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Trump to Zelensky: Cease-fire main goal in Putin talks

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Quick Hit:

President Donald Trump told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky his top goal in Friday’s Alaska summit with Vladimir Putin is securing a cease-fire, calling the leaders’ call a “10” and signaling a follow-up meeting with Zelensky if talks go well.

Key Details:

  • Trump told Zelensky the primary goal of the Alaska summit with Putin is to push for a cease-fire.
  • A second meeting including Zelensky could follow immediately if Friday’s talks go well.
  • European leaders and Zelensky insisted no territorial concessions can be recognized without Ukraine’s consent.

Diving Deeper:

In a call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and European leaders Wednesday, President Donald Trump pledged that his main goal in Friday’s one-on-one meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, would be to push for a halt in the fighting. Zelensky, speaking to reporters in Berlin, said, “All the partners demonstrated one voice, one desire, and one principle — there should be a cease-fire, there should be security guarantees. President Trump said he supports this and spoke about America’s readiness to take part.”

The White House confirmed that this will be the first in-person meeting between a U.S. president and Putin since 2021. Secretary of State Marco Rubio described the gathering as a “listening exercise” aimed at gauging whether Putin is serious about ending the conflict. Trump himself told reporters at the Kennedy Center that the call with Zelensky went “very well” and rated it “a 10.” He added that if Friday’s discussion went smoothly, he would move “almost immediately” to arrange a follow-up meeting between himself, Putin, and Zelensky.

While Trump appeared eager to move toward a broader peace negotiation, Zelensky underscored that Ukraine’s participation in any settlement was non-negotiable. He pointed to his constitutional obligation to put any potential land deal to a referendum — a process Trump had earlier said “bothered” him. U.S. law also bars Washington from recognizing Ukrainian territory as Russian without international consensus, further complicating the Kremlin’s push to secure recognition of Donetsk and Luhansk before peace terms are reached.

European leaders reportedly used the call to make clear to Trump why recognizing the two eastern Ukrainian regions as Russian territory prior to a peace agreement would be impossible. Zelensky also urged both the U.S. and Europe to levy additional sanctions on Russia, warning that Putin “for sure doesn’t want peace. He wants to occupy our territories.”

Putin, who proposed the Alaska meeting, has long refused to meet directly with Zelensky but has expressed interest in face-to-face talks with Trump. While immediate breakthroughs are unlikely, the summit is expected to set the stage for a potential three-way negotiation — one Trump insists will be essential to ending the war.

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Toronto International Film Festival To Screen October 7 Doc After Backlash For Initial Ridiculous Excuse

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From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By Ellie Fromm

The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) announced it would navigate legal concerns around a showing of a film documenting the rescue of hostages on Oct. 7, 2023.

TIFF CEO Cameron Bailey stated via social media Wednesday evening that they would work with the filmmaker of “The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue” to proceed with the screening. The move comes after TIFF pulled the film from the line-up due to legal concerns that the film did not receive legal permission from Hamas to use footage of the terrorists.

“I want to be clear: claims that the film was rejected due to censorship are unequivocally false,” Bailey said in the statement. “I remain committed to working with the filmmaker to meet TIFF’s screening requirements to allow the film to be screened at this year’s festival. I have asked our legal team to work with the filmmaker on considering all options available.”

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“The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue” is a documentary about retired Israeli General Noam Tibon’s rescue mission of his son, daughter-in-law and grandchildren on Oct. 7, 2023.

Wendy Sachs, who directed a documentary about the explosion of antisemitism after Hamas’ October 7 attacks, claimed via Instagram that TIFF employee’s hijacked the film’s showing and forced executives to pull it from the schedule.

“The truth is that TIFF staffers refused to work if this film about a grandfather rescuing his family on October 7th was shown at the Toronto Film Festival,” Sachs said on Instagram. “We’ve had similar issues with my film @october8thefilm being protested or rejected because staffers threatened to quit if they showed or worked on the film. It’s outrageous.”

Hamas’ October 7 attacks were some of the deadliest attacks committed against Israel in history, launching approximately 5,000 rockets and sending armed militants into Israeli territory. Over 240 hostages were taken, 1,200 civilians were murdered and many women were sexually assaulted by Hamas that day.

“First and foremost, I would like to express my sincere apologies for any pain this situation may have caused,” Bailey said in the statement. “It was never my intention to offend or alienate anyone. At TIFF, we believe in the transformative power of film to foster understanding and dialogue, especially during challenging times.”

Bailey claimed he originally invited the film to show at TIFF because he believed it was important for a large scale of different stories and perspectives to be shown at the festival, according to his statement.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently said his forces aim to “liberate” the Gaza Strip from Hamas and then give control of the strip to Arab forces, with Israeli forces having only temporary control of the strip.

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Offshore Wind’s Mask Finally Comes Off

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From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By David Blackmon

The green fairy tale now seems to be unraveling faster than a faulty wind turbine blade in a Nantucket storm.

On Monday, Aug. 11, 2025, Danish offshore wind giant Ørsted dropped a bombshell, notifying the market it plans a massive rights issue worth up to 60 billion Danish kroner (about $9.4 billion) to prop up its flailing offshore U.S. operations. The plan, which amounts to almost 50% of Ørsted’s market cap, is a desperation move driven by the forces of reality and President Donald Trump’s no-nonsense energy policies.

Ørsted’s stock took a nosedive in the wake of Monday’s announcement, cratering as much as 31.2% in Copenhagen trading, erasing billions in value overnight.

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The panic comes as the company is scrambling to fund its Sunrise Wind project — a 924-megawatt eyesore off New York’s coast — and shore up another 8.1 gigawatts of planned capacity through 2027. Ørsted says the cash infusion is a direct response to what it delicately calls “material adverse developments” in the U.S. market.

Translated to plain English, this means Ørsted, whose normal business model would have involved selling a large minority share to investors to raise needed capital, has been unable to find any buyers as Trump’s energy policy revolution takes hold.

President Trump has made no bones about his disdain for the wind industry in general and offshore wind specifically. He promised repeatedly during his 2024 campaign to gut the offshore wind industry, citing its bogus environmental claims and visual pollution, and boy, has he delivered.

His Day One executive orders targeted both onshore and offshore wind, freezing new leases and issuing stop-work orders. That has been followed by more executive branch actions targeting wind, along with language in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act to phase out Biden’s heavy subsidies and other preferences for the wind business.

As a result, Ørsted found itself unable to offload a stake in Sunrise Wind because no sane investor wants in on a venture that’s now politically radioactive and never had a business model capable of surviving without heavy government subsidies. Farm-down deals like the one Ørsted had planned now lie dead in the water in the new energy policy reality.

But the truth is that Ørsted has struggled to make a go of U.S. offshore wind for years. Back in 2023, under the Biden administration’s subsidy-fueled frenzy, the company ate $5.6 billion in impairments on projects like Ocean Wind 1 and 2, leading to cancellations and a CEO ouster. Inflation, supply chain woes and unreliable subsidies turned what was supposed to be a green gold rush into a black hole for cash. Now, with Trump at the helm, the mask is off.

CEO Rasmus Errboe, who took over the job from Mads Nipper earlier in 2025, called the situation “extraordinary.” But let’s be honest: Under Mads Nipper, this company made a habit of demanding higher and higher subsidies from governments everywhere it operates in recent years. If anything, calling for more subsidies anytime the going gets rough seems to be a part of Ørsted’s core business planning.

Another reality most will miss where Ørsted is concerned is that the subsidies provided by Biden and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s government were just the tip of the iceberg. The Danish government owns a controlling 50.1% stake in the company, meaning Danish taxpayers are footing the bill for the majority of its operations in any event. If Sunrise Wind goes belly up, the Danish people take the biggest part of the hit.

Amazing, isn’t it?

Meanwhile, back in the U.S., Trump’s suspension of new wind leases is a breath of fresh air for fishermenwhales and anyone tired of seeing their coastlines industrialized for intermittent power that costs a fortune and delivers peanuts.

Ørsted’s latest fiasco is emblematic of the entire renewable scam. Offshore wind is hyped by virtue-signaling politicians as the savior of the planet, but it’s riddled with problems: soaring costs, environmental havoc (just ask the Nantucket folks suing over blade failures), and total dependence on subsidies that vanish when real leaders take charge.

Now, the truth is staring us in the face: the offshore wind fantasy is crumbling, and it’s about time. It’s an industry that richly deserves to be put out of its misery.

David Blackmon is an energy writer and consultant based in Texas. He spent 40 years in the oil and gas business, where he specialized in public policy and communications.

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