Sean Hannity | “This is dangerous. I had somebody that wouldn’t let an elevator shut.”

NY Post | It’s increasingly clear that Democrats and the media establishment made an enormous miscalculation by waging total war against Kavanaugh and his family.

Daily Mail | Non-invasive brain scans could one day be used to assess workers’ competence on the job.

NBC News | Cows burp and fart more than they need to, according to a Swiss firm that says it has developed a feed that cuts methane emissions from livestock — helping to combat global warming into the bargain.

Daily Mail | Facebook has been illegally collecting data on children in its Messenger Kids app, according to a coalition of child and consumer advocacy groups. 

NBC News | All 100 senators will have secure access to the new information on Thursday, but not their staffs. They have set a pecking order for who gets to see it first.

CNS News | The lawyer who won a multi-million dollar libel settlement for Melania Trump is now warning The New York Times about a story suggesting her husband, President Donald Trump, may have committed tax fraud.

Star Tribune | A statement said the department would seek to refer the case elsewhere.

Andrew Syrios | The Left has become increasingly and often bizarrely obsessed with all manners of supposed privilege these days.

Washington Examiner | Just a third of Americans can pass a multiple choice “U.S. Citizenship Test,” fumbling over such simple questions as the cause of the Cold War or naming just one thing Benjamin Franklin is famous for.

Free Beacon | Pro-life demonstrators held an annual “Life Chain” event across Canada on Sept. 30, but one of the peaceful protesters ended up facing violence.

Mac Slavo | Interest rates will rise quickly and those hikes are going to be pretty big.

Free Beacon | U.K. leaders, concerned with Corbyn’s ties, ask for legal review of Corbyn’s Hamas ties.

Michael Snyder | U.S. bonds have not fallen like this since Donald Trump’s stunning election victory in November 2016. 

Friedrich Hayek | In all democratic countries, in the United States even more than elsewhere, a strong belief prevails that the influence of the intellectuals on politics is negligible.