning that the regime is “weaker, but it’s not cracking.”
History Watching
There’s a reason no US president before Trump has said out loud that taking a country’s oil is the “favourite thing” about a war. Because saying it — and then doing it — rewrites the rules of international conflict in ways that go far beyond the Persian Gulf.
Whether Trump follows through on Kharg Island or walks it back into negotiating theatre, one thing is now undeniable: the mask is off, and the oil was always part of the plan.
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