MASSIVE CORRUPTION IN TEXAS- This woman TORCHES the Frisco, Texas city council and @GregAbbott_TX for selling out the American people by allowing Indians and Muslims to purchase homes for $136,000 less than White, Black, or Hispanic American citizens!
https://t.co/637kzdQjRB
📣BREAKING TEXAS
BREAKING: Williamson County Elections Administrator @WilcoElections Caught Destroying Evidence of Surveillance Gaps
A digital clock in the Early Voting Ballot Board room exposed 2+ HOURS of missing surveillance video on 2/20/26.
What did EA Bridgette Escobedo do? She unplugged the clock. 🧵
1/ Dr. Laura Pressley was monitoring the legally required surveillance feed (Tex. Elec. Code §127.1232(b)) and noticed the clock on the EVBB table jumped from 5:18pm→6:24pm, then again from 6:47pm→7:47pm.
Over 2 hours of video — gone.
2/ AFTER those 2+ hours of missing footage, Escobedo personally delivered 4 early voting ballot boxes to the vault — alone. No Republican designee. No watchers. No chain of custody.
Then at 8:28pm she unplugged the clock.
3/ The clock stayed off for nearly 5 DAYS — eliminating the only independent timestamp that could expose future video gaps.
4/ TODAY at noon, the Republican Presiding Judge plugged the clock back in.
At 4:53pm, Escobedo marched into the EVBB room, shook the clock at the judge, and physically REMOVED it from the room.
It's all on video. The ballot board members laughed at her after she left.
5/ Why would an elections administrator remove a clock from a room with legally required 24/7 surveillance?
Because that clock is the only way the public can verify the video feed hasn't been spliced.
Williamson County, Texas. March 2026 Republican Primary. This is happening RIGHT NOW.
Greg Abbott has accumulated over $100 million dollars from ((people)) that like what he has done to Texas and want him to continue doing it. I'm broke and shadow banned on X, so I would appreciate a repost and post anything you can about "Doc" Pete Chambers, Texas is at risk.
@kobtweeting@Bannons_WarRoom@byronkhenry This is not India. We don’t negotiate set prices. How often do you walk into Lowe’s or Kroger and ask to pay a different price than what is marked? Another example of how they don’t assimilate to American culture.
@kobtweeting@Bannons_WarRoom@byronkhenry You don’t think all the people they drove out of the county will move back if they leave? You don’t think those people will pay the same taxes? The only way to unlock their money is to be the cheapest. Then they refer you to their people. That’s not ideal clientele for me.
@kobtweeting@Bannons_WarRoom@byronkhenry But it is true. I live in Collin county and own a business. In 18 years we very seldomly deal with them. And when we do, they always try and rip us off and want to haggle on prices.
@kobtweeting@Bannons_WarRoom@byronkhenry They only support their own people…. They buy from one of the hundreds of Indian supermarkets and Indian fast food restaurants. They only use service companies that are owned by other Indians, etc. If they all went away it would only hurt their own people and banks they owe
As a former Special Forces Warrant Officer with multiple rotations running counterinsurgency ops—both hunting insurgents and trying to separate them from sympathetic populations—I’ve seen organized resistance up close. From Anbar to Helmand, the pattern is familiar: spotters, cutouts, dead drops (or modern equivalents), disciplined comms, role specialization, and a willingness to absorb casualties while bleeding the stronger force slowly.
What’s unfolding in Minneapolis right now isn’t “protest.” It’s low-level insurgency infrastructure, built by people who’ve clearly studied the playbook.
Signal groups at 1,000-member cap per zone. Dedicated roles: mobile chasers, plate checkers logging vehicle data into shared databases, 24/7 dispatch nodes vectoring assets, SALUTE-style reporting (Size, Activity, Location, Unit, Time, Equipment) on suspected federal vehicles. Daily chat rotations and timed deletions to frustrate forensic recovery. Vetting processes for new joiners. Mutual aid from sympathetic locals (teachers providing cover, possible PD tip-offs on license plate lookups). Home-base coordination points. Rapid escalation from observation to physical obstruction—or worse.
This isn’t spontaneous outrage. This is C2 (command and control) with redundancy, OPSEC hygiene, and task organization that would make a SF team sergeant nod in recognition. Replace “ICE agents” with “occupying coalition forces” and the structure maps almost 1:1 to early-stage urban cells we hunted in the mid-2000s.
The most sobering part? It’s domestic. Funded, trained (somewhere), and directed by people who live in the same country they’re trying to paralyze law enforcement in. When your own citizens build and operate this level of parallel intelligence and rapid-response network against federal officers—complete with doxxing, vehicle pursuits, and harassment that’s already turned lethal—you’re no longer dealing with civil disobedience. You’re facing a distributed resistance that’s learned the lessons of successful insurgencies: stay below the kinetic threshold most of the time, force over-reaction when possible, maintain popular support through narrative, and never present a single center of gravity.
I spent years training partner forces to dismantle exactly this kind of apparatus. Now pieces of it are standing up in American cities, enabled by elements of local government and civil society. That should keep every thinking American awake at night.
Not because I want escalation. But because history shows these things don’t de-escalate on their own once the infrastructure exists and the cadre believe they’re winning the information war.
We either recognize what we’re actually looking at—or we pretend it’s still just “activism” until the structures harden and spread.
Your call, America. But from where I sit, this isn’t January 2026 politics anymore.
It’s phase one of something we’ve spent decades trying to keep off our own soil.