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Vince McMahon defends bringing Hulk Hogan back to WWE

Vince McMahon defended his decision to bring Hulk Hogan back to WWE in 2018, three years after the company severed ties with him once it was revealed that the pro wrestling icon had used a racial slur.
McMahon, who resigned from WWE and parent company TKO in January 2024 after a sexual misconduct lawsuit was filed against him by a former company employee, addressed his reaction to comments Hogan made during a sex tape and what happened in the aftermath during an interview for TMZ’s special on the Hulkster that aired Tuesday night on Fox.
McMahon had no issues bringing Hogan, who died at 71 in July, back to the WWE Hall of Fame and the company’s programming in 2018 after the multi-time world champion had paid a price in his eyes.
“I knew he wasn’t racist. I’ve been with him for so many years. He wasn’t a racist. He said some racist things. He should pay for that, and he did,” McMahon said on “TMZ Presents: The Real Hulk Hogan.” “In the end, I think everyone saw the real Hulk Hogan, Terry Bollea, and they felt, ‘Wait a minute, this guy doesn’t act like a racist. He’s not a racist.’ We all make mistakes. That was a big one, but he wasn’t a racist.”
In the 2007 sex tape that leaked in 2015, Hogan can be heard using the N-word multiple times and saying: “I guess we’re all a little racist.”
There is also audio of a 2008 conversation with his son Nick in prison, during which Hogan used racist language.
Hogan’s good friend Jimmy Hart also stated to TMZ that he did not believe Hogan was a racist. McMahon, who, along with Hogan, built WWE into a global wrestling power in the 1980s, could not believe the comments he heard from Hogan on the sex tape.
“It was unforgivable and I was aghast, ‘What happened?’” McMahon said. “When those things occurred, that’s not like him. ‘What in God’s name is going on?’”
It left WWE no choice but to shun Hogan.
“As soon as it happened, obviously, the company didn’t have anything to do with him anymore,” McMahon said. “We took him out of the Hall of Fame. You just don’t do those things.”
Hogan had called it a “glitch” and made attempts to apologize for his comments, but some, like former WWE star Mark Henry, have felt the legend did not go far enough to make things right. Henry refused to defend what Hogan said, but added that he offered Hogan and McMahon the idea of the Hulkster appearing at black colleges to help fix the situation at the time.
“Go and talk to them and be honest with your apology. He [Hogan] was like, ‘I’ve been advised not to talk about it no more.’ I said, ‘I think that’s bad advice,” Henry told TMZ.
McMahon, who has been persona non grata around WWE and its new parent company TKO after the lawsuit against him, was also asked if he had mixed emotions about not being invited to take part in any of the tributes WWE had for Hogan after his passing.
“It struck me that way as well,” McMahon said.
He called Hogan’s death a blow to my heart and was angry that his friend was booed during his last WWE appearance.
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Trump asks Supreme Court to take tariff appeal

U.S. President Donald Trump gestures during a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 26, 2025.
Jonathan Ernst | Reuters
President Donald Trump on Wednesday night asked the Supreme Court to quickly accept and rule on an appeal seeking to overturn lower court decisions that found most of his tariffs are illegal.
The request comes five days after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, in a 7-4 ruling, said that Trump overstepped his authority when he implemented the steep levies on virtually every country.
That decision threw a central pillar of Trump’s trade agenda into doubt.
Trump is asking the Supreme Court to hear arguments on his appeal in early November and issue a final decision on the legality of the disputed tariffs soon afterward, according to filings obtained by NBC News from the plaintiffs in the case.
Normally, the Supreme Court would take as long as early next summer to issue such a decision.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, in a declaration attached to Trump’s request, said the appeals court ruling “gravely undermines the President’s ability to conduct real-world diplomacy and his ability to protect the national security and economy of the United States,” the filing noted.
Filings by Trump also say that “delaying a ruling until June 2026 could result in a scenario in which $750 billion-$1 trillion in tariffs have already been collected, and unwinding them could cause significant disruption.”
Trump used the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, to impose steep levies on trading partners, declaring the United States’ federal deficit with other nations a national emergency.
But the appeals court said that “tariffs are a core Congressional power,” not a presidential authority.
“The core Congressional power to impose taxes such as tariffs is vested exclusively in the legislative branch by the Constitution,” the court said.
The appeals court paused its ruling from taking effect until Oct. 14, giving Trump time to ask the Supreme Court to hear his appeal, and the high court to potentially issue an indefinite stay of the decision until it resolves the appeal.
Jeffrey Schwab, senior counsel at the Liberty Justice Center, which represented plaintiffs who successfully sued to block the tariffs, in a statement said, “The government has now asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review this case. Both federal courts that considered the issue agreed that IEEPA does not give the President unchecked tariff authority.”
“We are confident that our legal arguments against the so‑called ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs will ultimately prevail,” Schwab said.
“These unlawful tariffs are inflicting serious harm on small businesses and jeopardizing their survival. We hope for a prompt resolution of this case for our clients.”
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Top Democrat says intelligence briefing cancelled after attacks by far-right Laura Loomer | US politics

Senator Mark Warner said on Wednesday that a meeting he had scheduled at the headquarters of a US intelligence agency was cancelled following online attacks by the far-right activist and conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer.
Warner, the Democratic vice-chair of the Senate intelligence committee, was set to visit the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency in Virginia in what he described part of his “responsibility to provide oversight and support to our intelligence community”.
The administration rescinded the invitation after Loomer initiated a “campaign of baseless attacks” against him and the agency’s director, Trey Whitworth, he said.
“I can’t overstate how unprecedented and dangerous this is,” Warner said in a fundraising email. “This administration is taking its marching orders from Laura Loomer – a wackjob with a long history of outlandish fringe views, including 9/11 denialism, anti-Muslim harassment campaigns, and associations with white supremacists.”
Loomer posted on social media in recent days complaining that the director of an intelligence agency was hosting a “rabid ANTI-TRUMP DEMOCRAT SENATOR”. She celebrated the cancellation, calling Warner a threat to national security and arguing he should be removed from the Senate committee.
“He weaponized our intelligence agencies to push the debunked Russia Collusion Hoax,” she wrote.
She told the New York Times Warner should “be removed from office and tried for treason”.
Warner told reporters that the decision to cancel the previously unpublicized meeting was made by the office of the defense secretary.
The incident illustrates Loomer’s enduring influence within Donald Trump’s administration. The 32-year-old, who has previously described herself as “a proud Islamophobe”, has acted as a national security and foreign policy adviser to the president. In April, Trump fired six staffers after Loomer gave him a list of people she believed were not sufficiently loyal to the president.
Last month, the administration announced it was planning to stop issuing visas to children from Gaza seeking medical care after complaints from Loomer.
Warner argued that Loomer is “basically a cabinet member at this point” and that Trump and his administration were “caving to whatever she wants”.
“This nakedly political decision undermines the dedicated, nonpartisan staff at [the] NGA and threatens the principle of civilian oversight that protects our national security,” Warner said in a statement.
“Members of Congress routinely conduct meetings and on-site engagements with federal employees in their states and districts; blocking and setting arbitrary conditions on these sessions sets a dangerous precedent, calling into question whether oversight is now allowed only when it pleases the far-right fringe.”
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Old master painting looted by Nazis recovered a week after being spotted in Argentinian property listing | Nazism

Authorities in Argentina have recovered an 18th-century painting stolen more than 80 years ago by the Nazis from a Jewish art dealer in Amsterdam, a week after it was spotted by chance in a real estate listing.
The painting, the long-lost Portrait of a Lady (Contessa Colleoni) by the Italian master Giuseppe Ghislandi, was looted in the second world war. It was handed over on Wednesday to the Argentinian judiciary by the daughter of the late Nazi financier Friedrich Kadgien, Patricia Kadgien, who has been under house arrest with her husband since Tuesday.
Prosecutors allege the couple tried to conceal the stolen artwork. They face a hearing on Thursday on charges of concealment and obstruction of justice. The Guardian contacted her legal representatives, who declined to comment.
The Dutch newspaper AD traced the painting after a years-long investigation that took a breakthrough turn last week when one of its reporters found Kadgien’s house in an online property listing in the seaside city of Mar del Plata.
A photo in the listing showed the missing artwork – last seen in 1946 and belonging to the Dutch Jewish art dealer Jacques Goudstikker – hanging above a sofa in the couple’s living room. AD published its findings on 25 August.
The next day, federal prosecutor Carlos Martínez ordered a raid on the property, but the painting was no longer there. Police seized two unlicensed firearms and two mobile phones.
Four additional raids on Monday uncovered two other paintings that experts believe could date back to the 19th century, along with several drawings and engravings. The judiciary is analysing the works to determine whether they, too, were looted during the second world war.
A federal court in Mar del Plata placed Kadgien and her husband under 72-hour house arrest on Tuesday.
After the fall of the Third Reich at the end of the second world war, several high-ranking Nazi officials fled to South America.
Friedrich Kadgien was among them. He fled the Netherlands in 1946, first to Switzerland, then Brazil, and finally to Argentina, where he had two daughters. The painting is believed to have accompanied him and to have remained in his family’s possession after he died in Buenos Aires in 1978.
The portrait was among more than 1,000 works of art stolen by the Nazis from Goudstikker, who died in 1940 after falling in the hold of the ship carrying him to safety.
Goudstikker’s heirs plan to reclaim the painting, AD reported.
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