I am an enemy of China Communist Party and everything it stands for. I promote the Rights of citizens and hope for a new vital Government of and for the people.
@CGTNOfficial Apart from a flood of Propaganda, Xi Jinping & the Chinese Communist Party should admit that they have allowed Covid19 to come into existence & show remorse for their lack of proper care for citizens. Also. an apology to the World would not be amiss.🇦🇺
In May 1944, 23-year-old Phyllis Latour jumped out of a US bomber and parachuted into occupied Normandy, France. Her mission was to gather information about Nazi positions in preparation for D-Day. Once on the ground, she quickly buried her parachute and clothes, and began a secret mission that would last four months, pretending to be a poor teenage French girl.
Phyllis had been trained by the British Special Operations Executive (SOE). She learned how to send secret messages in Morse code, how to fix wireless radios, and how to spy without being caught. She also went through tough physical training in the Scottish highlands. Phyllis wanted to get revenge on the Nazis who had killed her godfather.
Phyllis said, “The men who had been sent before me were caught and killed. I was chosen because I would be less suspicious.” She would ride a bicycle through the region, pretending to sell soap, and secretly pass messages to the British about German locations. She acted like a country girl chatting with German soldiers to avoid raising suspicion. She moved from place to place to stay hidden and often slept in forests finding her own food.
Phyllis also came up with a clever way to hide her secret codes. She wrote them on a piece of silk and pricked it with a pin each time she used a code. She kept it hidden inside a hair tie. Once when the Germans briefly detained her and searched her she took out the hair tie and let her hair fall, showing she had nothing to hide. In the summer of 1944, Phyllis sent 135 coded messages helping Allied bombers find German targets.
After the war, Phyllis married and moved to New Zealand. Her children didn’t know about her wartime service until 2000, when her oldest son found out online. This hero passed on October 7, 2023. May she rest In peace.
On June 9, 1944, the French Resistance captured a senior SS officer named Helmut Kämpfe near Limoges. The next morning, his unit, the 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich, was looking for a response. They had already hanged 99 men from the balconies of Tulle the day before, chosen at random from townspeople, leaving them to strangle slowly in front of their families because they couldn't find enough rope for a proper drop.
Now they needed something more.
On June 10, Sturmbannführer Adolf Diekmann led his men to Oradour-sur-Glane. Some historians believe he confused it with Oradour-sur-Vayres, a different village where the Resistance was actually active. Others believe he knew exactly where he was. Either way, at 2pm his soldiers blocked every road in and out of the village.
They told everyone to gather in the marketplace for a routine identity check. People complied. A dentist came. A farmer left his fields. Schoolchildren were told by their teachers not to worry, they'd be back by dinner. A man cycling through town stopped to see what was happening.
By 2:30pm, around 650 people were standing in the square.
Then the soldiers separated the men.
The women and children were marched to the church. The 190 men were divided into six groups and taken to barns across the village. The mayor, Dr. Paul Desourteaux, reportedly tried to negotiate. There was nothing to negotiate.
In the barns, the soldiers opened fire but aimed deliberately at legs. At thighs. At knees. The goal was not to kill but to incapacitate. To ensure that when they piled straw over the bodies and lit it, nobody could crawl away. Men who were on fire and still conscious screamed while soldiers stood outside the doors.
Six men survived by playing dead beneath other bodies. One died from his burns days later. Five lived.
In the church, the women had been waiting almost two hours with the children. Soldiers carried in a large wooden box and placed it in the nave. They lit a fuse and left. The explosion released a thick, suffocating smoke. Soldiers then entered and opened fire on anyone still moving. Then they piled wood, straw, and chairs onto the bodies and lit everything.
The church bell rang for hours as the fire climbed the tower.
Women broke windows. Those who reached the ledge were shot before they could jump. One woman, 47-year-old Marguerite Rouffanche, crawled behind the altar, found a small window, and squeezed through. She dropped three meters to the ground. A 19-year-old named Henriette Joyeux saw her and followed, throwing her seven-month-old baby out first. Soldiers shot the baby out of the air. Then shot Henriette. Then shot Marguerite five times as she ran.
Marguerite survived by lying still beneath pea plants in a garden while the village burned around her. She lay there until the next morning. She was the only person to leave the church alive.
The youngest confirmed victim was seven days old.
After the killings, the soldiers spent the afternoon looting every building. Food, valuables, livestock, wine. Some burned homes with elderly residents still inside. Then they ate dinner. That evening. In the area.
The next morning, relatives from surrounding villages arrived looking for their families. They found 642 dead and a village of smoking ruins.
The aftermath is almost as horrifying as the massacre itself.
At the 1953 war crimes tribunal, 65 men were indicted. Only 20 could be found. Fourteen were Alsatians, French citizens, and Alsace threatened to riot if its sons were convicted. An amnesty law was quietly passed. Almost everyone walked free within a year.
Nobody spent meaningful time in prison for Oradour-sur-Glane.
By French law, nothing in the original village may be moved, repaired, or altered. The rusted cars sit in the street where they burned. The sewing machines are fused to the shop floors. The baby carriages are still there. The church stands open to the sky with a plaque listing the names of the children killed inside.
You can walk through it today.
82 years ago this morning, those 642 people had no idea. The dentist was thinking about his afternoon appointments. The teachers were relieved the children were behaving. The man on the bicycle was annoyed about the delay.
By 6pm they were all dead, and the soldiers who killed them were eating dinner.
Never forget Oradour-sur-Glane.
A CIA whistleblower recently testified that a willingness to "make excuses for China" is "pervasive" in the intel community, where a neoliberal worldview that favors unfettered free trade and scientific cooperation dominates.
For example, the National Academy of Sciences (which has done clandestine work since the earliest days of the U.S. biological weapons program) works with Chinese scientists without counterintelligence checks.
CIA Director John Ratcliffe says he is righting the ship.
"Embrace the CCP. Taiwan will become the next Hong Kong."
At a June 8 Asia Society event in New York, a mainland Chinese dissident confronted KMT Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun live during Q&A — asking why, after her April Beijing trip to see Xi Jinping, she told Taiwanese that drones would "deliver bubble tea, not missiles."
The questioner didn't stop there: he pressed her on what Xi reportedly told Trump about a potential Taiwan invasion, then answered his own second question unprompted — "I'm from mainland China, so I know: Xi wants Taiwan because dictatorships cannot allow democracies to exist next to them."
Then came the line that stopped the room: "Embrace the CCP. Taiwan will become the next Hong Kong."
84 years ago today, the Nazis erased an entire village for a crime it didn't commit.
June 4, 1942: Reinhard Heydrich, architect of the Holocaust, dies after Czech paratroopers ambush him in Prague. Hitler demands blood. The Gestapo follows a false lead to a small mining village of 500 people: Lidice. It had no connection to the assassination. None.
At dawn on June 10, every man and boy over 15 was marched to a farm garden and shot in groups of five against the wall. Too slow, the commanders decided. They increased it to ten. Each new group walked past the bodies of their neighbors before joining them. By afternoon, 173 men and boys were dead. Mattresses had been propped against the wall to stop the ricochets.
The women and children were held in a school gymnasium for three days. Then the children were ripped from their mothers' arms. 195 women were shipped to Ravensbrück concentration camp.
The children were told they were being taken to their parents. 82 of them were loaded into sealed trucks at Chełmno and killed with engine exhaust. The youngest was about a year old. Only a handful, judged "racially suitable," were given to German families and stripped of their names.
Then the Nazis erased the village itself. Burned the houses. Dynamited the church and the school. Dug up 400 graves and looted the corpses. Cut down the orchards. Diverted the stream. Rerouted the roads. They filmed it all. Proudly.
But it backfired. The Nazis publicized Lidice as a warning, and the world answered. Towns in Mexico, Brazil, and the US renamed themselves Lidice. Parents named daughters Lidice. The village meant to be forgotten became impossible to forget.
After the war, 143 women came home. Years of searching recovered just 17 of the children. Today the site is a memorial, its centerpiece 82 bronze statues of children standing together, facing the valley where their village used to be.
The Nazis tried to murder a village and its memory. The people are gone. The memory won.
Remember Lidice. June 10, 1942.
One of the most brutal scenes in human history has been leaked.
A harrowing video released by Israeli occupation soldiers shows a drone chasing an unarmed Palestinian youth, directly targeting and killing him without mercy, in the southern Gaza Strip.
A video that the world must never forget.
143 bundles of human hair.
26 kilograms. Hidden inside pillows.
Smuggled out of Iran and just seized by Armenian customs officers.
And for many Iranians, one thought immediately comes to mind:
The hundreds of young women who disappeared after the January 2026 protests.
The daughters whose families still don’t know where they are.
The daughters whose bodies were never returned.
The daughters whose mothers and fathers are still waiting for answers.
The Islamic Republic has spent 47 years murdering, torturing, raping, executing, and disappearing its own people. Families have spent decades accusing the regime of covering up deaths, returning mutilated bodies, and harvesting organs from prisoners and victims killed in custody.
The regime has committed so many horrors against its own people that when authorities intercept 26 kilograms of human hair being smuggled out of Iran, many Iranians don’t see a customs violation.
They see the daughters who never came home.
One question:
Whose hair is it?💔
Spy Camera Found at UK Government Complex Amid China ‘Super-Embassy’ Row
A hidden camera has been discovered inside the Whitehall government complex, the very site where plans for China’s controversial new “super-embassy” in London had been worked on and ultimately approved.
The revelation has intensified concerns that the UK government’s decision to greenlight the massive Chinese embassy project has exposed Britain to significant security risks.
According to multiple UK media reports, it remains unclear how or when the camera was installed. It was found within the past two months during a security sweep.
https://t.co/c0GPH8HZkg
Pregnant Wife Raises Two Children Alone as Pastor Jailed 4+ Months for Preaching the Gospel.
In Chengdu, China, Preacher Dai Zhichao of Early Rain Covenant Church has been detained over four months without legal counsel, charged with inciting subversion for independent Gospel preaching. His pregnant wife raises their two children alone, while Elder Li Yingqiang faces identical charges in the same center.
Dai Zhichao’s wife should not have to raise their children alone; she should be watching her husband walk through the door.
Diplomatic and trade envoys must make clear that broader economic and geopolitical cooperation is inseparable from China’s compliance with international human rights standards.
Read Now
https://t.co/5DEIOjPtBB
Thank you, Lauren Lau, Ph.D.
@LindaLuhwfe
#ChinaChristianPersecution #ReligiousFreedomChina #EarlyRainCovenantChurch #YayangChurchCrackdown #StopSinicization
🕯️@frances_hui was 10 years old when she first stood in Victoria Park with a candle in her hand. She was surrounded by thousands of Hong Kongers gathered to remember June 4.
Thirty-seven years later, at the National Endowment for Democracy @NEDemocracy, she spoke about the power of memory and the impact the Tiananmen Massacre had on the next generation of Hong Kongers.
“The power of memory isn’t in how many speak of it. It’s in how much we are willing to give — to defend it, to pass it on, and to walk with one another.”
From one generation to the next, the torch of memory is carried through courage, solidarity, and the refusal to forget.
Watch the full event: https://t.co/pfrtMQUKKw
Yes, Xi wants to destroy Taiwan's democracy + would be happy to own TSMC, but the real prize? Direct access to the Pacific.
Chinese submarines dropping off Taiwan's steep eastern coastal shelf would completely change regional security + national security for Japan, Philippines.
Tensions between China and Japan are escalating as Chinese rare earth exports to Japan collapse following new export controls. Some critical minerals have reportedly fallen to near-zero levels, raising concerns for global supply chains, advanced manufacturing, and defense industries. Meanwhile, the rare earth dispute comes as Beijing and Tokyo clash over regional security, Taiwan, and growing cooperation between Japan and the Philippines, adding another layer of uncertainty to an already tense Indo-Pacific environment.
The CCP’s oppression of its people has no bounds. Last week, it denied families the opportunity to visit the graves of their loved ones – loved ones the CCP killed 37 years ago at Tiananmen Square. This brazen disregard for basic humanity is another reminder the CCP does not share the values of life and liberty that we cherish as Americans. https://t.co/QzlEj3ikRS
China is aggressively slamming Japan's record-breaking defense budget, claiming Tokyo is rushing toward dangerous remilitarization. On June 11, 2026, the Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a scathing warning, accusing Japan of breaking post-war norms and shifting its security policies in an offensive, expansionary direction. Beijing heavily criticized Tokyo for increasing military spending, easing lethal weapon exports, deploying intermediate-range counterstrike missiles, and pushing for constitutional changes to chip away at pacifist restraints.
This furious diplomatic backlash follows Japan's approval of a record 58 billion dollar defense budget for the 2026 fiscal year. Driven by mounting security threats from China, North Korea, and Russia, Japan’s spending focuses heavily on long-range standoff missiles and advanced coastal defenses. Tokyo maintains these upgrades are strictly defensive and essential for survival in an increasingly volatile Indo-Pacific region.
The fierce rhetoric highlights a profound geopolitical double standard. While Beijing frames Japan's self-defense measures as a threat to regional peace, China simultaneously commands a vastly larger military budget, rapidly expands its own naval footprint, and conducts aggressive military drills right on Japan's doorstep.
#JapanDefense #China #NationalSecurity #Geopolitics2026 #IndoPacific #MilitaryModernization #SelfDefense #ForeignPolicy
Penny Wong Explodes Over Palestine Questions in Senate Estimates | Micha...
yes Minister, the UK and France have recognised the Palestinian Embassies in their countries. Why not Australia? Thank you @DavidShoebridge
https://t.co/LrCAVmvpXv via @YouTube