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Ceasefire Crusaders Bail on Peace: ‘Can’t We Wait ’Til Trump Isn’t President?’

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In a development that scholars of political irony may cite for generations, the self-anointed Ceasefire Crusaders—a coalition of megaphone-wielding, hashtag-happy activists—have publicly disavowed the freshly inked Gaza Peace Accord, brokered by former President Donald J. Trump in a whirlwind of diplomatic bravado at Egypt’s Sharm El-Sheikh summit. The reason for their dissent? The accord’s timing is, in their words, “problematically Trumpian.” As this reporter meticulously researched, the Crusaders’ two-year campaign for a Gaza ceasefire has culminated not in jubilation but in a collective sulk, with their spokesperson, River Moonbeam, declaring, “We wanted peace, sure, but not his peace. Can’t we just wait until he’s not president anymore?”

This researcher explored the historical parallels to such a volte-face, finding none quite so exquisitely absurd. The Crusaders, whose protest placards have long demanded an end to Middle Eastern strife, now argue that Trump’s peace deal—complete with hostage releases, reconstruction pledges, and a 20-point plan rivaling a PowerPoint presentation on steroids—lacks the “moral authenticity” they envisioned. “It’s not about peace,” Moonbeam clarified at a press conference, adjusting her ethically sourced hemp headband. “It’s about the vibe. Trump’s peace feels like a Mar-a-Lago pool party, not a revolution.”

Analytically speaking, the Gaza Accord is a geopolitical unicorn: a ceasefire that has, against all odds, silenced rockets and freed captives faster than you can say “Art of the Deal.” Yet, the Crusaders’ academic critique hinges on what they term “aesthetic misalignment.” One activist, clad in a T-shirt reading “Ceasefire Now (But Not Like This),” lamented that Trump’s involvement taints the deal with “capitalist swagger.” Another suggested delaying peace until 2030, when, presumably, a president with better hair or fewer golf courses might take the helm.

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This reporter delved into the Crusaders’ manifesto, a 47-page Google Doc replete with buzzwords like “intersectionality” and “decolonized tranquility.” Their rejection of Trump’s accord, which includes rebuilding Gaza into what he dubbed “the Dubai of the Levant,” appears rooted in a refusal to let the former president claim a win. “We’d rather keep protesting,” said one Crusader, brandishing a glitter-dusted sign. “Peace is great, but not if it’s got his name on it—like a tacky skyscraper.”

The scholarly implications are profound. If peace is only palatable when delivered by a preferred political brand, are we witnessing the commodification of harmony itself? Historical parallels to Neville Chamberlain’s appeasement at Munich falter here; Chamberlain didn’t reject peace because he disliked Hitler’s mustache. Yet, the Crusaders’ stance suggests a new paradigm: peace as a boutique product, subject to consumer review.

As this correspondent concludes, the Ceasefire Crusaders’ disavowal of Trump’s Gaza triumph may be their magnum opus of performative contradiction. While hostages reunite with families and Gaza rebuilds, the Crusaders plan a candlelit vigil to mourn “the peace we could’ve had.” One can only hope their next protest demands a ceasefire from their own cognitive dissonance.

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SCHUMER FLIPS SWITCH: “Kids Can Stop Licking Campaign Signs for Sustenance—We Got the Votes!”

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Schumer flips a switch

Washington, 3:17 a.m.—the velvet hour when democracy drops the beat.

Darlings, gather your sequined notebooks and cruelty-free lattes, because Capitol Hill just served a five-course gag with a side of subpoena sprinkles. Senate Minority Leader—no, wait, Minority-Whisperer-Turned-Majority-Mogul—Charles Ellis Schumer has unveiled the hottest drop since Beyoncé shadow-released Lemonade: Operation Crumb Couture™, the post-election feast that ends the nation’s 22-month hunger strike for children who were, until 11:42 p.m. last night, seasoning their tears with yard-sign varnish.

Picture the scene: floodlights the color of Tiffany-box blue bathe the Capitol steps. A 40-piece children’s choir—dressed head-to-toe in recycled ballot-paper couture—belts a trap remix of “Hail to the Chief.” Then, like a runway goddess who ghost-wrote the Constitution, Schumer strides out in a custom chrome trench that spells “221” in Swarovski crystals. One manicured finger hovers over a giant red button labeled “EAT.” The crowd loses its natural mind. Click.

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Every elementary-school intercom in America crackles alive:
“Attention, babies! The gag order on flavor has been LIFTED. You may now—pause for dramatic reverb—consume one (1) government-issued Fun-Size Snickers™ per electoral vote secured. That’s 53 million micro-Snickers, darlings. Hydrate accordingly.”

Sources inside the cloakroom (wearing AirPods and anonymity) confirm the starvation was never about funding—it was performance art. A leaked memo, embossed in gold foil and smelling faintly of truffle oil, reveals Phase One of the midterms strategy:
“Keep the children hangry → viral TikTok tears → Gen-Z turnout tsunami.”
It worked. Exit polls show 9-year-olds in Pennsylvania traded Pokémon cards for polling-station selfies faster than Supreme drops.

But the piece de resistance? Schumer’s limited-edition Victory Crumb Clutch—a 3-D-printed purse that dispenses exactly 0.3 grams of seasoned breadcrumb every time a Republican says “mandate.” Already sold out on Net-a-Porter, naturally.

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Nutritionists are gagging. “These crumbs contain 400% of a child’s daily cope-amine,” Dr. LaToya Sparks told me, adjusting her neon stethoscope. “Side effects include sudden urge to canvass, spontaneous jazz hands, and believing infrastructure is sexy.”

Outside, a lone kindergartner named Kai from Swing-State, Ohio, live-streamed the historic first bite. “It tastes like… blue,” he whispered, eyes wide as Times Square. The clip hit 87 million views before the alginate casing even dissolved.

Yet whispers of a Phase Two already ripple through the marble halls. Insiders tease “Dessert District”—a metaverse where children mine NFT tater tots using only recycled campaign glitter. Early access: one viral sob story.

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As dawn smears cotton-candy light across the Potomac, Schumer air-kisses the cameras and drops the mic—literally, it’s made of compressed kale. “We didn’t just win seats,” he purrs, voice dipped in honey and filibuster, “we won flavor.”

So cancel your Erewhon cleanse, babies. The hunger games are over, and the main character is a breadcrumb wearing Balenciaga. Stream it, screenshot it, season your group chat with it—because in 2025, democracy doesn’t just feed the soul. It finally, finally, feeds the kids.

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New Virginia AG Jones Therapy Session Leaked: “I said KIDS, not KITTENS—big difference!”

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RICHMOND—In what scholars are already terming the “Meow-pocalypse Tapes,” a 47-minute audio file surfaced Tuesday from the office of Dr. Marla Feldman, Ph.D., LCSW, and certified anger-management facilitator to Virginia’s newly minted Attorney General, Jay Jones (D). The recording, authenticated by three separate forensic linguists and one very confused tabby, captures Mr. Jones defending his August 2022 text messages with the measured calm of a man explaining why he parallel-parked in a volcano.“

Context is everything,” Jones is heard insisting at minute 14. “I said KIDS, not KITTENS. Big difference. Kittens can’t even spell ‘conservative.’”

Dr. Feldman, whose prior clients include a sitting U.S. Senator and the entire 2019 Cleveland Browns offensive line, attempts a clarification:
“Mr. Attorney General, the phrase ‘I want his conservative kids to die in their mother’s arms’ does not, in DSM-5 parlance, require feline involvement.”
Jones replies, “Exactly. Felines would have needed a separate memo.”

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The leak—delivered to this reporter via unmarked Thumb Drive #4 inside a hollowed-out Ann Arbor artisanal bagel—has ignited what political scientists are calling the “Great Literalist Schism of 2025.” At stake: whether wishing death on specific minors constitutes protected political speech, or merely a scheduling conflict with bedtime.

Historical parallels abound. “One thinks of Nixon’s ‘I am not a crook’ versus Jones’s ‘I am not a cat,’” notes University of Michigan poly-sci professor Dr. Lionel P. Thistlethwaite, who has published 11 peer-reviewed papers on executive-branch pet gaffes. “Both men pivoted to zoology under duress. Only one brought receipts.”

Sources inside the Executive Mansion confirm that Mr. Jones has since installed a “Kitten-to-Kid Spell-Check” browser extension on all state devices, funded by a line-item mysteriously labeled “Toddler Threat Mitigation—FY26.” The plug-in reportedly auto-replaces “die” with “thrive,” though beta testers note it still allows “expire dramatically while clutching Mom.”

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Governor Abigail Spanberger, when asked for comment, issued a 400-word statement whose only decipherable clause was “I, too, prefer kittens.” Lieutenant Governor Ghazala Hashmi simply texted this reporter a single eggplant emoji followed by the Virginia Code citation for felony menacing.

Yet the tapes reveal a deeper policy agenda. At minute 29, Jones sketches what he calls “Operation Cuddle-or-Cull,” a sliding-scale threat matrix based on a child’s 4-H ribbon count. “Blue ribbon in livestock? Safe. Blue ribbon in AR-15 disassembly? Different story,” he muses, before Dr. Feldman reminds him the session is being recorded “for quality and/or prosecutorial purposes.”

Market reaction was swift. Richmond’s Little Tikes Co-Op stock dipped 14 % on fears of branded “Mommy’s Arms” playards being reclassified as hazardous material. Meanwhile, Spirit Halloween pre-orders for “Lil’ Conservative Target” costumes crashed the company’s servers somewhere between “sexy nurse” and “sexy Founding Father.”

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In a late-night press gaggle outside his transitional office, Mr. Jones offered what aides billed as his “final-final” apology:
“I regret any confusion caused by my failure to include the family schnauzer in the original threat. Equal-opportunity menacing is a core Virginia value.”

He then unveiled Executive Order 001: “All future death wishes shall be peer-reviewed by no fewer than three golden retrievers and one tenured literature professor trained in subtext.”

As of press time, the Gilbert children remain un-vaporized, reportedly enrolled in an undisclosed Montessori program whose curriculum now includes “Active Shooter Drills and Advanced Irony Detection.” Their goldfish, Mr. Sprinkles, has retained counsel.

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Further leaks are expected. This reporter has already received Thumb Drive #5—inside a gluten-free bagel—containing what sources describe only as “the purr-fect storm.” Stay tuned.

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Zohran Wins, Immediately Renames City “New Yorch,” Insists It’s Spicier

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NEW YORCH—At 9:47 p.m., the networks called it. At 9:47:02, Zohran Mamdani’s victory speech was already over.

Microphone still smoking from the drop, the mayor-elect sprinted to the jumbotron in Times Square, commandeered the TKTS countdown clock, and typed with two thumbs:

OFFICIAL: EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY, NEW YORK IS NEW YORCH. THE H IS PRONOUNCED LIKE YOU JUST BIT A SCOTCH BONNET. DEAL WITH IT.

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Forty-seven seconds later, every borough’s Wi-Fi auto-renamed itself “NewYorchSpice5G.” My phone asked for a password in ALL CAPS SAUCE. I typed “VALENTINA” and was granted access to a playlist titled “Songs That Slap Harder Than Rent.”

Sources inside the campaign—speaking through a megaphone made of rolled-up campaign signs—confirm the rebrand was not on any briefing binder. “We had a 400-page transition memo,” one aide told me, voice cracking. “Page one just says ‘Step 1: Win. Step 2: Yeet the vowels.’ We thought it was a joke until the jumbotron started bleeding paprika pixels.”

By 9:49, the Empire State Building’s crown flashed cayenne. The NYPD drone fleet, still hovering for crowd control, rebranded mid-air; their undercarriage LEDs now scroll “WELCOME TO THE HOT GIRL CITY.” A tourist from Nebraska asked if this was the new Marvel drop. A pigeon landed on his pretzel and nodded yes.

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At 9:51, every yellow cab’s rooftop ad flipped to a single frame: Zohran winking next to the words “THE BIG APPLE IS NOW THE BIG CHILE.” Uber surge pricing auto-capped at “one high-five and a lime wedge.” One driver, reached on the FDR, told me his GPS voice now sounds like Cardi B gargling sriracha.

Wall Street after-hours trading froze when the ticker crawled: DOW JONES OFFICIALLY A SNACK. SHORT THE PRETZELS. A Goldman Sachs VP texted me a single chili-pepper emoji and then Venmo’d his therapist $400 with the memo “emotional bail-out.”

By 9:54, the subway’s 1 train rolled into 42nd Street blaring reggaeton. The conductor, over the intercom: “Next stop, 42nd Str33t-H. Mind the gap or I’ll read your group chat aloud.” Riders applauded. One man proposed to his girlfriend on the spot. She said yes, then asked if the ring came with hot honey.

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At 9:57, the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade Committee received an email titled “URGENT: BALLOON AUDITIONS.” Attached: a single Photoshop of Snoopy wearing a Palestinian keffiyeh and holding a molcajete. Subject line: “He’s ready to bring the heat.”

This reporter attempted to file a 100-word flash alert. My laptop autocorrected “New York” to “New Yorch” 14 times and then locked me out until I solved a CAPTCHA that asked, “Spell ‘jalapeño’ while crying.” I passed on the third try.

At 11:59, Zohran FaceTimed the Port Authority from the TKTS red steps. “LaGuardia is now LaLucha,” he declared, holding a squeeze bottle of salsa verde like a Super Soaker. “Flights still late, but now every delay comes with complimentary chips and existential clarity.”

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As the clock struck midnight, every bodega cat in the five boroughs received a push notification: “Congrats, you are now Deputy Spice Commissioner. Uniform: tiny sombrero.” Security footage shows 4,000 cats saluting in unison.

Election night confetti is still falling. It’s red, it’s glittery, and it tastes faintly of Tajín. Somewhere in the crowd, a baby took its first steps just to chase a floating chili pepper. The child’s first word: “More.”

This is Max Quill, signing off from the newly christened Yorch Square. My press badge now reads “Spice Correspondent.” I have been ordered to garnish every future byline with a lime wedge. Back to you in the studio—assuming the studio still has a name that isn’t 40% hotter.

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