Cenk Uygur is not “far-right,” so why was he banned from the UK — the answer is ISRAEL.
George Galloway just confirmed it to me — he says the real reason is Israel, and “a blind man could see it.”
Seems Donald Trump is not the only one under control — please welcome the Great Britain of today.
Watch FULL here:
https://t.co/iCU4uRZzJb
Thank you to @MLW_PAC for their on-the-ground coverage of the Montana primaries, now up on BitChute.
Watch the full series here: https://t.co/ntXsHtg5XN
Britain just barred Cenk Uygur from entering, apparently because he's a vocal critic of Israel. This achieves nothing. He's arriving for public debate, not violence. The proper response to ideas you oppose is open discussion, not censorship. Silencing critics weakens free speech for everyone and makes Britain look insecure. Let him speak.
"There are no good moves left" for the US in Iran conflict — K. J. Noh.
The US basically trapped, and it's the one who laid out that trap.
US-Iran conflict is just like Korean war — no matter what the US next move will be — it will do only worse for America.
US foreign policy creates its own dead ends — and it won't last long...
Watch FULL here:
https://t.co/98BfWU1Xdf
A piece by Jack Despain Zhou (@tracewoodgrains) has been circulating that's worth reading carefully. He documents how @Wikipedia's current entry on Mao Zedong opens its legacy section with a paragraph of universal-good praise, "political intellect, theorist, military strategist, poet, and visionary" who "drove imperialism out of China" and "improved literacy and education," before getting to the tens of millions of deaths under his rule. When the deaths are finally mentioned, they're framed in mitigating language: most were "unintended casualties," the rest were "necessary victims in the struggle to transform China."
The piece contrasts this with Wikipedia's entry on Franco, which opens with critical framing and never offers the defense-attorney structure used for Mao.
🚨Fein Print Podcast is back next Tuesday! 12:00 PM ET
The Sixty Day Clock and the Guest Who Took Over the House
Join @thefeinprint with @thewernickfiles@BruceFeinEsq@Dennis_Kucinich
The War Powers Resolution requires the President to terminate military operations within 60 days unless Congress has authorized them. The strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities began in June 2025.
Operations against Iran-aligned forces have continued at varying intensity since. The 60-day clock should have triggered the legal requirement for congressional authorization months ago. The administration has not sought authorization. Members of Congress have introduced resolutions to force the vote. The leadership of both parties has blocked the resolutions from reaching the floor.
This episode examines what the War Powers Resolution actually requires, why Congress has systematically avoided the vote that the law mandates, and what the avoidance reveals about the collapse of constitutional accountability for state violence.
A short segment introduces Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum's recent framing of American interventionism. The United States enters the house as a guest. Then the United States takes over the house. The framing applies to the pattern of how American power operates across military, intelligence, economic, and data acquisition relationships with countries that depend on American assistance or cooperation. The framing is accessible in ways that academic analyses of American power are not, and it has analytical content worth engaging regardless of whether listeners are familiar with Mexican politics.
The episode operates from the constitutional framework rather than from partisan analysis.
#FeinPrint #ConstitutionalCrisis
Let's talk about what SC's new 'child safety' law actually does to your privacy. To verify you're not a minor, platforms must now continuously analyze your behavior and estimate your age, which means collecting more data about you, not less. That data doesn't disappear. It gets sold to brokers who will happily tell advertisers, insurers, and employers who you are. It gets stolen, because it always does eventually. It gets handed to governments who ask nicely, or not so nicely, with a subpoena. We've seen this cycle play out with every 'safety' mandate that required more data collection. The data never stays where it's supposed to. It never stays as long as it's supposed to. And it never gets used only for what it was supposed to. Child protection is a real and worthy goal. But a law that builds mass surveillance infrastructure for adults, forces more data into corporate hands, and passed without a single meaningful vote of opposition is not child protection. It's a gift to every entity that profits from knowing everything about you, wrapped in the one argument almost nobody dares to vote against.
Just look at Putin and Trump’s arrivals in China.
Putin looks so much more confident, as a man who has been there many times.
Meanwhile, Trump looks like a kid who finally gets a long-desired toy.
And it all somehow ends up as a theatrical play with one actor.
Subscribe to BitChute for more:
https://t.co/n1nfdKl18O
Peter the Great wanted a “window to Europe”— access, recognition, partnership.
For centuries, Russia kept looking West…
But after Ukraine, sanctions, sabotage and endless lectures, Moscow may finally be seeing Europe’s true face.
Watch FULL here:
https://t.co/BAmEaoE3AC
What if I told you Iran’s leverage may not stop at oil — it could be even bigger: the INTERNET itself.
The cables running through that chokepoint carry commerce, finance and connectivity for the Gulf — and some reportedly pass through Iranian waters.
Just when it feels like things can’t get worse, Iran keeps reminding the world how badly the US miscalculated.
Watch LIVE on BitChute at 5:30 Moscow time:
https://t.co/CfRgpj7v0w
US could have been tens of trillions of dollars RICHER, and Europe could have had fewer refugees.
But NO — instead, the West chose endless wars.
Millions across the Middle East could still be ALIVE.
Here’s a solution for countries that aren’t fans of refugees — STOP THE WARS.
Watch FULL here:
https://t.co/NDuyXRTjuP
The globalist warmongering cabal will never make me silent.
I will continue spreading the truth on @Bitchute
I'm still on X, YouTube, TikTok (and many more to come).
Follow me on Bitchute for all my latest and exclusive content.
https://t.co/vizI9GEnHc
Two and a half centuries after the founding, one member of the House votes the way the founders would have voted on war, on foreign aid, on executive overreach, and on the Constitution. His name is Thomas Massie. His primary is May 19, and the largest foreign-policy lobby in Washington has joined the President of the United States in spending over twenty-five million dollars to remove him from Congress.
This is the most expensive House primary in American history. It is also the clearest test case for two questions that matter beyond Kentucky. Can AIPAC's spending playbook be defeated? Can a Republican defy a sitting Republican President, publicly and on substance, and survive?
In the 250th year of the American founding, the question is not who praises the founders most loudly. The question is who still votes as if the Constitution limits power.
Donate directly to the campaign at https://t.co/pUlTdcp0kH. Vote if you live in the district. Tell anyone you know who does. The deadline is six days away.
France's massive centralized digital ID breach is exactly why governments have no business collecting and hoarding our sensitive data. 19 million citizens’ names, addresses, DOBs, phones, emails and gov IDs now exposed. Catastrophic single point of failure.
This isn’t a competence issue, it’s the predictable result of government overreach. No mandate justifies turning citizens into a giant honeypot for hackers and identity thieves.
Governments must stay out of our data. No digital ID systems. Privacy is a right, not a government convenience.