This is 100 percent correct. And why I said what I said when I was asked during Covid on Fox News, “Fauci says he is science and if you criticize him you are criticizing science, what do you say? “
My response was: “A lot of doctors and people I speak to do not see it that way, they see him more as Dr Mengele, the doctor of death from the Nazi concentration camps”.
For that I was cancelled by Fox News where I was in the midst of contract negotiations & had a very successful show in Fox Nation: “The Rest of the Story with Lara Logan”. I had been a regular guest on most of their shows & many people thought I already worked there but I was not paid for any of that & not employed by Fox. Up to then I had done my Fox Nation show through a modest production company but I was so successful, Fox News was going to employ me for the first time. Someone made sure that did not happen - not because I was wrong, it was because I was telling the truth.
And powerful people once again did not want that.
🚨 Gavin Newsom’s wife was laundering herself so much money from her NGO she was actually in the top 5% for pay from all charities in the entire nation
But that’s not all, Gavin Newsom “bought his $3.7 million Sacramento estate, it was done through an LLC, but that LLC doesn't seem to have appeared on his tax returns — There’s a lot of questions”
“He’s released at least partly to journalists in closed-door viewing sessions, his tax returns. And if you look at that, his income, it's about $1.2 to $1.4 million a year. And it just doesn't add up for all of his expenses. He's got massive mortgages, $625,000 in mortgage payments and he's got at least $1 million in living expenses, and the two just don't add up”
“When I had a look at Jennifer Newsom's charity, I found that she was paying herself since 2012, $3.7 million. And this is a lot of money when you look at the amount that the charity brings in. It's sort of $1-$1.7 million a year. And she's paying up to a third of that to herself and her own company—$300,000 a year.
Now, I did a bit of data analysis looking at what charities that size usually pay their executives, and she was in the top 5% of all charities in the nation for pay”
In the video I included more instances where Gavin Newsom laundered money to his wife
- $1 million to block a casino project
- $5 million to an office for his wife that he created
- He sent $300,000 from his donor PG&E to his wife’s NGO
And more, it never ends. They need to go to jail
We are seeing the start of civil war in Britain.
This is not going to be resolved with more nice speeches by leftist politicians about tolerance.
Muslims simply don't belong in Europe. The indigenous population of England, Scotland and Ireland are never going to share their country with Muslim invaders.
The only solution is to send the Muslims home. They have their own countries. They can visit as tourists, but they should never be allowed to migrate to Europe or the USA.
In 1884, Ulysses S. Grant was dying of throat cancer and was dead broke.
His money was wiped out by a swindler who stole his fortune.
Desperate to leave something for his wife, he agreed to write his Civil War memoirs and was close to signing a contract for a meager 10% royalty.
Mark Twain stepped in, called the deal robbery and offered Grant 70% of the profits through his own publishing company.
Grant raced death to finish the book, completing it just days before he died in July 1885.
It became one of the greatest memoirs ever written.
The royalties left his widow nearly half a million dollars, about $16 million today, and the book has never gone out of print.
Dr. Luc Montagnier, Nobel Laureate, final interview before being FOUND DEAD 6 days later.
"I am here to expose Fauci's gain-of-function – COVID was the job of a professional...it's NOT natural. Sequences like HIV have been added...in order to make a vaccine."
Born this day in 1925 in a Texas sharecropper's shack, one of twelve kids. His dad walked out, his mom died young, and Audie Murphy quit school in fifth grade to pick cotton and hunt rabbits to feed his brothers and sisters. He got deadly accurate with a rifle for one reason: the family couldn't afford a wasted bullet.
After Pearl Harbor he tried to enlist and got laughed off. The Marines rejected him. The Navy rejected him. The paratroopers rejected him. He was 5'5" and barely 110 pounds, and they all said he was too small to fight. His sister had to fudge his paperwork just to get the Army to take a 17 year old.
Then he went to war and became something out of a legend.
January 26, 1945, near Holtzwihr, France. His company was down to a handful of men facing six tanks and 250 German infantry. Murphy sent his men back, then climbed onto a burning American tank destroyer that could have exploded under him at any second, grabbed the .50 caliber machine gun, and held off the entire assault alone for nearly an hour. He was wounded in the leg and kept firing. When a buddy asked over the field phone how close the Germans were, he reportedly said hold on and let me ask them.
He came home the most decorated American soldier of the entire war. Every valor award the Army could give, some of them more than once, plus French and Belgian honors on top.
Life magazine put his baby face on the cover, James Cagney saw it and invited him to Hollywood, and the cotton picker who couldn't pass a physical became a movie star. He made over 40 films. In 1955 he played himself in To Hell and Back, the movie of his own memoir, and it was Universal's biggest hit until Jaws came along twenty years later.
But the war never let go. He had what we now call PTSD, slept with a loaded pistol under his pillow, and got hooked on sleeping pills trying to outrun the nightmares. He kicked the addiction by locking himself alone in a motel room for a week. Then he did something almost no famous man did back then: he went public, told the country that combat had wrecked his nerves, and pushed the government to study and treat what war does to a soldier's mind.
He died in a plane crash in 1971 at just 45 years old. They buried him at Arlington, where his simple headstone is the most visited grave in the cemetery after John F. Kennedy's.
Every branch told him he was too small to fight. He outfought all of them, then spent the rest of his life trying to help the men who came home broken like he did.
🚨JUST IN: Jacksonville woman Jennifer Cruz has pleaded guilty to punching a state trooper after mistaking him for an ICE agent.
She now faces up to 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. The judge is reviewing the case, with sentencing scheduled soon.
Charlie Kirk and RFK Jr. on Bill Gates and Dr. Fauci colluding to ‘Vaccinate the entire World’…
“They were summoned to his $147M Mansion in Washington…and said, “Let’s form a partnership to vaccinate the whole world and to give immunity to all vaccine companies”…Gates owns shares in virtually all Pharmaceutical Companies. It has nothing to do with Public Health…”
Something good is happening at this World Cup.
The Scots turned up. The English turned up. The Norwegians turned up. They sang their songs, got stuck in, and the Americans loved them for it. Glasgow and Boston are getting twinned off the back of it.
For 30 years we’ve been told to view the US as some sort of Great Satan — all imperialism and orange-man clichés. Not everyone buys it of course, but enough do.
And then Europeans actually go, and find a place that feels familiar. Makes sense to them. A bit richer, a bit further ahead, but recognisably ours. Settled by Europeans, still deeply European in its bones.
There’s a gathering-of-the-clans feeling to it. Old neighbours discovering they still like the same songs, the same drink, the same daft humour, and genuinely enjoying each other’s company.
None of it’s a surprise, really. It’s just been buried under so much politics that we forgot we were allowed to enjoy it.
Good to be reminded.
🚨 HOLY CRAP. Health Sec. Bobby Kennedy just exposed a hotel in Gavin Newsom’s California where every single room was listed as the “headquarters” of a nursing group. You read that right. Every room. Same address. Same scam. They are not providing care. They are not treating patients. They are just collecting taxpayer money. This is the fraud machine Democrats pretend does not exist. How many more fake “providers” are bleeding the system dry while politicians look the other way? Clean it up. Prosecute it. End it.
240 years ago today, the most underrated general in American history died. From a sunburn.
Nathanael Greene was never supposed to be a soldier. He was a Quaker from Rhode Island who ran his family's iron forge. He had asthma, a stiff leg that gave him a permanent limp, and zero combat experience. His own church suspended him just for going to watch a military parade.
So how did he end up commanding the entire Southern army? He read. He bought every book on warfare he could find and taught himself strategy from scratch. Washington noticed, and trusted him more than almost anyone.
By 1780 the war in the South was a disaster. The previous American general got beaten so badly he fled 200 miles on horseback. Congress let Washington pick the replacement, and he picked Greene without hesitation.
Greene's plan was insane. He looked at his small, starving, half-naked army and decided he could not win, so he would lose correctly. He ran Cornwallis all over the Carolinas until the British were exhausted, far from supply, and bleeding men they could not replace. "We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again."
At Guilford Courthouse, Cornwallis technically won the battle and lost a quarter of his army doing it. That was the whole point. Greene lost almost every fight on paper and won the entire South. Cornwallis limped off to a little tobacco port to rest and refit. The port was called Yorktown.
Here's the part that should make you angry. To feed and clothe his men, Greene personally co-signed for war supplies because the government wouldn't pay. When the bills came due, Congress refused to honor them. The man who saved the South came home buried in debt that wasn't his.
Georgia gave him a plantation near Savannah as thanks. He finally had peace. Then one hot afternoon in June 1786 he spent the day walking a neighbor's rice fields with no hat. He collapsed from sunstroke and a week later he was dead at 43.
One last twist. After he died, his widow Catharine took in a broke young houseguest tinkering with an idea. His name was Eli Whitney, and the cotton gin was invented at the dead general's home.
June 19, 1786. Remember the name. Nathanael Greene.
.@SenJohnKennedy,
Is it true that you’re publicly supporting the SAVE America Act,
but then privately attacking those Senators that are actually pushing for the SAVE America Act?
It looks like you’re up for re-election in 2028.