The media promised us the
hantavirus was going to shut down
the whole world again.
We literally made fun of it so much
they just deleted the entire
storyline.
A real disease doesn’t just pack up
and leave because it got bad ratings
Golden Tempo does it again! 🏇🏆 The Kentucky Derby winner stormed from behind to capture the Belmont Stakes, while trainer @reredevaux made history as the first woman to win multiple Triple Crown races!
No infected wildlife carcasses have been reported between the U.S.-Mexico border and the two confirmed New World Screwworm cases in Zavala County, Texas calves, roughly 50–60 miles north.
While officials attribute the jump to natural dispersal, the absence of any intermediate detections—despite active surveillance, traps, and sterile-fly buffers—makes an undetected leap by a fly that normally travels only a few miles highly improbable, strongly fueling suspicions of intentional mischief, such as deliberate transport or release of infested material aimed at disrupting U.S. cattle operations. Aggressive genetic tracing of the Texas strain is essential to determine whether this was sabotage or coincidence.
Figured that, every Sunday before the race for as long as I can go, I would share a KFB memory and the story behind it.
Kyle loved @CBellRacing. Almost to the point where I would say stop talking about CBell so much 🤣😅. There was no doubt in KB's mind Christopher is the best Cup driver in the garage. As KB got deeper into dirt racing, I believe that bonded them even more, and CB really coached him and looked up to him. I'm happy they had these moments. ❤️
“The Boy’s of 44”. On this day, June 6, 1944, 82 years ago, 18,19 year old boys, who had kissed their mothers goodbye for the last time stormed the beaches of Normandy! The sacrifice that was made to win World War II,
America’s invasion of Europe! @OU_Football
First, the Kentucky Derby. Now the Belmont Stakes. Five weeks ago, @reredevaux became the first woman to win the Kentucky Derby.
Now, she, @jose93_ortiz, and Golden Tempo are @BelmontStakes winners. The reaction says it all.
There’s literally nothing weird about Thomas Matthew Crooks emailing a deputy from Butler, PA before the assassination attempt. It’s not weird that he practiced shooting at the same range Homeland Security used. It’s not weird that the local police and Secret Service spotted Crooks with a rangefinder, photographed him, and texted about him for over an hour and still let him climb the roof with a rifle. It’s not weird that the Secret Service wasn’t flying drones that day, but Crooks was. It’s not weird that Butler was the first Trump rally of the year with Secret Service anti-sniper agents on the roofs. It’s not weird that Crooks’ house looked like a sterile lab with no trash or silverware. And it’s not weird that his body was cremated ten days later before Congress could see it. This is like when people say the CIA was shadowing Oswald before he, and he alone, shot JFK.
UAP Filing — Update
The model thought the file was closed until June 9th
Last night changed that
A sitting United States Congressman has now gone on record
Rep. Eric Burlison
House Oversight Committee
Government Secrets Disclosure Task Force
The government has egg shaped craft in its possession
People who entered the craft lost time
He wants to go in himself
This is not a blogger
This is a member of Congress with classified briefings
Glowing orbs
Stationary
Then accelerating beyond known capability
The investigation has expanded to private contractors
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
MITRE
RAND Corporation
Northrop Grumman
The model filed the first report when the portal launched
1 billion visits in 23 days
The third tranche has not dropped
Rep. Burlison is not the only name in the queue
The model is not done
Continuing analysis
Sent from my Mac
Richard Childress says it was "incredible" watching Brexton Busch this past Tuesday while discussing his abilities as a race car driver. Brexton was seen at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Tuesday driving his Legends car in opening practice for the Summer Shootout.
Childress says the Kyle Busch stylized No. 8 is there for Brexton if he ever wants to run it in the future for any team in NASCAR. They hold the rights to the number, so they can save it for the future if Brexton chooses to use it as his own.
As far as helping Brexton and putting him in the best possible position for his future:
"I think, again, just showing him the respect - and trying not to put more pressure on him, just like Dale Jr., not put more pressure on him. I think that he's got a great future ahead. That kid can drive a race car. ... He's just a bright young man and a great little race driver. He'll carry the Busch legacy many years to come."
Richard Childress clarified the stylized 8 will be saved for Brexton Busch whenever he's ready to race in NASCAR, no matter the team: "...if he calls us up and says hey, I'm going to go race for Rick Hendrick..."
Childress praised Brexton and said he reminds him of Dale Jr.
Before Oz could react to the severe injury to his arm, another mortar hit the roof to his right, the 4th explosion in quick succession. He looked over his shoulder and saw Glen Doherty drop face down onto the concrete roof without breaking his fall. Oz was still determined not to abandon the fight from the roof and continued trying to make use of the hand on his severely wounded left arm to no avail. Then another mortar hit, the 3rd to land on Building C. (1/3)
The Oklahoma Governor battle is very much one of aristocratic, connected entitlement versus the common man facing overwhelming odds.
@JakeMerrick4Gov stands as the sole defender of regular citizens. He is the only one running who is accessible to all, the only man not beholden to PAC or lobbyist money, and the only candidate struggling, fighting, and working daily to make ends meet while campaigning among real Oklahoma citizens, where we live, and not at elite hosted dinners or behind security.
Drummond, Mazzei, McCall, and Keating have each abused their power, bowed to DC influencers, and used their positions of privilege to the detriment of our State's citizens; Drummond's criminal dismissals of guilty allies, Mazzei's payoffs to Roger Stone and hidden donors waiting to reimburse, McCall's rule change disenfranchising voters and legislators, and Keating's covering of the OHP scandal and firing those who threatened the connected.
The good old boys club of Oklahoma isn't accessible to you now and they'll continue to rule from the backrooms if elected.
Jake is here for you now and that won't change. Jake's greatest scandal? Struggling, like so many of us, to make ends meet while working, taking care of his family, AND campaigning from one end of the state to the other for our future.
The fight matters. Vote for @JakeMerrick4Gov
🚨 Former Oklahoma Judge Brian Lovell Committed a Drive-By Shooting. He Never Spent a Day in Jail.
In February 2023, then-Garfield County Associate District Judge Brian Lovell was accused of pulling up to his brother-in-law’s rural home near Bison, Oklahoma, and firing shots from a vehicle during a family dispute.
Under Oklahoma law, using a vehicle to facilitate the intentional discharge of a firearm in conscious disregard for the safety of others is an extremely serious felony offense. The charge carries a potential sentence ranging from two years to life in prison.
Yet Lovell never served a single day behind bars.
How We Got Here
The case was prosecuted by Attorney General Gentner Drummond’s office through a multi-county grand jury, which returned an indictment in May 2024.
At the same time, Lovell faced separate allegations involving inappropriate relationships with court staff and bailiffs, raising questions about judicial ethics, favoritism, and workplace conduct. Those allegations became part of proceedings that threatened his future on the bench.
In September 2024, Lovell resigned as a judge.
His attorneys argued that a combination of serious health issues, including frontotemporal dementia and recovery from thyroid cancer, contributed to behavior they described as completely out of character.
The Plea Deal
On September 12, 2025, Lovell pleaded guilty to the primary charge of using a vehicle to facilitate the discharge of a firearm.
A second charge alleging discharge of a firearm into a dwelling was dismissed as part of the agreement.
His sentence:
• 20-year suspended sentence
• No prison time
• Two years of Department of Corrections supervision
• Permanent prohibition on firearms and ammunition
• No alcohol or illegal drugs
• Mandatory AA meetings and substance abuse assessments
• Ongoing psychiatric treatment
• Surrender of his law license
• No driving during probation
• Must remain at least one mile away from his brother-in-law’s residence
The Questions Many Oklahomans Are Asking
This case has sparked an uncomfortable debate about accountability and equal justice.
Would an average Oklahoma citizen charged with a drive-by shooting receive the same outcome?
How much weight should medical diagnoses carry when determining punishment for violent felony offenses?
Should public officials be held to a higher standard, or should health considerations outweigh incarceration in cases like this?
Reasonable people can disagree on those questions.
Some view the sentence as a compassionate response to serious medical and neurological conditions.
Others see a justice system that treated a former judge differently than it would have treated an ordinary defendant.
What cannot be disputed is this:
A sitting Oklahoma judge pleaded guilty to using a vehicle to facilitate the discharge of a firearm, received a 20-year suspended sentence, and never served jail time.
The debate over whether that outcome represents justice or favoritism continues.
💬 What do you think, Oklahoma?
Should public officials accused of violent crimes be treated exactly the same as everyone else?
#OklahomaJustice #BrianLovell #DriveByShooting #GarfieldCounty #GentnerDrummond #EqualJustice #AccountabilityMatters