@Lazarus38611569 Coach Popovich is a friend of the family and he is still part of the team. I thought about playing for him when he was the coach at a small college.
Mr. Hartmann writes:
"For decades, Democrats suspected what has now been CONFIRMED in plain English by a Trump insider. Ashley St. Clair, former TPUSA brand ambassador, who built a million-follower platform on X...has spent a few weeks blowing the lid 1/
https://t.co/I7qG3P6sfY
@TheWapplehouse My mom, dad, and sister all served. Growing up in an Air force family I always thought I would get to join. It was the greatest disappointment in my live that I was not able to join. I worked as a defense contractor alongside alongside military personnel but it is not the same.
Jon Stewart on the ICE murder of Alex Pretti: “They’re lying. We saw it. That’s how brazen they lie when they know we’ve seen the truth. Imagine how they lie when there’s no evidence to contradict them. Maybe that explains why Alex Pretti really was a threat. Because he was brandishing a weapon. A handheld, aluminum, 1080p, 60fps weapon of mass illumination. Because there is nothing more dangerous to a regime predicated on lies than witnesses who capture the truth”
Let’s be crystal clear. These aren’t “spin.” These aren’t “interpretations.” These are documented lies and legal conclusions — and we’re calling them what they are: lies.
1. Trump said he wasn’t in the Epstein files.
He is in the files. Proven. Period.
2. Trump said he ran to lower prices.
Inflation and costs for everyday Americans are still higher today than when he took office. That campaign promise was flatly false.
3. Trump promised he wouldn’t gut healthcare.
He allowed the enhanced Obamacare subsidies to expire, causing premiums to jump and coverage to worsen for millions. That wasn’t an accident — it was a betrayal of his pledge.
4. Trump claimed he would be a peace-time president.
He escalated military action without Congressional approval. That was a lie.
5. Trump said he lost the 2020 election because it was “rigged.”
Special Counsel Jack Smith confirmed under oath that Trump privately acknowledged losing the 2020 election — even though he repeatedly claimed otherwise in public. That’s a lie layered on top of a lie.
6. Trump said he didn’t try to overturn the 2020 election.
Smith testified that his investigation developed proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Trump engaged in a criminal scheme to overturn the election and impede the lawful transfer of power, and that the Capitol riot “does not happen without” Trump’s actions.
That isn’t opinion — that’s what the prosecutor said under oath. Trump lied about it.
7. Trump said he respected the rule of law.
He was indicted on federal charges for illegally retaining classified documents and obstructing justice, and Smith explained he had powerful evidence of willful retention of sensitive materials and obstruction.
Claiming he respected the law while hiding classified docs was a lie.
8. Trump said he stood for law and order.
He refused to call off the mob on January 6 while people were in danger, and Smith testified the attack wouldn’t have happened without him.
That claim was a lie.
9. Trump said he couldn’t be bought and wouldn’t abuse his office.
He used his presidency to pardon allies convicted for crimes related to January 6 and pressured officials to manipulate election outcomes. That was a lie.
10. Trump said he always tells the truth.
He has been documented making thousands of demonstrably false statements while also being accused — by the prosecutor himself — of engaging in criminal conduct. Claiming truthfulness after that is the ultimate lie.
Bottom line: These aren’t partisan talking points.
They’re documented claims, sworn testimony, legal findings, public data, and measurable outcomes.
When someone tells the truth, it lines up with reality.
When someone tells a lie, the record — not the rhetoric — reveals it.