@MrSpindel Bij autochtone Nederlanders durven ze dit wel, waarom omdat ze onderdanig zijn, ze trekken geen messen of wapens, ze slaan er niet op los. Daarom worden wij in het hoekje gedreven als vee. Geslagen met wapenstokken, gooien, waterkanon. Maar we zijn nog net genoeg om te werken
Two Chinese nationalist one on a student visa the other here illegally scam over 140k in a elaborate gift card scam.
Here is the unbelievable story of Caoyuan Liu (22) and Linghan Chen (26), the duo from Flushing, NY, who terrorized Florida grocery stores before it all came crashing down in a chaotic federal raid.
Liu and Chen didn’t shoplift items—they stole data. Their highly organized operation relied on a stealthy, multi-step manipulation process that targeted unsuspecting holiday shoppers:
They swept into major grocery stores, cleared out entire gift card racks, and took the unactivated cards back to their luxury Airbnb in Jensen Beach, FL.
Using precise tools, they carefully cut open the packaging, recorded the serial numbers, and scratched off the security coatings to document the secret PINs.
They meticulously resealed the packaging so the cards looked entirely brand new on the shelves.
They snuck the compromised cards back onto the store displays. When an everyday customer would purchase and have funds loaded on to a then activated card.
Monitoring the cards online, Liu and Chen would instantly drain the balances to zero the second they were activated—buying high-end electronics like Apple products before the victim even left the store parking lot.
The operation targeted at least 42 different grocery stores across Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, Martin, and St. Lucie counties, tampering with around 2,000 cards for an estimated theft of at least $140,000.
Despite the digital nature of their crimes, they couldn't resist showing off their wealth. Security cameras captured the duo fleeing multiple crime scenes in a luxury black Bentley SUV with New York plates.
When Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) and the Martin County Sheriff’s Office raided their Airbnb, chaos ensued. The suspects frantically tried to destroy evidence, with agents later recovering piles of tampered gift cards the couple had desperately tried to flush down the toilet. A later search of the Bentley revealed even more hidden card stashes.
When the dust settled, the case took a massive turn involving international borders and immigration status, highlighting how these global rings operate:
Linghan Chen (The Fugitive): Chen was in the U.S. on an active student F-1 visa. Exploiting a small window before strict federal travel restrictions and border alerts were locked down after the initial raids, she managed to board a flight and flee back to China. Because China does not have an extradition treaty with the United States, she remains a protected fugitive from federal justice. Isn't it great we allowed her here on that visa? 🤦
Caoyuan Liu (The Left Behind): Liu was in the country illegally and lacked the immediate means to escape. Left behind to face the full weight of the federal government, he pleaded guilty in a Fort Pierce federal court to conspiracy to possess 15 or more counterfeit or unauthorized access devices. He faces up to 5 years in federal prison, after which he will be transferred to ICE custody for formal deportation proceedings.
This case has become a primary example for Florida law enforcement and federal prosecutors vowing to dismantle mobile, international fraud rings using local rentals as base camps.
Yet another example of people that are not supposed to be here placing extra burden and loss on American citizens.
"On March 30, 1981, just sixty-nine days into his presidency, Ronald Reagan was wheeled into George Washington University Hospital with a bullet wound inches from his heart — and what the doctors and nurses who treated him that day remembered for the rest of their lives was not the gravity of the moment but the extraordinary grace of the man at the center of it, cracking jokes from the gurney, telling the surgeons he hoped they were all Republicans, and whispering to Nancy when she arrived at his bedside that he had forgotten to duck. Reagan was seventy years old, the oldest president in American history to that point, and he was closer to death than the public was told for many years — the bullet had lodged within an inch of his heart and he had lost more than half his blood volume — and yet the spirit he brought to those terrifying hours in the hospital became, in the minds of the American people, something larger than one man's personal courage: it became a kind of national exhale, a reminder that optimism was not naivety but a form of strength, that a man could face the worst the world could offer and respond with warmth and humor and an unshakeable belief that things would be all right. Reagan's recovery was remarkable by any medical standard, but the doctors who treated him insisted that his physical vitality — he was an avid horseman and outdoorsman who had kept himself genuinely fit throughout his life — was matched by something harder to measure and equally important: a psychological resilience, a refusal to be diminished by fear, that they had simply never encountered in quite the same form before. He was back at his desk within weeks, and the letters that poured into the White House from ordinary Americans during his recovery ran into the millions — handwritten notes from farmers and factory workers and schoolchildren and retirees, people who felt, in some way they found difficult to articulate, that Reagan's refusal to be broken was their refusal too, that his recovery belonged to all of them. It was perhaps the moment that defined his presidency more than any policy or speech — the moment when the country saw not the politician but the man, and found in him something they genuinely loved."
The Chinese Communist Party has no right to imprison pastors, silence dissidents, or punish those who speak the truth.
Today, the House passed H. Res. 1259, a resolution urging President Trump to prioritize securing the release of Pastor Jin Mingri, Pastor Gao Quanfu and his wife Pang Yu, Dr. Gulshan Abbas, Jimmy Lai, and others unjustly detained by the PRC during future engagements with President Xi.
America must always stand with those persecuted for their faith and for freedom.