The Supreme Court has signaled it will strike down state laws allowing ballots after election day.
Justice Alito says it's called “Election DAY” for a reason.
🚨 Washington taxpayers are funding a system they were never fully told about.
This was only 3 years. Ferguson is hiding this from parents, kidnapping kids from school. Ruining kids that parents will be forced to spend a lifetime trying to fix.
“Gender-affirming care” isn’t a tiny line item — it’s embedded across Medicaid billing, managed care, hospitals, mental health services, pharmaceuticals, and school-linked policies.
$57–63 BILLION flowed through Apple Health from 2023–2025.
How much of it was tied to trans-health-related billing, referrals, procedures, hormones, counseling, and administration?
Taxpayers deserve transparency.
#WashingtonState #Medicaid #AppleHealth #TransHealth #WApolitics #TaxpayerMoney #HealthcareCosts #Transparency #FollowTheMoney
An Egyptian priestess wrote on her stela that she didn't believe mummies would awaken after death.
She tells her spouse to enjoy himself on Earth because only darkness awaits him.
On this night in 1781, one man on a horse saved the American Revolution from losing Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, and half of Virginia's government in a single morning.
You were never taught his name.
June 3, 1781. The British had chased Virginia's entire government out of Richmond. Jefferson, in his final days as governor, and the legislature had fled to Charlottesville, thinking they were safe in the foothills.
They were wrong.
That evening, 26 year old militia captain Jack Jouett was at a tavern in Louisa County when roughly 250 of the most feared cavalry in the British army came pounding down the road. Their commander: Banastre Tarleton, nicknamed "The Butcher," the man whose dragoons had cut down surrendering Americans at Waxhaws.
There was only one place they could be going. Charlottesville. 40 miles away. And the capture of Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, would be the prize of the war.
Jouett couldn't outrun them on the main road. So he didn't use it.
He swung onto overgrown backwoods trails and the abandoned Old Mountain Road, riding 40 miles through the dark with only the full moon for light. Legend says low hanging branches whipped and scarred his face for life.
Tarleton stopped his men for a 3 hour rest. Jouett never stopped.
Before sunrise on June 4, he came up the mountain to Monticello and woke Jefferson. Then he rode down into Charlottesville and warned the legislature.
Jefferson got out with minutes to spare. British dragoons were coming up his mountain as he left. The legislature escaped over the Blue Ridge to Staunton. Tarleton caught only seven stragglers, one of them a frontiersman serving in the legislature named Daniel Boone.
Paul Revere rode about 12 miles in 1775 and got captured before reaching Concord. Longfellow wrote him a poem and made him immortal.
Jack Jouett rode 40 miles, lost nothing, saved everything, and got a thank you gift of two pistols and a sword from the Virginia Assembly.
No poem. No fame. Almost no memory.
Don't condemn Muhammad and his companions for waging wars, raiding caravans, marrying children, owning slaves, degrading women, or engaging in brutal violence.
Raiding rival tribes was standard. Child marriage was practiced. Slavery was the norm. Tribal codes, honor killings, conquest, this was the fabric of life in that time and place.
The real problem isn’t what Muhammad did. The real problem is that what he did was declared sacred.
His every action wasn’t just recorded, it was immortalized, canonized and sanctified.
His tribal conduct wasn’t left in the 7th century, it was elevated as timeless law for the entire world.
He didn’t just live in history, he froze history in place and called it religion.
What should have been contextualized as ancient is now institutionalized as eternal.
What should have been buried with time is now resurrected in legal codes, school curriculums, and acts of terror.
Finally getting over the asthma - and here's the org chart of the Newark protests, as promised. A few are missing, particularly the Catholic NGOs. But this is the basic template for how mass protests are coordinated so quickly.
Tina Peters — the Colorado election official jailed for exposing how the Secretary of State manipulated the 2020 election — is now FREE.
On the SAME DAY she walked out, Mike Davis filed a federal civil rights criminal referral with the DOJ targeting the Colorado officials who imprisoned her for her First Amendment views on election integrity.
Like 95% of uber drivers can't speak English.
I've canceled quite a few rides because of this.
I refuse to get in a vehicle when the driver can't read the road signs.
Uber should be SUED for taking their customers lives in the hands.
It's an accident waiting to happen.
BREAKING: President Trump announces executive order to shut down bank accounts used to facilitate illegal immigration or to give illegal aliens welfare
252 years ago today, the British Empire closed the busiest port in North America to teach one colony a lesson, and accidentally turned thirteen colonies into one country.
On December 16, 1773, a few dozen Bostonians had thrown 342 chests of East India Company tea into the harbor. The damages came to roughly £9,659. Lord North, the Prime Minister, decided to make an example. Parliament passed the Boston Port Act. King George III signed it on March 31, 1774. It took effect at dawn on June 1.
The Royal Navy moved warships into Boston Harbor and dropped anchor. Every dock was sealed. No ship could enter or leave. Not a barrel of flour, not a load of firewood, not a letter. The port would stay closed until Boston paid the East India Company in full and promised to behave.
The intent was to isolate Massachusetts and force her neighbors to watch her starve.
What happened instead is one of the strangest political miracles in modern history.
Down in Williamsburg, a 31 year old burgess named Thomas Jefferson and a few friends, including Patrick Henry and Richard Henry Lee, pulled a dusty old book off the shelf of the House of Burgesses library, a record of how the Long Parliament had once handled a tyrant, and proposed that the entire colony of Virginia observe June 1, 1774 as a day of "fasting, humiliation, and prayer" in solidarity with Boston.
The Royal Governor, Lord Dunmore, dissolved the House two days later for treason. The burgesses simply walked across the street to the Raleigh Tavern and kept meeting.
June 1 came. In Virginia, every Anglican church was draped in black. The bells tolled all day. Plantation owners shut their doors. Jefferson wrote later that "the effect of the day through the whole colony was like a shock of electricity."
The same shock ran through every colony south of New England. Wagon trains of food started rolling toward Boston from as far away as Charleston. The Marblehead fishermen offered to give the Boston merchants the use of their docks for free. A Quaker miller in Pennsylvania sent a hundred barrels of flour. Israel Putnam personally drove a herd of sheep from Connecticut to feed the city.
Three months later, 56 delegates from twelve colonies sat down together in Philadelphia. It was called the First Continental Congress. None of them had ever met under one roof before.
Parliament wanted to punish a city. It created a nation.
252 years ago today, in a harbor full of Royal Navy frigates, the American Revolution stopped being a Massachusetts problem.
Can someone help me find the det's on this current FY2026 vendor?
I'm pretty good at digging,,,, but I'm stumped. @Susan_Dupres
https://t.co/8ExyCf1uBJ
If taxing unrealized gains is somehow “unfair” for billionaires holding stock, then why are middle class homeowners hit every year with rising property taxes based on the unrealized value of their home?
Most people haven’t sold their house. They haven’t “realized” anything. Yet the tax bill keeps going up anyway.
🚨 WOW! Attorney Mike Davis has just wrote a CRIMINAL REFERRAL to the DOJ and Harmeet Dhillon to launch investigations into the mistreatment of Tina Peters in Colorado prison, now that she's released
The list INCLUDES Secretary of State Jena Griswold
YES, go all-out and achieve full justice! 🔥
"Only a criminal investigation can answer these questions, because judges and prosecutors are absolutely immune civilly...this protection, however, does not extend to criminal liability."
"I write to urge an investigation of potential federal civil-rights violations of Tina Peters."
"The evidence is clear: Colorado government officials conspired to severely, unconstitutionally, and criminally punish Tina Peters because of her First Amendment-protected views on election integrity."
"Specifically, A3P requests that the criminal investigation focus on the following participants in Peters’ prosecution: Mesa County District Judge Matthew Barrett, who presided over Peters’ trial; Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser; Mesa County District Attorney Dan Rubinstein, who led the prosecution in cooperation with Weiser; Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold; and any and all other potential coconspirators."
First obtained by Daily Caller
@mrddmia
🚨 SCIENTISTS JUST CREATED A 5D GLASS DISC THAT CAN STORE 360 TERABYTES AND LAST FOR BILLIONS OF YEARS.
Researchers have developed a revolutionary data storage technology: a tiny glass disc that can hold 360 terabytes of information (roughly 100,000 times the capacity of a standard DVD) and survive extreme conditions for billions of years.
The disc uses ultrafast lasers to etch five-dimensional nanoscale structures inside fused silica glass. These five dimensions include three spatial coordinates plus two additional dimensions based on light polarization and intensity allowing incredibly dense and stable data encoding.
Why this matters:
• The disc has been tested at temperatures up to 1,000°C and under intense radiation with zero data degradation
• It could preserve humanity’s most important knowledge (libraries, archives, scientific records) for future civilizations
• Unlike magnetic or optical discs that degrade in decades, this technology offers true “forever” storage
• Potential applications include long-term climate data, astronomical archives, and cultural heritage preservation
The deeper implication is enormous:
We are moving from fragile, short-lived digital storage to something that could literally outlast human civilization itself.
For the first time, we have a practical way to create permanent archives of our species’ knowledge that could survive the rise and fall of empires.
What would you choose to preserve on one of these discs for the next 10,000 years?
Follow for more frontier materials science and future technology.