🚨🇮🇱 À Sakhnin, en Israël, un Israélien a tenté d’assassiner une famille palestinienne en frappant à leur porte dans le but de les faire sortir de leur domicile et de les tuer.
The Kennedy Center ordered employees to remove President Trump’s name from the performing arts venue, strip all references from signs, brochures, the website and other materials — and to update email signatures and letterhead immediately. https://t.co/1J2FEPH33q
More than half of the publicly identified donors to President Trump’s White House ballroom project have won new or expanded federal contracts worth more than $50 billion, according to a report from a government watchdog group. https://t.co/wEAqxMA7AG
In February, Rep. Thomas Massie read Attorney General Pam Bondi a line from the Epstein files.
Leslie Wexner, he said, is listed in them as a co-conspirator. Not to tax evasion. To child sex trafficking.
Nobody has been charged.
They are making a movie about Greg Grim Reaper Scarpa? The FBI informant serial killer (over 50 bodies) they let terrorize nyc for 40 years. Who got aids because he “didn’t want black blood.”
He’s a civil rights hero now
��An ICE agent, in Palm Beach, threatened to arrest a U.S. citizen for standing in his own front yard.
The video shows a man filming ICE agents surrounding and questioning a young man, which is happening directly in front of his home.
While the man stands on his lawn, recording, an ICE agent walks onto the man’s property, points his finger at him, and orders him to move back 25 feet.
The homeowner backs up and shouts:
“This is MY PROPERTY!”
And yet, the agent continues threatening him with arrest.
For what exactly?
Standing on his own lawn, while filming government agents operate in front of his driveway?
Since when do Americans need permission from the federal government to stand in their own yard?
The First Amendment protects the public’s right to observe and document government activity.
Property rights don’t disappear because federal agents show up in your neighborhood.
And if there was a legitimate safety concern requiring a “25-foot perimeter,” why was the agent able to simply turn around and walk away moments later?
The Constitution doesn’t become optional when federal officers find it inconvenient.
🚨An ICE agent, in Palm Beach, threatened to arrest a U.S. citizen for standing in his own front yard.
The video shows a man filming ICE agents surrounding and questioning a young man, which is happening directly in front of his home.
While the man stands on his lawn, recording, an ICE agent walks onto the man’s property, points his finger at him, and orders him to move back 25 feet.
The homeowner backs up and shouts:
“This is MY PROPERTY!”
And yet, the agent continues threatening him with arrest.
For what exactly?
Standing on his own lawn, while filming government agents operate in front of his driveway?
Since when do Americans need permission from the federal government to stand in their own yard?
The First Amendment protects the public’s right to observe and document government activity.
Property rights don’t disappear because federal agents show up in your neighborhood.
And if there was a legitimate safety concern requiring a “25-foot perimeter,” why was the agent able to simply turn around and walk away moments later?
The Constitution doesn’t become optional when federal officers find it inconvenient.
🇮🇱 THEO VON: "Israel is obsessed with control so they use American soldiers like war machines to feed their bloodlust."
"They're a satanic regime who just want to cause pain."
BREAKING: Three counties in Texas have declared local state of disaster declarations on the New World Screwworm: Kinney, Jim Webb and Uvalde
Three others are pending: Webb, La Salle and Val Verde
The reasoning behind these declarations is because they feel they are not getting the federal nor state support needed to combat this crisis
Its long past due for the President to declare a National Emergency Declaration so local officials on the front lines are getting the support they need
GoPro says there is ‘substantial doubt’ it will be able to stay in business over the next year 📷
• Sales are down
• Costs are up — particularly memory chips, driven by demand from AI data centers
• Net losses have totaled over $500M in the past two years
The House voted today on a new measure to fuse elements of the Israeli and US militaries, particularly on the cyberweapons front. Section 224, as its known, is included in the National Defense Authorization Act. Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., introduced an amendment to strip it from the bill. Watch as a stream of Republicans and Democrats stand up in support of the enhanced cooperation. Only Rep. Sarah Jacobs (D-Calif.) joined Khanna, and the measure failed in a voice vote. Watch:
Officers attacks innocent senior war veteran. Wrong guy due to zero investigation work by a terrible officer.
Officers with the Sulphur Police Department in Louisiana responded to a disturbance call at American Legion Post 179. The dispatch alleged that a man in a purple shirt was acting aggressively and hitting people inside.
When officers arrived, they immediately fixated on Johnny, the local American Legion Post Commander, who was standing in the middle of the room. Johnny complied with orders to step outside, entirely unaware that the officers thought he was the suspect.
Once outside, things escalated in a matter of seconds:
Johnny immediately tried to explain that they had the wrong man and that he was the Post Commander running the building.
Rather than verifying his identity or listening to the crowd, Captain Jordan drew his pepper spray.
Before Johnny could even process the conflicting commands to "step back" and "put your hands behind your back," Captain Jordan deployed the chemical spray directly into his face.
Captain Jordan then knocked him down with what he described as a Spartan kick to place Johnny in handcuffs.
While Johnny was on the ground, his frantic wife and several horrified bystanders rushed out to scream the truth: YOU HAVE THE WRONG MAN.
The actual individual who had caused the disturbance—an autistic young man who had suffered a severe behavioral meltdown—was still sitting quietly at a table inside.
Johnny hadn't been attacking anyone; he was actively acting in his official capacity as commander to manage the building and keep the situation calm until help arrived.
Instead of admitting a massive error, Captain Jordan doubled down on his actions, claiming Johnny was "non-compliant" and aggressive for not instantly moving backward while simultaneously being told to put his hands behind his back.
The Sulphur Police Department ran an internal investigation and cleared Captain Jordan of any wrongdoing. However, the City of Sulphur quietly cut a check, paying out an undisclosed settlement to Johnny to avoid a devastating civil rights lawsuit.
But the final slap in the face to Johnny and the veterans at Post 179? Unbelievably, even after the city settled for the incident, the police department turned around and named Captain Jordan "Officer of the Year."
A textbook example of a department circling the wagons, rewriting the narrative, and rewarding bad policing.
These are the types of stories that give the police a bad name in the communities.