🚨Stephen Miller outlines the US government's legal ground for the prosecution of the attempted coup d'état, insurrection and conspiracy.
Listen to every word.
"Comey, Clapper, Brennan, Obama, Monaco all conspired together, all worked together to try to sabotage, undermine, unravel the democratic institutions and structures of this country.
The Russiagate hoax, the Russiagate conspiracy, and all of the assaults against our liberties along with it, the pre-dawn raids, the handcuffing of innocent Americans, the espionage against President Trump's campaign and staff, the removal of his National Security Advisor, one fake indictment, one fake charge after another, the special counsel, all of it, was an unrelenting attempt to overthrow the government the American people voted for.
I cannot find words harsh enough to condemn the conduct of these conspirators, these insurrectionists."
@greg_price11 Judge Alito is absolutely correct in pointing out that it would be partisan to run out the clock in favor of a party keeping in force a rule that has already been found unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
It’s absurd.
🚨 HE JOKED ON TIKTOK ABOUT BUYING SPIRIT AIRLINES… HOURS LATER $132,000,000 FLOODED IN — NOW HE COULD BE CEO
Spirit Airlines didn’t just struggle… it collapsed.
One of America’s biggest low-cost carriers wiped out.
That’s when this guy stepped in.
The same guy who went viral for flying Spirit Airlines for 24 hours straight on YouTube.
He posted a simple idea on social media:
“What if we all just… buy it?”
His logic?
There are 250M+ adults in the U.S.
If even a fraction chipped in the cost of a Spirit ticket ($30–$40)… you could raise billions.
Then it exploded.
• Millions of views within hours
• Website launched in under an hour
• Traffic crashes it instantly
• Media starts calling (WSJ, CBS, Fox)
• Developers, lawyers, PR scrambling to join
A few hours later?
$132,000,000 in pledges.
(No money collected, just people saying they’re in)
Now he’s pitching something even bigger:
• One person = one vote (not based on money)
• No private equity control
• Airline “owned by the people”
• Him… stepping in as CEO
He admits he’s figuring it out in real time.
It started as a joke but turned into a movement overnight.
People aren’t laughing anymore… they’re signing up.
Would you trust a random guy from TikTok to run this airline… or stick with the people who ran it into the ground?
📹: TikTok/hbpvo
FAUCI CAUGHT ON TAPE: "When you make it difficult for people in their lives, they lose their ideological BS and they get VACCINATED."
"You want to come to this college, buddy? You're going to get VACCINATED."
ONE WEEK LEFT TO PROSECUTE HIM.
The decision should be EASY.
Reminder that the Iranian Revolution started as a student-led leftist Marxist movement to overthrow the Shah. Then Muslims joined in, presenting themselves as ‘anti-imperialists’ too.
Once the Islamic regime took power, those same leftist students and their progressive ideals were the first to be killed.
Leftist students in American and Western universities are literally making the same mistake right now. They never learned the lesson.
Joe Rogan: "You have people like Bill Gates saying that planting trees to deal with carbon dioxide is ridiculous. How is that ridiculous? They literally turn carbon dioxide into oxygen. It's their food."
We aren’t just getting shorted in product weight on food
This is a 100 pack of screws from Home Depot
“I just counted them — I dumped 'em out. 73, there's 73 screws in here”
Missing 1 or 2 is an error. Missing 27% of the product is fraud
Americans are being robbed blind
Most under talked about news story this week:
The massive fires in the Pacific Palisades were deliberately started by a radical left freak who idolizes Luigi Mangione.
Remember when @GavinNewsom said it was because of climate change?
Wow. The Democrat Party is a terrorist org.
There's a clay tablet with the founding charter of a 12-partner company on it. Twelve merchants pooled 33 pounds of gold to start the firm. The contract has the partner names, the starting capital, the profit split, and the penalty for cashing out early.
The tablet is nearly 4,000 years old. It was found at a site called Kanesh, in central Turkey. Archaeologists have dug up 23,500 of these clay records there, most of them business documents: receipts, loan contracts, shipping orders, lawsuits. The houses they were stored in eventually burned. The fire baked the clay solid and preserved every record.
The merchants came from Assur, in modern-day Iraq. They loaded donkeys with tin and cloth and walked them 1,000 kilometers across mountain passes to Kanesh, roughly the distance from New York to Atlanta. Each donkey carried about 180 pounds and the trip took two to three months. They came home with silver and gold.
The company ran for twelve years under a merchant named Amur Ishtar. A third of the profits went back to the investors. Pull your share out early and the firm gave you four kilos of silver per kilo of gold, half the normal rate. Locked-up money was meant to stay locked up.
That one company was just a tiny piece. The tablets show a complete economy with partners suing each other in commercial court, husbands writing home about prices, and wives writing back complaining the husband had been gone too long. A woman named Ahatum quietly lent silver to four different men over nine years. People bought up other people's loan documents and used them as collateral for new loans, the same thing Wall Street does today with mortgage-backed securities. One merchant got caught smuggling tin in his underwear to dodge a 10% import tax.
In 2019, four economists from Harvard, Sciences Po, Chicago, and Virginia ran the tablet numbers through a gravity model, the math economists use today to predict how much two countries will trade based on size and distance. The Bronze Age numbers matched modern trade numbers almost exactly. Trade fell off with distance at nearly the same rate it does between countries today. The paper ran in the Quarterly Journal of Economics.
There was no economic theory yet. The idea didn't even have a name. The word "capitalism" wouldn't be coined for another 3,800 years, and Adam Smith was 3,700 years away from writing a sentence about markets. Just a guy named Pushu-ken writing a clay tablet to his business partner about a shipment of cloth, and a woman in Assur recording who owed her how much silver. Capitalism was already there, doing its full job, almost four thousand years before anyone wrote down a theory of how it worked.
Winston Churchill fought his depression with bricks. He'd lay them for hours at his country home in Kent. He joined the bricklayers' union. And in 1921 he wrote about why it worked. It took psychology another 75 years to catch up.
He called his depression the "Black Dog." It followed him for decades. His method for fighting it back was as basic as it sounds: laying brick after brick, hour after hour.
Churchill spelled out his theory in a long essay for The Strand Magazine. People who think for a living, he wrote, can't fix a tired brain just by resting it. They have to use a different part of themselves. The part that moves the eyes and the hands. Woodworking, chemistry, bookbinding, bricklaying, painting. Anything that drags the body into a problem the mind can't solve by itself.
Modern psychology now calls this behavioral activation. It's one of the most-studied depression treatments out there. Depression sets a behavior trap. You feel bad, so you stop doing things, and doing less means less to feel good about. Feeling worse makes you do even less. The loop tightens until you can't breathe inside it.
Behavioral activation breaks the loop from the action side. You schedule the activity first, even when every part of you doesn't want to. Doing it produces small rewards: a wall gets straighter, a painting fills in, a messy room gets clean. Those small rewards slowly rewire the brain. Action comes first, and the feeling follows.
Researchers at the University of Washington put this to the test in 2006. They studied 241 adults with major depression and compared three treatments: behavioral activation, regular talk therapy, and antidepressants. For the people who were most severely depressed, behavioral activation matched the drugs. It beat the talk therapy. A 2014 review of more than 1,500 patients across 26 trials backed up the result.
Physical work like bricklaying does something extra on top of this. It crowds out rumination, the looping bad thoughts that grind people down during the worst stretches of depression. Bricklaying needs both hands and gives feedback brick by brick: each one is straight or crooked. After an hour you can see exactly how much wall you built. No room left for the mental chewing.
The line George Mack used in his post, "depression hates a moving target," is good poetry. The science behind it is sharper. Depression hates a brain that has somewhere else to be.
this trial is wild.
elon: they stole a non profit to make themselves billionaires.
openai founder: no way.
openai founders journal: man i can’t believe we are stealing this non profit. feels unethical but at least i’ll be a billionaire.
Bill Murray: When I read what Woodward wrote about my friend Belushi, I knew they framed Nixon.
MURRAY: "If this is what he writes about my friend that I've known for half of my adult life, which is completely inaccurate, what the hell could they have done to Nixon?"
ROGAN: "Once you see propaganda or bullshit from someone that you know and you see a distorted perception, it really opens your eyes to the fact that a lot of the things you read are horseshit."