
U.S. engineers have discovered mysterious, undocumented communication devices lurking in some Chinese-made solar power inverters and batteries Reuters reported. In the case of the suspicious Chinese power inverters, the devices were designed to connect solar panel arrays and windmills to power grids. They have Internet capability, so their performance can be monitored and their software can be updated easily... an unwelcome reminder for solar panel owners that their equipment could be controlled or shut down using the Internet. Associated Press reported: “Pope Leo XIV affirmed Friday that the family is founded on the “stable union between a man and a woman,” and that the unborn and elderly enjoy dignity as God’s creatures, articulating clear Catholic teaching on marriage and abortion at the start of his pontificate. In the same speech, the pontiff rejected LGBT ideology, denounced abortion and euthanasia – that’s a great start. https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2025/05/pope-leo-xiv-family-is-stable-union-between/ A Pollfish survey of 1,000 managers across America, reported by Resume.com, revealed the reasons that eight in 10 managers said newly hired college graduates did not work out during their first year on the job. Excessive use of cell phones ranked as the top pet peeve of managers, at 78 percent. Some 61 percent of managers found their new hires were entitled or easily offended, while 57 percent noted these new employees were unprepared for the workplace. Lack of a work ethic scored 54 percent, followed by poor communication skills at 48 percent and lack of technical skills at 27 percent. Other concerns managers had about the graduates included lateness, failure to turn in assignments on time, unprofessional behavior, and inappropriate dress and language. Seventy percent of companies surveyed noted that some hires had to be placed on performance improvement plans. “Colleges don’t teach students how to behave in the workplace, and there is a lack of transitional support from both universities and employers,” Resume.org’s career coach Irina Pichura stated in the report. “Most students graduate with little exposure to professional environments, so when they arrive at their first job, they’re often learning basic workplace norms for the first time. Colleges should have a workplace training program to support graduates’ transition to the workplace.” Only 58 percent of companies responding to the Pollfish survey indicated they plan to hire from the class of 2025, and one in six hiring managers admit they’re hesitant to hire recent graduates at all. Of those managers who are open to hiring new Generation Z graduates, more than 50 percent are seeking qualities such as initiative, a positive attitude, a strong work ethic, adaptability, and openness to feedback. As Breitbart News reported, a Mexican navy ship with over 270 people aboard hit iconic New York City bridge on Saturday evening, with the losses attributed to the massive 150-foot masts on the vessel, known as the Cuauhtémoc Training Ship, hitting the crowded decks as they fell. The cause of the collision is under investigation. AP reports New York Police Department Special Operations Chief Wilson Aramboles said the ship had just left a Manhattan pier and was supposed to have been headed seawards not toward the bridge. ... an initial report was that the pilot of the ship had lost power due to a mechanical problem, though officials cautioned information was preliminary. Lead researcher and founder of GeoengineeringWatch.org Dane Wigington, however, has dedicated his life to exposing and halting covert climate engineering operations. On a recent episode of “Back to the People,” he told Nicole Shanahan the wild story of how he became one of the world's most vocal critics of geo-engineering — an insidious threat most know nothing about. Many years ago, Wigington built an off-grid home powered by solar, wind, and hydro energy in a remote area near Lake Shasta in Northern California. Everything was going great; his home was even featured in a major renewable energy magazine, celebrating his expertise in sustainable living. But one day, something changed: His solar panels began losing a huge amount of power. Given his professional background in solar energy, Wigington knew that the culprit couldn’t possibly be natural. After extensive research, he found the answer in his rainwater: It had aluminum in it — toxic levels that rose dramatically over an 18-month period. Aluminum, Wigington explained, “is abundant in the Earth's strata; it does not exist in free form naturally — period. If it's in free form, it's been mined and refined and dispersed.” In other words, climate engineering programs, specifically in the field of solar radiation management, were likely spraying aluminum nanoparticles into the atmosphere to reflect sunlight and cool the planet, which is deeply problematic considering “aluminum is toxic to all life forms.” The rainwater is “killing virtually all soil microbiome. ... Our forests are completely imploding, not just in Northern California — the entire North American West Coast and most places around the world, and they blame that on beetles or a pest,” says Wigington, but “that's a symptom of a sick, dead, dying tree and ecosystem.” “We have too many agencies trying to protect their paychecks and pensions and not willing to tell the truth.” And that truth is: Geo-engineering, which is marketed as a means of mitigating climate change, is actually causing it. “It’s speeding up drying,” even though “the goal is to block out the sun to keep the land from heating,” echoes Nicole.Report: U.S. Engineers Find ‘Rogue Communication Devices’ in Chinese Solar Panels:
Pope Leo XIV: A Family Is ‘A Stable Union Between a Man and a Woman’, the Unborn and Elderly ‘Enjoy Dignity as God’s Creatures’:
New College Grads Not Working Out, Most Hiring Managers Say: Survey
Mexico President Mourns Loss of Two Sailors in Brooklyn Bridge Tragedy: