BREAKING: Adam Hoffman has been released from jail for "good behavior."
Hoffman is the 49-year-old Waco, TX attorney who faced life without parole for repeatedly raping a young boy, until Texas AG Ken Paxton offered him 1 day in jail and no need to register as a sex offender. A judge increased his sentence to a whopping 60 days. He got out in 30 days.
This is MAGA's vision for the USA. Full story: https://t.co/cU1WnZKAfr
Tried blaming Obama… didn’t go too well. This MAGA caller got EXPOSED.
At some point, you’ve gotta stop blaming the past and answer for what’s happening right now!
Un hombre cegado por una bandera que le tapa los ojos. No ve que avanza hacia el vacío.
Banksy ha captado la esencia de la ultraderecha en el mundo. Es un maldito genio.
Let the adult in the room speak.
To Nick Cannon and Chilli — I say this with love, but also with truth.
What y’all are saying right now… in my opinion… is dead wrong.
Now let me be clear — I’m the one who fought all the way to the Supreme Court for free speech. So I respect your right to say whatever you want. That’s a fact.
But this hits different.
Because the same Black people you’re turning your backs on…
The same Black women you’re dismissing…
Those are the same people who built you.
They buy your tickets. They watch your shows. They support your careers.
And now you’re aligning with a man — Donald Trump — who has openly disrespected Black women, including Michelle Obama, and countless other accomplished Black women.
Let’s talk facts:
Our people depend on the Department of Education.
Our people depend on HUD.
Our people depend on opportunity — not having their achievements dismissed as “DEI.”
This same man has:
•Tried to erase Black history
•Limited what our children can learn
•Praised and pardoned officers involved in killing unarmed Black men
So don’t act like this is just politics. This is personal.
Nick, you were right about one thing — yes, a Republican president signed the law freeing enslaved Africans. That’s history.
But you left out everything that happened AFTER that.
You left out where today’s MAGA movement stands.
You left out who has consistently fought for civil rights, voting rights, and opportunity.
If it was left up to them right now, they’d take us backwards — not forward.
And let’s be real…
If they truly cared about Black people — about Foundational Black Americans, descendants of slaves — we wouldn’t even be having this conversation.
We’d be talking about reparations.
So I’m not coming at y’all with hate… I’m coming at you with responsibility.
Because influence comes with accountability.
And right now… y’all on the wrong side of this one.
And people keep asking me why I’m running for Congress — this is exactly why.
To stand up. To speak out. To fight for our people when others won’t.
Go to my website, support the fight, and join the team:
https://t.co/jCqvMC3KI3
Make sure you’re on the right side of history.
@AnaKasparian I never have. Feel free to continue lying publicly, though. Those checks don’t cash themselves and you aren’t talented enough to be relevant with the truth.
Shay Taylor-Allen learned last week that she had matched with her first-choice residency pick, Yale School of Medicine — the very same hospital where she was born and later worked as a janitor. ABC News' Danny New has the story. https://t.co/Y4mQi3aXMr
(1/10 🧵) If you live in NY, you may see a new warning: “THIS PRICE WAS SET BY AN ALGORITHM USING YOUR PERSONAL DATA.” This mandatory disclosure went into effect late last year, and it’s the first attempt by a US state to grapple with a new generation of surveillance pricing.
We’re gathered in support of a lawsuit filed by former New York State Senator Thomas Duane and Chelsea public housing residents challenging NYCHA’s plan to lease the Fulton and Elliott-Chelsea Houses to Related Companies for 99 years in violation of state law.
We honor the life of Claudette Colvin, whose courageous refusal to surrender her seat as a teenager in Montgomery, Alabama was one of several acts of resistance that challenged segregation before the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Ms. Colvin later became one of the plaintiffs in Browder v. Gayle, the federal case that reached the Supreme Court and led to the end of bus segregation. Her life reminds us that progress is shaped not only by moments, but by sustained courage and truth. May we honor her legacy and continue the work of justice.
THE MINNESOTA MASSACRE
Or, How Federal Force Was Turned Against the People, and the Constitution Made an Afterthought
“Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigues of supporting it.”
— Thomas Paine
In Minnesota, armed agents of the federal government fired upon a civilian in the public street. Before inquiry, before testimony before the law could so much as clear its throat the executive power declared the act righteous. Judgment was rendered not by evidence, but by authority. This is not law. This is power speaking in advance of truth. When force is used against the people, the burden of proof belongs to the state. When the state answers that burden with certainty instead of investigation, it confesses not strength, but fear.
ICE was not created to rule communities by shock and spectacle. It was not endowed with moral exemption. It is bound—like every officer, like every agency—by oath to the Constitution. That oath demands restraint, impartiality, and silence until facts are known. To do otherwise is a breach of trust.
History teaches this lesson plainly.
In Boston, soldiers fired into a crowd. The Crown rushed to defend them. Civilians were blamed. Process was delayed. Power closed ranks. The outrage that followed was not born merely of bloodshed, but of pre-judgment of authority declaring itself innocent by decree.
Change the uniforms. The pattern remains.
The Minnesota Massacre is not defined by numbers, but by sequence: force first, verdict second, evidence last. A government that defends lethal force before investigation does not preserve order; it destroys legitimacy. A president who absolves agents before inquiry poisons due process and teaches every subordinate that loyalty outranks law.
This is a fiduciary failure. Power is held in trust for the people, not wielded against them. When that trust is abused, the injury falls not only on the victim, but on the republic itself. Some will say this is necessary. Others will say it is exceptional. History replies that exceptions are how abuses are born.
The Constitution does not permit executive righteousness in place of trial. It does not permit federal force to operate beyond scrutiny. It does not permit silence from the people when their rights are treated as obstacles.
Let this be said plainly: A state that fears investigation has already lost the moral ground it claims to stand upon. Shame is not too strong a word for those who rushed to judgment. Accountability is not extremism. Demanding process is not disorder. For when authority substitutes certainty for truth, liberty is no longer protected it is merely "postponed". These are the times that try men’s souls.