I posted a lot of videos yesterday because WATER DAY. This is the most important one.
The Reflecting Pool contractor Eddie Wood broke his silence exclusively with me because the facts matter. Watch!
Nobody asked them to do it. Nobody trained them for it. They were just two teenage boys — the kind you pass on the sidewalk and barely notice — leaning on their bikes in the summer heat when they saw something no child should ever have to experience.
A man walked away with 5-year-old Jocelyn Rojas. She was supposed to be playing outside. She was supposed to be safe.
And in that single, awful second — while most of us would have been paralyzed, reaching for a phone, waiting for someone with a uniform and a badge to show up — these two boys made a choice.
They got on their bikes and they went after him.
No hesitation. No waiting for permission. No "someone else will handle it." Just two pairs of legs pumping hard through the streets of Lancaster, eyes locked on a stranger who had a little girl that wasn't his.
They tracked him. They stayed close. They didn't let him disappear into the afternoon like something that was never going to be found.
And then they confronted him.
Two teenagers. On bikes. Against a grown man who had already done the unthinkable. They forced him to stop.
He let Jocelyn go.
"The entire thing lasted only minutes." — Lancaster Police
Minutes. Because two boys closed the distance fast enough to interrupt it. Because they were raised — by someone, somehow — to believe that other people's emergencies are your business too.
When reporters asked one of them afterward why they did it, he gave the most deflating, most beautiful, most teenage answer imaginable.
He shrugged.
"I just felt like it was the right thing to do."
No speech. No GoFundMe. No press conference. Just a kid who saw a little girl in danger and couldn't make himself look away.
Jocelyn went home. She was reunited with her family. She got to grow up.
Because of two boys on bikes who hadn't been asked, hadn't been trained, hadn't been paid — and did it anyway.
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW! Trump’s “pool guy” breaks his silence to deny claims of a “no-bid” contract, budget overruns and excessive profits on the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool repairs. Watch:
I don't know if Bari Weiss is the right person to turn around CBS News' fortunes, but if her only accomplishment is ridding us of these insufferable windbags, her tenure will be a success.
This is the most important image on the internet right now:
Henry Nowak’s hand cuffed.
Pale due to loss of blood.
Henry is dying.
The demonic hands of the British authorities restraining him as they coddle his migrant murderer.
Henry bleeds out as UK cops and migrants insult him
Send the video to everyone you know showing how heinously Nowak was treated by the police in his dying moments and how the police cravenly kowtowed to his murderer.
Legacy mainstream media, same ones who wrote about George Floyd millions of times, are dead silent about Nowak.
💥NEW: Dem Harold Ford Jr. on New Jersey Anti-ICE Rioters: “That place was open during the Obama Administration … for protesters to be outside engaging in this kind of violence, imparting these kind of threats to federal officials … Democrats, we have to say, ‘This is WRONG!’”
“Decades of decay do not happen by accident.”
🎯🎯🎯🔥🎯🎯🎯
This meme nails it because it points out something the left desperately does not want people to notice.
When a city has been run by the same political machine for decades, at some point the excuse-making has to stop.
New York last elected a Republican mayor in 1994.
Seattle, 1964.
Minneapolis, 1957.
Portland, 1952.
Chicago, 1927.
Washington, D.C., never.
Yet every time crime spikes, streets decay, businesses flee, schools fail, homelessness explodes, and ordinary families start wondering if it is still safe to walk downtown, Democrats somehow find a way to blame Donald Trump.
Really?
Trump did not run those city councils.
Trump did not write those local policing policies.
Trump did not elect those prosecutors.
Trump did not tell city leaders to go soft on criminals, demonize police, tolerate open-air drug markets, ignore quality-of-life crimes, or treat law-abiding taxpayers like an afterthought.
The people in charge made those decisions.
And in these cities, Democrats have been in charge for a very, very long time.
That does not mean every problem can be fixed overnight. Big cities are complicated. But after decades of one-party rule, residents have every right to ask a simple question.
How is this working out?
If people are tired of high crime, boarded-up storefronts, filthy streets, rising taxes, and leaders who always have a scapegoat but never have a solution, then maybe it is time to stop rewarding failure.
Politics is supposed to be accountability.
If a restaurant gives you bad food for 30 years, you stop eating there.
If a mechanic keeps ruining your car, you find another mechanic.
But somehow, in big blue cities, the same crowd keeps getting power, the same policies keep failing, and the same politicians keep blaming everyone else.
At some point, residents have to decide whether they want change or just another round of excuses.
The meme is funny, but the point is serious.
Decades of decay do not happen by accident.
Thomas Sowell on the truth about the Great Depression:
“There’s this narrative out there that the reason we had mass unemployment in the 1930s was because the market failed.”
“It so happens that for the 12 months following the stock market crash, we never hit double digits of unemployment. Unemployment peaked at 9 percent two months after the crash and started going down.”
“The unemployment rate was down to 6.3 percent when the federal government figured it had to intervene. And that’s when the downward movement reversed and we never saw 6.3 percent again for the next decade.”
“It’s clear as crystal that the disaster came after federal intervention.”
Brandon Gill represents Texas’s 26th district, he’s only 30 years old, and a young dad, married to his college sweetheart, sharp conservative voice.
His his fans love that he’s this fresh, articulate, all-American guy who doesn’t come from politics.
He’s a former Turning Point USA activist who jumped straight into Congress and immediately started going after what he sees as elite overreach, big government, and cultural decay.
People see him as proof that young conservatives don’t have to be cynical or washed out, they can still be married, have kids, and fight for traditional values while staying relevant.
The “young father in Congress” image lands really well with the base. He’s one of the few Gen Z/Millennial Republicans getting serious attention right now.
He’s 32, born on an Air Force base in New Mexico, and grew up on a cattle ranch in West Texas.
His dad was a fighter pilot who flew combat missions in the Gulf War, and his grandfather was a Southern Baptist preacher, so service and faith run deep in his family.
At Dartmouth he graduated cum laude with degrees in economics and history, led the conservative student paper, and grew the Christian Union into one of the biggest groups on a pretty hostile campus.
After college he worked as an investment banker in New York, then started his own conservative news outlet, the DC Enquirer, before running for Congress.
At 30 he got elected as the youngest Republican in the House. He’s in the Freedom Caucus, serves on Judiciary and Oversight, and pushes hard on border security, cutting government waste, and protecting life.
Lives in Flower Mound with Danielle and their two little ones. Classic Texas conservative story, ranch kid to Congress.
Listen to every word from Henry Nowak’s father.
Its worse than we predicted.
He told police he was stabbed 4X and he couldn’t breathe 9X.
They cuffed Henry and let him die.
Police never cuffed Vickrum even after arrest.
Footage must be worse than imagined.
Must be released!
ICE Deportations…
Clinton: 2 million with no riots.
GW Bush: 2 million with no riots.
Obama: 5 million with no riots.
Trump: 2 million with no riots.
Biden: 4 million with no riots.
Trump: 900K with riots, protests and Dem outrage.
Its all manufactured to stop Trump.
Facts.
Ça fait un moment que je me pose des questions sur le bilan (provisoire) de Milei en Argentine. On lit tout et son contraire. Alors j'ai arrêté de lire les commentaires et j'ai regardé les chiffres bruts.
L'Argentine, c'est l'expérience grandeur nature que les économistes attendaient depuis 50 ans. Même pays. Même peuple. Même culture. On change UNE variable : la méthode économique.
Avant : des décennies de gestion étatiste et péroniste, "redistributive". Le résultat concret ? 211% d'inflation, 42% de pauvreté, un État en déficit permanent qui finance son train de vie en faisant tourner la planche à billets.
Puis arrive Milei. Méthode inverse, brutale, assumée : on coupe, on déréglemente, on arrête d'imprimer.
Deux ans plus tard (photo à son arrivée (fin 2023) vs aujourd'hui) :
Inflation annuelle : 211% → 31%
Inflation mensuelle : 25% → ~2%
Déficit public : −5% du PIB → +1,8% (excédent)
Croissance : −1,6% → +4,4%
Pauvreté : 42% → 28%
Sans débat. Jugez par vous-mêmes.
Et le point essentiel : ces gains ne vont pas "aux riches" ou "aux marchés". Ils vont d'abord aux plus pauvres.
L'inflation est l'impôt le plus injuste qui existe — elle frappe ceux qui n'ont aucun actif pour se protéger. La diviser par 7, c'est rendre du pouvoir d'achat à ceux d'en bas. Et 14 points de pauvreté en moins, ce sont des millions de gens, pas une ligne Excel.
Pendant un siècle, on a expliqué aux Argentins que l'État les protégerait en dépensant toujours plus. Résultat : un des pays les plus riches du monde en 1910, ruiné. On vient d'inverser la méthode. Regardez le résultat.
À un moment, il faut accepter ce que les faits racontent : sur le terrain économique, la méthode libérale a livré en deux ans ce que des décennies de socialisme avaient promis sans jamais tenir. Et ça profite d'abord aux plus modestes.
On peut détester le style de Milei — la tronçonneuse, l'outrance, les sorties improbables, il n'a rien d'un homme d'État classique. Mais on ne juge pas une politique économique au style de celui qui la mène. On la juge à ce qu'elle fait à la vie des gens.
Et les chiffres ont parlé.