🚨SECRETARY OF WAR PETE HEGSETH DISHONORABLY DISCHARGES 1,408 ANTIFA TERRORISTS FROM THE MILITARY AFTER A MASSIVE INVESTIGATION INTO THEIR SOCIAL MEDIA AND PERSONAL ACTIVITIES — THEY LOST THEIR CAREERS, PENSIONS, AND HEALTHCARE!
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This is how you clean house.
Pete Hegseth just dropped the hammer on 1,408 soldiers with ties to Antifa. After a lengthy investigation into their social media posts and personal activities, these domestic terrorists have been dishonorably discharged.
No more hiding behind the uniform. No more using the military as cover while pushing radical leftist violence. Hegseth made it clear: “We won’t allow these terrorists to infiltrate our military.”
These 1,408 soldiers didn’t just lose their jobs. They lost their pensions, their healthcare, and their careers. That’s the price for bringing Antifa ideology into the ranks.
The military is not a place for domestic terrorists. Hegseth is doing exactly what needed to be done — purging the radicals who want to turn our armed forces into another Antifa playground.
This is what real leadership looks like. No more wokeness. No more tolerance for enemies within.
The investigation was thorough. The consequences were severe. And more are coming.
Share this everywhere so every Antifa sympathizer in uniform sees what happens when they get caught!
Follow @mcafeenew for more drops.
Look at this photograph.
It’s 1968.
The man carrying this little boy on his shoulders is not his father.
His father has just left.
Left his mother.
Left their home.
Left for another life.
And the man who showed up — who drove 45 minutes across London just to check on a 5-year-old boy whose world had suddenly fallen apart — is holding him steady with both hands while the child laughs at the top of his lungs.
That drive would inspire the best-selling Beatles single of all time.
The boy’s name was Julian Lennon.
And he has never quite known how to feel about it.
Julian Charles John Lennon was born on April 8, 1963.
Four days earlier, The Beatles had released their first album.
His father, John Lennon, was becoming one of the most famous people on Earth.
From the beginning, music came first.
The touring.
The recording.
The chaos.
The fame.
Julian came after all of it.
Paul McCartney, however, had known Julian since he was a baby. He watched him grow up while the world around the Beatles became louder and stranger and harder to survive.
Then, in May 1968, John told Cynthia Lennon their marriage was over.
He had fallen in love with Yoko Ono.
Cynthia later said she came home from vacation and found Yoko already there.
Just like that, the family was broken apart.
Julian was five years old.
Paul McCartney decided to drive out to see Cynthia and Julian.
No cameras.
No publicity.
No grand gesture.
Just a friend showing up because a little boy was hurting.
And during that drive, Paul started humming.
“Hey Jules… don’t make it bad…”
Later, he changed “Jules” to “Jude.”
The song became “Hey Jude.”
Released in August 1968, it spent nine weeks at No. 1 in America, sold millions of copies, and became the biggest-selling Beatles single in history.
But for Julian Lennon, the song carried two truths at once.
To the world, it became comfort.
To him, it became memory.
A reminder that his father had walked away.
And that another man had stepped in long enough to help carry the weight.
Years later, Julian admitted he has a “love-hate relationship” with the song.
Because every stadium singalong…
Every radio replay…
Every well-meaning person saying “Your song!”…
Also brings him back to that moment when his childhood changed forever.
Yet even through all the complicated feelings, one thing never changed:
He never forgot that Paul showed up.
Not because he had to.
Not because it benefited him.
But because a child needed kindness.
Look at the photograph one more time.
A little boy laughing with his whole body.
A man holding him securely on his shoulders.
Two hands making sure he doesn’t fall.
Julian doesn’t know yet about the divorce.
About the fame.
About the legal battles.
About inheritance disputes.
About the strange burden of having your pain turned into one of the most famous songs ever written.
Right now, he only knows one thing:
Someone came.
And sometimes, for a child, that is everything.
If I woke up tomorrow obese, with high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, fatty liver, gout, constant fatigue, and brain fog.
On 6 different medications.
Here’s exactly what I would do to fix them all and be off all meds…
🧵