A New Jersey police sergeant has been charged with stealing $10,000 worth of cameras and other equipment from a photojournalist who had been injured covering tense protests outside a Newark immigration jail.
https://t.co/D6MlHuKNC4
Remember kids, this sick society is not "the real world". The predator parasite class wants you to believe their power is a part of nature, when it's actually the result of violence. The real world is a paradise of plenty, currently being held hostage by sadistic power addicts.
Many studies back this up! 😎
Sadly, my adopted Mom lives in Indiana where they still live in reefer madness. Her condition has worsened to where she's in hospice now. All because of ignorance.
I hope someone sues these type of States for medical malpractice.
In the spirit of true liberty, Voltaire’s insight cuts to the heart of power.
The surest way to identify who truly holds authority over you isn’t through titles, laws, or elections—it’s by noticing whose ideas, actions, or sacred cows are shielded from open criticism.
A free society thrives when everyone and everything can be questioned, mocked, or challenged without fear of ruin.
When certain groups, institutions, or ideologies become untouchable, liberty begins to wither.
Defend the right to criticize boldly and relentlessly. That’s not incitement—it’s the ultimate safeguard against tyranny.
In the Land of the Free?
This meme nails the quiet tyranny of our surveillance state.
The figure in the suit, camera-headed and finger-pointing in front of the Capitol, says it all: “I don’t need a warrant when I can buy your data.”
The Fourth Amendment once protected us from unreasonable searches.
Today, the feds simply purchase our location history, browsing habits, and communications from tech giants—who often comply eagerly for profit or favors.
No pesky judicial oversight.
No accountability.
Just endless dossiers compiled without your consent.
Libertarians have warned for decades: when government grows this powerful, privacy dies by a thousand purchase orders.
Your data isn’t “just metadata”—it’s the blueprint of your life.
Real liberty demands we reclaim it. End the warrantless data brokering.
Defund the surveillance apparatus. Restore the wall between the state and our private affairs.
Otherwise, the camera-headed bureaucrat isn’t just a meme. He’s policy.
This graphic nails a timeless truth: politicians campaign like libertarians and govern like authoritarians.
Trump promised radical transparency, yet the Epstein files remain sealed—another chapter in the bipartisan tradition of protecting the powerful.
He vowed to end endless wars, but escalation with Iran proves the warfare state’s gravitational pull is stronger than campaign rhetoric.
And tariffs?
They’re taxes on American consumers and businesses, inflating costs while pretending to save jobs—classic economic ignorance that ignores why free trade and sound money actually deliver affordability.
The real lesson isn’t “Team Red bad.”
It’s that concentrated power corrupts regardless of the letter next to the name.
Libertarians don’t need better rulers; we need far fewer rulers.
Shrink the state, end the secrecy, stop the interventions, and let voluntary cooperation and open markets do the heavy lifting.
Until then, broken promises like these are just features of the system, not bugs.
In the spirit of Liberty, Terence McKenna’s words strike like a thunderclap of truth.
We possess unprecedented wealth, knowledge, technology, and human goodwill—the raw materials for a flourishing civilization where voluntary cooperation, innovation, and mutual respect could create genuine human paradise.
Yet we remain shackled by the very structures McKenna decries: centralized power that elevates the least visionary, the least competent, and the least noble to positions of coercive authority.
Liberty reveals the solution.
When individuals are free to associate, trade, innovate, and govern their own lives—without the dead hand of the mediocre state directing our destiny—we unlock humanity’s true potential.
No central planner can match the distributed intelligence of free minds. No bureaucrat can outshine the emergent order born of consent.
The path to that paradise is not more control from the “least among us,” but radical decentralization of power.
True liberty doesn’t just criticize bad leadership—it renders it obsolete by empowering every sovereign individual.
The future belongs to the free.
Complacency is the silent killer of liberty.
We’ve heard it a thousand times: “That surveillance bill is too extreme—it’ll never pass.”
“They’d never get away with it.”
Yet every major expansion of state power in history rode that exact wave of public shrugging.
From the Patriot Act to digital ID mandates and AI-powered tracking, governments test the waters, face mild outrage, then quietly normalize the unthinkable.
Libertarians understand the pattern: power doesn’t ask permission twice. It exploits our busy lives and short memories.
Today’s “common-sense safety measure” becomes tomorrow’s tool for monitoring dissent, freezing assets, or silencing wrongthink.
The antidote isn’t cynicism—it’s unrelenting vigilance. Demand sunset clauses on every new surveillance authority. Insist on warrants, transparency, and strict limits. Reject the narrative that trading privacy for security is ever a fair deal.
Freedom isn’t lost in one dramatic coup. It erodes, one “they’ll never get away with it” at a time.
Stay awake. Push back.
Complacency is not a defense.
Pentagon Sees Growing
Espionage Threat From Israel:
The Defense Department has increased the counterintelligence threat assessment to its highest level, and Israel is believed to have eavesdropped on American negotiations with Iran.
https://t.co/Q7GfYWG2JZ
If FISA 702 were truly just about surveilling foreigners overseas, the government wouldn’t be fighting so hard against a warrant requirement for spying on Americans.
A 17-year-old valedictorian, Leen Hijaz, used her graduation speech to speak for the voiceless: "Millions suffering in Palestine, Sudan, Congo, Afghanistan. Families torn apart by ICE."
The school administrator cut her mic. Told her: "If you don't stop, you're not graduating." They withheld her diploma for four days.
The Iranian navy, which has been destroyed eight times, has apparently closed the Strait of Hormuz again, because the United States, for the seventh time, won the war that wasn’t a war, so now the United States has to open the Strait of Hormuz that was already open before the not-war began.
The not-war began because Iran had uranium that was totally, completely, beautifully obliterated, so they can’t build the nuclear bomb they weren’t building, which is why the United States had to start the not-war it definitely didn’t start.
Now the United States, which has nuclear weapons, is threatening to use nuclear weapons to stop Iran from getting nuclear weapons, because nuclear weapons are far too dangerous for countries with nuclear weapons to allow other countries to have.
If the United States saw the United States doing what the United States does in other countries, the United States would invade the United States to liberate the United States from the tyranny of the United States.
I will deliver this speech Monday at approximately noon. I’m honored to report that some survivors have already indicated they will attend as my guests in the gallery. If you’re a survivor and would like to attend, please contact my office, or talk with leaders in your group.
In the timeless struggle depicted here, the lone warrior of Individualism stands unyielding against the writhing hydra of collectivism. Socialism, communism, fascism, globalism, corporatism, and militant theocracy—each serpent promises security through control, yet delivers only chains.
Libertarians recognize this truth: no collective can grant rights or prosperity; they can only seize them.
True freedom arises from voluntary exchange, personal responsibility, and the sacred sovereignty of the individual.
When government, cartel, or ideology claims the power to plan our lives, it crushes innovation, dignity, and human potential.
The battle is eternal, but the outcome is ours to claim.
Arm yourself with reason, integrity, and the non-aggression principle.
Resist the forces that would sacrifice the one for the many.
Liberty isn’t granted—it is defended, one principled choice at a time.
Stand tall. The future belongs to the free.
If you nodded along to those six questions—craving more personal freedom, smaller government, lower taxes, and voluntary solutions over force—you’re not alone.
The Libertarian message resonates because it trusts individuals to run their own lives better than distant bureaucrats ever could.
In a world of endless regulations, surveillance, and trillion-dollar spending sprees, liberty reminds us that true progress comes from free minds and free markets, not top-down control.
Peaceful cooperation beats coercion.
Personal responsibility beats dependency.
Civil liberties aren’t optional—they’re the
foundation of a flourishing society.
You don’t need to fit a perfect mold or agree on every issue to embrace these principles.
Whether you’re tired of both major parties or simply value your autonomy, libertarian ideas offer a consistent alternative: maximize freedom, minimize force.
Explore them. Read, debate, and decide for yourself. The torch of liberty shines brightest when carried by independent thinkers.
If the State’s priority was actually protecting children instead of engaging in family policing, less cases would fall between the cracks.
#justiceforKemari@StopCPSNow_
Despite staffing changes, internal reviews, and a corrective action plan, state lawmakers left a NC House Oversight Committee hearing frustrated after hearing that repeated warning signs were overlooked before Dominique Moody’s death.
#ncga#ncpol
https://t.co/RhXguhztvj
The Bipartisan Debt Disaster
America’s $40 trillion national debt is not a bug—it’s a bipartisan feature.
For decades, Democrats and Republicans have danced together in a grotesque pas de deux of spending, each party gleefully expanding government while pointing fingers at the other.
Whether it’s endless wars, entitlement explosions, corporate bailouts, or vote-buying “investments,” both sides treat the public treasury like a bottomless ATM and future taxpayers like indentured servants.
Libertarians reject this entirely. Debt is deferred theft: it erodes the currency through inflation, crowds out private investment, and mortgages the liberty of unborn generations to fund today’s political indulgences.
No society can borrow its way to prosperity.
True fiscal responsibility demands slashing spending across the board, ending the Fed’s money-printing monopoly, and restoring limited government—before the bill comes due and crushes what’s left of individual freedom.
Both parties built this. Neither will dismantle it. The only solution is radical restraint.