Hello Mr. Hunter Biden,
You're getting six-digit likes on every post lately. I don't have any hope to ratio you or whatever through traditional "Hello" means.
But for those uninitiated, those who are captivated by your fake-humble persona obviously PR-engineered to capture unsuspecting disaffected Republicans:
You are not some humility, witty guy turning over a new leaf. You are the ultimate proof of nepotism, everything that the so-called "Epstein Class" is supposed to represent.
Let me explain - off the top of my head.
You were a board member of USGLC. U.S. Global Leadership Coalition. The most powerful NGO that nobody's ever heard of. Last year, I documented in several threads, how Liz Schrayer, USGLC lead, took credit for ramming through a 90 billion dollar bill for Ukraine in 2024, even as @mattvanswol demonstrated that Western North Carolina got zero help in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene because FEMA threw up their hands and said they ran out of funds.
USGLC, arguably, is the most powerful NGO that nobody has ever heard of. It includes a bunch of corporations, a bunch of nonprofit leads, and ... for some magical reason, I documented, extensively, linked, that Liz Schrayer started pursuing you in 2012. During the Obama years, when you were Biden's son. Are you a former Secretary of State? No. Are you a CEO of a Fortune 500 company? No. That puts you below the average USGLC board member, by a good tier.
So what DID get you on USGLC? The only reason: that you were the son of a sitting Vice President known for corruption, and you yourself were known for corruption.
You are not "folksy." You are the worst of the worst of the elite. Most of the elite, at least, get their credentials through Georgetown/George Washington/Harvard Kennedy. You got yours purely on nepotism. Any photographs you have of yourself at motels is proof that you are so incompetent that you waste all your money, not that you come from humble beginnings. Because others like @MarcoPolo501c3 have thoroughly documented that you benefited a great deal from your nepotism.
You even tried to bait those in with saying you prefer to keep immigration "legal" - but we all know the trap that keeps illegal immgrants here: outlaw deportations, and make every immigrant case "asylum", and magically, everyone who might've been here illegally a few years ago is legal.
You may get 175K likes on your semi-subverting, PR-designed photographs. But those of us who know, know you're fake.
https://t.co/vMml22uCbu
People like him are master manipulators and hide their true selves from those around them. If I ever found out I knew someone like him, I would cut them out of my life forever. No sweeping it under the rug just because it’s easier to look the other way and maintain the status quo.
Dear @WhiteHouse, my name is Rodney Smith Jr., founder of Raising Men & Women Lawn Care Service in Huntsville, Alabama. Through our 50 Yard Challenge, over 6,000 kids across the country have signed up to mow free lawns for the elderly, disabled, veterans, active-duty military, first responders, and single parents. With America celebrating its 250th birthday this year and me also being born on July 4th, I wanted to humbly ask if a few kids from our program and myself could travel to Washington, D.C. to help mow the White House lawn for this historic celebration.
More than anything, I want these kids to see how a simple act of service something as ordinary as mowing a lawn for someone in need can lead to extraordinary places. What better lesson in community service than showing them that helping others can take them all the way to our nation’s capital? I’d also love to bring my American flag-themed mower in hopes that the President might sign it, so I can later auction it off and donate 100% of the proceeds to a nonprofit supporting veterans. It would be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to highlight the importance of service, patriotism, and the impact young people can have when they choose to make a difference. 🇺🇸
@SahilBloom When do you clean your house/vacuum/wash floors/clean showers/toilets, wash your clothes, get your groceries, buy household essentials, cut your grass?
Baseball (Junior High) Game Day! - Check out the event preview for the The Cascade Cougars vs The Calamus-Wheatland Warriors. It starts at 10:00 AM and is at Cascade High School Baseball Field. https://t.co/WEAfVmk3CW
📋 Google to Release 64 Million Bacteria-Infected Mosquitoes Across California and Florida Over the Next Two Years—The Truth and Actual Numbers (It’s Worse Than 64 Million)
Google has filed two separate Experimental Use Permit applications with the EPA, not one. When you add them together, the scale is staggering:
View the second image below.
Subtotal: 64 million mosquitoes over two years targeting the primary West Nile and St. Louis encephalitis vector.
Combined total across both permits: 176 million lab-bred, Wolbachia-infected male mosquitoes slated for release across American neighborhoods.
🦟 How It’s Supposed to Work
The mechanism is cytoplasmic incompatibility. Male mosquitoes are infected with a specific Wolbachia pipientis strain that doesn’t carry the same Wolbachia strain; the eggs fail to develop in the lab. When these treated males mate with wild females who don’t carry the same Wolbachia strain, the eggs don’t hatch. No offspring, population crashes.
The sales pitch is clean:
- Males don’t bite — so no increased nuisance to humans during the release
- Not “genetically modified” in the transgenic sense — Wolbachia is a naturally occurring endosymbiotic bacterium already found in ~60% of insect species
- Species-specific — only the target species is affected
- “Alternative to chemical pesticides” — the greenwashed framing
🔴 What They’re Not Telling You
1. The EPA Classified This as a Pesticide
Read that again. Under FIFRA Section 5, the EPA is treating live, bacteria-infected mosquitoes as a “pesticide chemical” with an “active ingredient” measured in milligrams. The Federal Register lists the total active ingredient as 8,480 mg for the Aedes permit and 14,080 mg for the Culex permit.
You’re not being asked to comment on a public health intervention. You’re being asked to comment on a pesticide experiment — and the EPA’s own framing should tell you something about how they actually view what’s being released into the air you breathe and the ecosystem you live in.
2. No Release Locations Have Been Announced
The Federal Register notices specify the states but not the counties, cities, or neighborhoods. The public comment period closes June 5, 2026 — and residents are being asked to weigh in without knowing whether these mosquitoes will be released in their backyards, near their schools, or around their children's playgrounds.
That’s not oversight. That’s a blank check dressed up as a comment period.
3. The “Male Mosquitoes Don’t Bite” Defense Is Incomplete
Yes, male mosquitoes don’t blood-feed. But the release mechanism itself — millions of insects emerging from automated rearing facilities into residential areas — introduces variables that haven’t been adequately studied:
- What happens to local food webs when you flood an ecosystem with millions of Wolbachia-infected males that then die without reproducing? Bats, birds, dragonflies, and fish all feed on adult mosquitoes. A sudden pulse of 16 million dying males isn’t ecologically neutral.
- What about Wolbachia horizontal transfer to non-target species? The bacteria can jump between arthropod species under certain conditions. Once it’s in the wild at this scale, it’s not coming back.
4. The Track Record Is Mixed at Best
Earlier Wolbachia trials in the Florida Keys (through MosquitoMate and Oxitec) produced inconsistent results. Some areas saw population suppression; others saw mosquitoes bounce back or shift their breeding patterns. The Miami Herald documented significant community pushback and operational failures in prior releases.
The Singapore Debug expansion — announced May 12, 2026 — is being sold as a success story, but it’s an R&D program, not a proven intervention. You’re the test subject, not the beneficiary.
5. Google’s Involvement Should Raise Every Alarm Bell
This isn’t a public health agency. This isn’t a university research lab. This is Google LLC — a surveillance advertising company with a documented history of:
- Launching projects, collecting massive datasets, then abandoning them when they’re no longer profitable
- Operating health-tech ventures (Verily) that have repeatedly over-promised and under-delivered while vacuuming up sensitive biological data
- Using AI and automation in ways that prioritize scale and data collection over safety and informed consent
The Debug project uses "software engineers, biologists, specialized insect breeding robots, and artificial intelligence" — meaning every release is also a data-harvesting operation. What data are they collecting? On whom? With what consent?
6. The Comment Period Is a Formality
Let’s be blunt about how the EPA’s “public comment” process works in practice. The agency has already determined these permits “may be of regional and national significance” — which in regulatory language means they’re treating this as a precedent-setting approval. The comments get filed, summarized by some contractor, and the permit is issued with whatever “conditions” the agency feels like attaching.
Past EUPs for mosquito releases have included “monitoring requirements, buffer zones, and stop-release triggers” — all of which sound reassuring until you realize enforcement is essentially non-existent and the triggers are set so high they’ll never activate.
🧬 The Bigger Picture
This is what happens when you let Silicon Valley treat the biosphere as a software problem to be debugged. The name itself — Debug — reveals the mentality. Mosquitoes aren’t code glitches. Ecosystems aren’t programs you can patch with a release update.
The diseases these mosquitoes carry — West Nile, dengue, Zika, chikungunya — are real problems. But the solution pathway that leads through Google’s labs, automated rearing facilities, and the EPA’s pesticide regulatory framework is not the same thing as a public health intervention. It’s a corporate experiment using the American public as unwitting subjects, with the EPA providing the regulatory rubber stamp.
The comment deadline is June 5. After that, the decision moves behind closed doors — and 176 million bacteria-infected mosquitoes start getting boxed up for delivery to neighborhoods that haven’t been named and residents who haven’t been asked.