Welcome to Thursday. If you’re waking up hoping for clarity in American institutions, you might want to hit snooze. Cracker Barrel rebrands away from its roots, the Trump administration sharpens immigration rules to screen for anti-Americanism, and Tulsi Gabbard launches a once-unthinkable purge of the nation’s top intelligence office. Here’s what you need to know.
Cracker Barrel’s New Look
Cracker Barrel has officially rebranded, and not everyone’s thrilled. The new logo, unveiled Aug. 18, ditches the old imagery — no more man in a rocking chair, no more barrel. What’s left is a minimalist “Cracker Barrel” typeface nestled in a soft-edged hexagon, with a color palette supposedly inspired by “farm fresh scrambled eggs and buttermilk biscuits.”
Cracker Barrel completely changed their iconic logo for the first time in 47 years…
— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) August 20, 2025
and it's absolutely horrible.
When will they learn? pic.twitter.com/ZhfVeR5CyO
Gone is the down-home charm.
But it’s not just the logo getting a facelift — the restaurant itself is being remodeled to reflect a more modern, minimalist aesthetic. That means stripping away the very things that made Cracker Barrel Cracker Barrel: the checkerboard floors, antique wall clutter, vintage signage, cozy fireplaces, and country-store chaos that greeted you with every stop off the highway.
Cracker Barrel CEO Julie Masino should face charges for this crime against humanity pic.twitter.com/auBFPi4bpr
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) August 21, 2025
Now, select locations are being redesigned to feel “streamlined” and “clean.” Which, to loyal patrons, translates to “soulless” and “identical to every other generic chain.”
Cracker Barrel is far from the only brand to make this leap into bland. In chasing a “future-proof” identity, these companies risk forgetting why people showed up in the first place.
America to Migrants: Love It or Leave It
In a major immigration policy update, the Trump administration is rolling out new vetting procedures for foreign nationals applying for visas or green cards. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) will now treat anti-American behavior — like online posts criticizing the U.S., showing support for terrorist groups, or promoting antisemitic views — as “overwhelmingly negative” factors when considering immigration benefits.
“We don’t owe the privilege of American life to people who hate this country,” said USCIS spokesman Matthew Tragesser.
Foreign students involved in anti-Israel campus protests may feel the brunt of this first, but the policy reflects a broader shift: under Trump’s second term, immigration standards are being raised and filtered more thoroughly.
This is just the latest in a string of changes from USCIS Director Joe Edlow, who is aggressively working to dismantle parole programs from the Biden era and weed out fraud and inaction in asylum processing. Edlow is also moving to bar non-citizens from U.S. elections and refocus the agency on positive societal contributions.
Gabbard Slashes the Intelligence Bureaucracy
Tulsi Gabbard, now Director of National Intelligence, has done what no spy chief before her dared: she’s firing nearly half the staff at ODNI and closing entire intelligence centers deemed politicized and ineffective.
Dubbed “ODNI 2.0,” the overhaul will shrink the agency from about 2,000 personnel to 1,300. Three major centers — the Foreign Malign Influence Center, the National Counterproliferation and Biosecurity Center, and the Cyber Threat Integration Center — will be shuttered or folded into other operations. Gabbard’s team found these offices had strayed from mission and crossed into partisan activism.
Notably, FMIC was linked to coordination with social media platforms to suppress stories like Hunter Biden’s laptop, raising red flags about the weaponization of intel for political purposes.
The External Research Council and National Intelligence University are also being dismantled, with Gabbard citing their use as “hubs for injecting partisan priorities.”
The cuts are expected to save $700 million annually, and may soon extend to other intelligence agencies. The move comes as former DNI James Clapper and others face a grand jury investigation over their role in the Russiagate narrative — which, according to recently declassified documents, relied on spun or manufactured intel kept tightly controlled by John Brennan’s CIA.
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