Isræli False Flag at the Pentagon — Failed?
Col. Lawrence Wilkerson: “Hell, I don’t run my building. Moššad does.”
Then watch him says:
“I watched Moššad take over the Pentagon in 2002.”
From USS Liberty in June 1967 to the Pentagon hazardous-materials incident in June 2026, the same doctrine keeps reappearing:
Isræli action.
American exposure.
System protection.
Buried witnesses.
Nevada exposed the legal gate:
Isræli Sigal Chattah’s office dropped the Isræli biolab case and let an Isræli predator flee back to Isræl after an FBI sting.
Then came the Pentagon chain:
Isræli espionage raised to “critical.”
Pentagon hazardous materials.
Trump calls Netanyahu “f*cking crazy.”
Bibi pushes toward Iran war.
Watch the short investigative documentary.
Then read the thread for the full timeline and receipts. 1/5🧵
Full timeline:
0:00 — Opening Montage: The Pattern Before the Timeline
1:38 — Col. Lawrence Wilkerson: “Mossad Took Over the Pentagon”
2:27 — Saagar: Pentagon Raises Israeli Espionage Threat to “Critical”
3:16 — Fox News: Hazardous-Materials Incident at the Pentagon
4:00 — @krystalball : Why Deeper U.S.–Israeli Military Integration Is Dangerous
5:18 — Ana Kasparian: Israeli Predator Tom Alexandrovich and Biolab Operator Ori Solomon
6:09 — KTNV Las Vegas: Israeli Sigal Chattah Ruled Unlawfully Serving
7:26 — Ana Kasparian: Federal Charges Dropped Against Israeli Ori Solomon
8:20 — @RepThomasMassie: USS Liberty Remembered on the House Floor
An 1,800-year-old silver amulet discovered in Germany contains references to Jesus Christ and may be the earliest known archaeological evidence of Christianity north of the Alps.
Empires have come and gone.
The message remains the same:
“Jesus Christ is Lord.” Philippians 2:11
EX-CIA OFFICER SAID THIS YEARS AGO ✡️🚨
Former CIA officer Philip Giraldi warned that Israeli espionage against the United States was so extensive it could almost be viewed as an act of war.
This was 20 years ago.
Imagine the scale today.
I’ve been sharing this all day to small accounts to big accounts on X … and I hope it goes fucking viral everywhere
Deport Deport
Deport the fucking lot
This Ukrainian girl's mother died 4 years ago. Yesterday, the TCC abducted her father. They promised her he’d be shortly released. But he never returned.
The child is now an orphan. Life under Zelensky is hell. He’s sacrificing whoever he can get his hands on.
For two days, his owners believed he had gone missing because he never came home. In reality, he was staying on the hills to guard a sheep that had just given birth. If loyalty could be captured in one image, it would probably look exactly like this dog. 🐕🐑⛰️
One of the most brutal scenes in human history has been exposed.
Israeli soldiers opened fire on thousands of starving Gazans as they ran in desperation for a piece of food during the war on Gaza.
A moment the world must never forget.
Tucker Carlson alleges that through bribes, assassination attempts, spying, and political pressure, Israel has forced Trump into war with Iran that he can’t get out of.
Carlson has noted that Trump shut down his own investigation into the Butler Assassination Attempt, was terrified of Bibi Netanyahu giving him a golden pager, and that, despite his best efforts, Trump has been steadily slow-walked into a war with Iran against his will.
Carlson has also alleged that Charlie Kirk, a chief opponent of war against Iran, was assassinated as part of a broader plot, with Israel covering it up, despite believing Tyler Robinson’s involvement.
Carlson pointed to Joe Kent and numerous attempts made by Israel not only to spy on Trump, but to hinder “first responders” that would help Trump in an assassination attempt.
Examining the war, Tucker points out that the US has spent more on defending Israel than on the Gulf states, and more defending Israel that it has spent on its own defense.
Follow: @AFpost
Reintegrating elephants and rhinos looks a little different. But the end result – a life in the wild – is always the same.
Central to the successful rewilding of both species is gradual acceptance by the locals. Our elephant orphans hone their survival skills over years through face-to-face interactions with wild elephants, and we tend to find herds are accepting of their presence.
Rhinos are different. Deeply territorial, they don't welcome newcomers. Our rhino orphans learn through scent, dung piles and the slow process of being recognised by the wild rhinos around them. Every day, dawn to dusk, their Keepers walk them along the trails and dung piles left by their wild neighbours. The calf contributes its own, and gradually – over years – it becomes an accepted part of the local community. Apollo here is mid-way through that process.
Read more: https://t.co/jjLgqc8QKt
This World Cup, everyone with Norway 🇳🇴
The joy Norway experienced at the end of the match after defeating Israel 5-0:
Norway donated all the match's proceeds to Palestine.
Italian Prime Minister Meloni is preparing to expel all Israelis residing in the country without valid visas.
"I am a woman and at the same time a mother! I cannot stand alongside a slaughterer of innocent children."
#ThoughtForTheDay
Pigeons get called sky rats.
But birds like these once carried messages through gunfire when every radio failed.
And the part most people miss is this.
For thousands of years humans relied on pigeons to move information faster than any technology available at the time. Their homing instinct is so precise that a trained bird released hundreds of miles away can still navigate straight back to its loft.
That simple biological skill made them invaluable in war.
During World War I and World War II, armies deployed hundreds of thousands of pigeons. When telephone wires were cut and radio signals failed, commanders often had only one reliable way to send a message through chaos.
In 1918 a Pigeon named Cher Ami carried a desperate note from trapped American troops in the Argonne Forest. The bird was shot through the chest and lost part of a leg during the flight but still delivered the message, helping stop friendly artillery fire and saving nearly two hundred soldiers.
Today their descendants wander city sidewalks, pecking quietly for crumbs.
Most people see a nuisance.
History once saw a lifeline with wings.