Russia has been barred from competing in the Olympics since they started a war in Ukraine. Nothing has changed. It’s an absolute disgrace the IOC would clear them to compete while Putin continues to bomb Ukrainian cities and hold their land.
🚨 BOMBSHELL ALERT 🚨
The fraudsters who looted BILLIONS from Minnesota families just got the rug pulled out from under them!
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent just dropped the hammer: The IRS is launching MASSIVE, RELENTLESS AUDITS on every bank, MSB, and dirty-money middleman who helped launder the stolen cash.
THEY HAVE NOWHERE TO HIDE.
No more hiding behind shell companies.
No more wiring taxpayer dollars to Somalia while American families suffer.
Every dirty transaction is about to be TORCHED under the microscope.
For once, the IRS is hunting the REAL criminals — not you.
Follow the money. Expose them all. Prosecute without mercy.
The Great Reckoning is here.
Thank you, Sec. Bessent! 🇺🇸💥
RT if you want every last fraudster dragged into the light!
🚨 HOLY SMOKES. Trump Education Sec. Linda McMahon just found out that DEAD PEOPLE were getting student loans from the federal government
BILLIONS of dollars are now being saved.
"There were BOTS, ghost students, dead people getting these loans. We enforced and tweaked the entire system so we have real-time fraud identity now."
Finally, you have to actually PROVE you're a real person.
Unbelievable this was not already the case!
In 1992, two friends made a promise that sounded almost impossible to keep.
Tom Cook and Joe Feeney shook hands and agreed that if either of them ever won the Powerball jackpot, they would split it. It didn't matter whose ticket it was. A handshake was enough.
Years passed.
Then decades.
They kept buying lottery tickets, week after week, while life moved on. Retirement got closer, but the promise stayed exactly where they had left it.
On June 10, 2020, Tom stopped at Synergy Coop Exit 45 in Menomonie, Wisconsin, and bought a Powerball ticket.
The next morning, while having breakfast with his wife, he checked the numbers.
Every number matched.
The ticket was worth a $22 million Powerball jackpot.
Tom's first call wasn't to a lawyer or a financial advisor.
It was to Joe.
When Tom told him they had won, Joe couldn't believe it.
His first words were,
"Are you jerking my bobber?"
Joe, an avid fisherman, thought his lifelong friend was pulling a prank.
He wasn't.
Tom had every legal right to keep the jackpot for himself. After all, it was his ticket.
Instead, he did exactly what he had promised 28 years earlier.
The two friends chose the lump sum of about $16.7 million before taxes, and after taxes, each walked away with roughly $5.7 million.
When reporters asked Tom why he shared the money without hesitation, his answer was as simple as the promise itself.
"A handshake's a handshake."
Tom retired after giving his two weeks' notice. Joe, already retired from the local fire department, looked forward to traveling with their wives. After years of taking road trips in a PT Cruiser convertible, they joked that they might finally upgrade.
Millions of dollars changed their lives.
But the most valuable thing in this story wasn't the jackpot.
It was a promise made between two friends in 1992 that was still worth keeping in 2020
This really is an unbelievable story and just about sums up the UK right now.
A small leafy village in Piddington has voted for independence from the United Kingdom because the Government is planning on dumping 1000 illegal aliens into a village of only 180 people.
Why is Arkansas #1 in religious liberty?
When an out of state activist group tried to shut down our Christmas celebrations, we stood up, fought back - and won.
America’s Mayor Rudy Giuliani was disbarred and had to surrender his Manhattan apartment, Mercedes and luxury watches for accusing Georgia election workers of fraud…turns out…he was right…
🚨 HOLY CRAP! FBI Director Kash Patel just revealed the Biden admin "BURIED" Minnesota fraud investigations because it potentially implicated BIDEN ALLIES.
The FBI is now also investigating fraud links to ELECTED OFFICIALS and t*rrorists.
Imagine that.
The FBI is additionally surging forensic accountants and data teams to MN, per @C__Herridge
DOZENS of investigations have been opened since the middle of this year up through December.
DHS agents were spotted on the ground this week, going door-to-door as well 👇
KEEP INVESTIGATING and LOCK THEM UP! The American people demand accountability. @FBIDirectorKash
🚨 HEARTBREAKING HORROR 🚨
DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin just exposed the pure evil: Innocent children trafficked across the open border were RAPED 600 TO 700 TIMES — locked in rooms, forced to service monsters day after day.
THEY ARE BABIES. THEY DON’T DESERVE THIS. NO CHILD DOES.
“We found 146,000 kids so far… but nearly 300,000 are STILL MISSING.”
I don’t care if you’re liberal, conservative, or anywhere in between — if you can’t stand up and scream SAVE OUR CHILDREN, who the hell are you?!
This is not politics. This is a national emergency. These kids are suffering in the shadows while too many look away.
ENOUGH. Share this. Demand action. Demand every missing child be found. Demand justice for the innocent.
#SaveTheChildren #ProtectOurKids #EndTheHorror
Repost if you have a soul. These babies need us NOW. 💔🙏
This is Warrick Dunn, who became the head of his family at 18 and later turned that loss into more than 250 homes for single mothers.
On January 7, 1993, two days after his eighteenth birthday, his mother, Baton Rouge police Cpl. Betty Smothers, was sh*t and k*lled in an ambush while working an off-duty security job, escorting a store manager to make a night bank deposit.
Suddenly the oldest of six with no parent, Dunn raised his five younger siblings and used his mother's life insurance to buy them a home so the family would not be split apart.
He still reached Florida State University, became the first Seminole with three straight 1,000-yard rushing seasons, and was drafted 12th overall by Tampa Bay in 1997.
That rookie year, to honor his mother's dream of homeownership, he founded Homes for the Holidays for single-parent families.
As of 2026, his charity has furnished more than 250 move-in-ready homes for single mothers and their children.
They told us it was never antisemitism. They said it was about Israel's war, aggression, and innocent lives. So now Iran strikes seven Muslim Arab countries. Children die. Women bleed. Hospitals are targeted. And behold, the streets are silent. No tents on campuses. No roaring crowds. No Parliament in endless mourning. No theatrical recognition of a state. Not even the usual prophets of outrage.
And so we ask, with sorrow rather than surprise: was it ever truly about the dead?
Or have you become prisoners of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Islamic regime in Iran, their proxies whispering in the West?
If you are still there, blink twice.
We may yet come to rescue you.