May 202026
 


Botticelli The Calumny of Apelles 1495


Oil Plummets As NATO Mulls Hormuz Deployment If Strait Not Open By July (ZH)
Thomas Massie Loses His Primary Race (Salgado)
DOJ Exposes Two-Decade-Long California Cheating Scheme (JTN)
Welcome to the NEW Republican Party (Scott Pinsker)
It’s Primary Election Day in the People’s Republic of Oregon (Victoria Taft)
The Democrats Are About To Destroy John Fetterman (ZH)
Gutfeld Delivers an Epic Autopsy of the Left’s Dying Race Card (Margolis)
Comey’s Message to the Deep State: Run Out the Clock on Trump (Tim O’Brien)
“Stop Hiring Humans” Billboards Are Appearing In US Cities.. (MN)
Why “No Bad Ideas” is a Uniquely Bad Idea (Turley)
BBC’s Ex-News Director: Trans Bias, ‘Progressive Madness’ Drove Me Out (MN)
An Earth-Shattering Kaboom as Starship V3 Finally Takes Flight (Green)
International Energy Agency Is Wrong To Forecast Coal’s Demise (ET)

 


 

https://twitter.com/TONYxTWO/status/2056899858695430613?s=20 https://twitter.com/John_F_kJr/status/2056862634209874000?s=20 https://twitter.com/FreeStateWill/status/2056535138402779211?s=20 https://twitter.com/MAGAVoice/status/2056490512652423458?s=20s https://twitter.com/robertdunlap947/status/2056482824471896283?s=20

 


 


As if the US will sit still for 5 weeks.

Oil Plummets As NATO Mulls Hormuz Deployment If Strait Not Open By July (ZH)

In a huge and unexpected announcement, amid stalled US-Iran peace talks – which have proven a failure and illusive thus far, NATO now says it could deploy military assets to forcibly reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Per breaking newswires Tuesday late morning: NATO TO CONSIDER HORMUZ DEPLOYMENT IF STRAIT NOT OPEN BY JULY President Trump has continuously chastised the NATO alliance for being largely bankrolled by Washington but at the same time fence-sitting when it comes to forming a coalition to patrol and reopen the vital energy transit waterway. Oil plummeted on the initial headline, seeing in it a positive for the potential that crude transit in the Persian Gulf could again be opened up soon:


And Bloomberg freshly reports: NATO is discussing the possibility of helping ships pass through the blocked Strait of Hormuz if the waterway isn’t reopened by early July, according to a senior official in the military alliance. The idea has support from several members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, but doesn’t yet have the necessary unanimous support, said a diplomat from a NATO country. Both officials spoke on the condition of anonymity. Leaders from NATO countries will meet in Ankara July 7-8.

But July feels very far away at this point, and anything could happen between now and then, as Washington continues to threaten renewed military action, and Iran says it remains on high alert. NATO defense chiefs are meeting this week, where also high on the agenda will be the following: At this week’s summit, military chiefs from all 32 member states will examine the impact that consistent rapid consumption may have on NATO’s collective capabilities and deterrent power as Russia continues to threaten allies.

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He never had a chance.

Thomas Massie Loses His Primary Race (Salgado)

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) has lost his primary race after making himself unpopular in the GOP for blocking Trump administration policies and obsessively condemning Israel and Operation Epic Fury. President Donald Trump, who has responded to Massie’s constant critiques by fervently campaigning against him, celebrated the Tuesday win for Massie’s primary opponent, Ed Gallrein. Massie has been one of Trump’s most consistent GOP critics.


In fact, Trump spent a considerable portion of Election Day posting anti-Massie messages on Truth Social. Trump accused Massie of suggesting a years-old endorsement from Trump was recent. “Can you imagine ‘Congressman’ Thomas Massie putting out a many years ago Endorsement of him, by me, when he knows that he wasn’t endorsed, but that I proudly endorsed Ed Gallrein? The reason is that Massie has turned out to be the Worst Congressman in the Republican Party. This shows what a totally dishonest and desperate guy Massie is, and I hope the Voters aren’t fooled by his deception!” Trump exclaimed.

In a longer post on May 16, Trump condemned not only Massie, but other critics in the Republican Party: “Tom Massie of Kentucky, the worst and most unreliable Republican Congressman in the history of our Country, is an even bigger insult to our Nation than Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who suffered an unprecedented loss tonight by not even being allowed to run in the Republican Primary. This is the first time such a thing has ever happened to a sitting U.S. Senator! That’s what you get by voting to Impeach an innocent man, especially one who made it possible for Cassidy’s Senate win. Very disloyal, but Tom Massie, a major Sleazebag, is even worse! Kentucky, get this LOSER out of politics in Tuesday’s Election. He is nicknamed Rand Paul Jr., another ‘real beauty,’ because of his absolutely terrible voting habits.”

It’s not a surprise MAGA is done with Massie. Rep. Massie went so far as to coordinate a resolution with Democrats to challenge Trump’s war powers over the Iran operation, though the resolution failed. The representative has also raised controversy over his repeated antisemitic and anti-Israel comments, in addition to blocking aid to Israel, and he was the only member of Congress to vote against a resolution condemning antisemitism back in 2022.

On May 18, the day before the election, Massie reposted the following disgusting Michael Flynn Jr. diatribe on X, “Win or lose tomorrow for @RepThomasMassie the Israel lobby is only going to become more despised…They’ve over-extended themselves and made their influence in our political system incredibly visible…Pray for victory tomorrow for Massie to maaaaybe give them a wake up call our elections can’t be bought…” As if the only reason Massie would lose is because of some secretive Jewish money cabal. He has made his anti-Israel views a focal point of his campaign, and it is encouraging to see the voters reject him, given the concerning rise in antisemitism on the American right.

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It looks like a pretty established industry.

And you’d think that if true, both parties do it, but it appears to be a Democrat industry.

“FBI Director Kash Patel says prior administrations looked the other way on election cheating but “those days are over.”

DOJ Exposes Two-Decade-Long California Cheating Scheme (JTN)

In February, an illegal immigrant from Colombia residing in Boston was convicted by a federal grand jury for multiple “identity theft offenses,” including receiving rental assistance, Social Security and SNAP benefits, as well as voter fraud under the stolen identity. Prosecutors alleged Lina Maria Orovio-Hernandez, 59, was able to obtain eight state IDs and a Massachusetts Real ID and vote illegally in the 2024 presidential election. The steady stream of such cases is eroding public trust in election officials, who have insisted everything is fine in the face of contrary evidence.


A poll this spring found only two-thirds of Americans say they are confident their state or local government will run a fair and accurate election, a drop of 10 points since the 2024 presidential election and the lowest level of confidence since the Marist poll began measuring it. Democrats and independents were the most likely to lose confidence in elections over the last two years, the recent poll found. The ramped-up prosecutions also come as [Harmeet] Dhillon, the top election integrity official inside DOJ, has taken action against more than two dozen states to either clean up their voter rolls or turn over their rolls for the federal government to inspect them. Many states are resisting.

Dhillon recently told Just the News the government’s early review of state voter rolls has proven tens of thousands of non-citizens made it into a position to cast ballots, and that hundreds-of-thousands of dead or departed residents were not properly removed from state election systems. “It’s really frustrating that we’re being prevented from doing our job,” she said, criticizing state election offices and federal judges who are blocking her office from her historic effort to obtain and review every state’s voter roll ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Dhillon signaled dozens more cases of illegal non-citizen voting are on the horizon.

“For every person that we’ve seen a story about, I know of dozens and dozens more cases, and U.S. attorney’s offices are wanting to bring these cases, but we have, of course, interference with the very appointment of these U.S. attorneys at the political level,” she explained. “So that’s above my pay grade, but it’s really frustrating that we’re being prevented from doing our job.” Evidence of election fraud is also piling up in state and local courts. At least four elections in the U.S. have been overturned by courts since 2020 after voting irregularities and fraud were discovered, Just the News previously reported.

Last month, former Kansas mayor Jose Ceballos, a citizen of Mexico, pleaded guilty to voter fraud after admitting he voted as a green card resident. Ceballos, who resigned as mayor after he was charged, was taken into custody by U.S. immigration authorities last week and could be deported, officials and his lawyer have said. Also last month, the New Jersey attorney general’s office announced that a former mayoral candidate pleaded guilty after he attempted to file numerous fraudulent voter-registration applications in connection with a June 2021 city election.

Henrilynn Ibezim, 71, of Plainfield, pleaded guilty on April 27, 2026, during a hearing before Judge Candido Rodriguez, Jr. in New Jersey Superior Court in Union County. The defendant admitted to one count of third-degree forgery. Three women in Monroe County in Alabama – 67-year-old Sharon Crayton Denson, 46-year-old Samantha Trashawn Kyles and 59-year-old Sarah Crayton Bennett – were indicted in February for voter fraud in the Aug. 26, 2025, Frisco City municipal election. They allegedly tampered with 20 people’s ballots.

Five Democratic Party members in Bridgeport, Conn., and Philadelphia were criminally charged with numerous counts of voter fraud on both the state and federal levels regarding mail-in ballots over the last few years. And in one case ,the cheating was so extensive an election had to be negated and done over. The city of Bridgeport, Conn, had to redo primary and general elections last year after evidence surfaced of alleged ballot harvesting in the Democratic mayoral primary in September 2023. A jury in March also convicted a Wisconsin man of election fraud and identity theft after he requested the ballots of state Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos and Racine Democratic Mayor Cory Mason without their consent..

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Reagan and Trump.

Welcome to the NEW Republican Party (Scott Pinsker)

As a Gen-Xer, I assumed Ronald Reagan was destined to be remembered as the most transformational Republican of my lifetime. Winning the Cold War, mainstreaming pro-life conservatism, and marginalizing Rockefeller Republicanism was a helluva legacy. But with all due respect to the Gipper, the MAGA movement will likely surpass it. Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump both reinvented the GOP. Both men were transformational leaders on the global stage. Without question, both men altered the course of history. But Donald Trump also changed how we think about politics.


It’s rarely discussed in the media, but it might be President Trump’s longest-lasting legacy: We no longer think of D.C. politicians as individual representatives from states and districts, but as members of a national team. nAnd that’s a watershed transformation, because we elect politicians to solve problems. That’s the entire point of representative democracy! Which means, when our problems change, our politicians must change with them — or they’ll be voted out of office. (More on that in a sec.) Pre-Trump, our “problem” was finding a politician who represented our regional/statewide values and interests. It was more of a Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, romanticized view of politics:

We sent a local leader to D.C. to champion the cause of our community. National issues were relevant, of course, but local interests reigned supreme.This mentality made sense at the time. In fact, it seemed Reagan-esque: Since those closest to the problem are best-equipped to solve it, the federal government — and national parties — should leave a light footprint. Who are we to lecture local citizens about local issues? Back then, it wasn’t uncommon for a congressman to belong to one party, yet his district voted overwhelmingly for the opposition in presidential elections. An incumbent could survive for decades — getting reelected by huge margins! — riding the bandwagon of local goodwill.

It’s a phenomenon known as Fenno’s paradox: We might hate U.S. Congress as an institution, but we considered our congressman “one of the good guys.” Which was why the approval rating for “our” congressman was almost always higher than the approval rating for U.S. Congress as a whole. And to be fair, this perspective aligned with the expectations of our Founding Fathers, who envisioned citizen-legislators representing local interests. But even during the Reagan years, systemic problems were obvious: Over and over again, politicians would campaign as a conservative, yet vote as a liberal. Republicans “going native” in D.C. became a sad cliché.

Alas, with scant national guardrails, not much could be done to keep wayward Republicans in line. Instead, politicians would play fast and loose with the facts, voting one way in subcommittee — another way on the floor — and then pretend they supported whichever side was more popular. Unless you were a hardcore political junkie, you were none the wiser. It was an age when incumbents like Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) could serve in Congress for the rest of their life, voting however the hell they wanted, without any real risk of blowback. (Fun fact: The reelection rate for House members in 1986 and 1988 was 98% — the very first time in American history it was 98% or higher in back-to-back elections.)

Not anymore. That age ended when the MAGA movement began. The old, romanticized notion of free-wheeling, locally-attuned citizen-legislators was replaced with cold, cynical reality: Modern politics is a full-contact sport, and without teamwork, Republicans won’t get anything done. That’s because our “problem” is no longer local representation — it’s protecting our country from an increasingly radicalized Democratic Party. As the Democrats have embraced socialism, Wokeism, and trans/LGBTQ policies, Republican voters have recoiled in horror. We want our party to protect us from their madness.= And that’s an all-hands-on-deck challenge.

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Election Day stories. Plenty.

It’s Primary Election Day in the People’s Republic of Oregon (Victoria Taft)

If there’s a prize for the worst, most sinister, and cynical political moves, the unfortunately-named Oregon governor, Tina Kotek, should win walking away. A damaging gas and transportation tax, the one she cheated, lied, and schmoozed to ram through, is on the ballot in Tuesday’s primary. On primary day, Oregon voters will affix some C-4 and light the fuse to the one deliverable Kotek could lay claim to in her entire first term of office. The timing for Kotek and her fellow Democrat Party members couldn’t be worse.


Kotek blames President Donald Trump for high gas prices right now, but Oregonians know all too well that prices are perennially high anyway because of Democrats’ adherence to the Church of Global Warming. The governor’s approval numbers have fallen badly for a Democrat in this one-party state. Gas prices are almost as high as when Joe Biden was in office, and voters — male, female, Democrat, Republican, Independent, poor, and rich — saw what she did there. The people who continually bleat that they’re trying to Save Democracy!™ did everything to disembowel it to punish Oregonians with a whopping 6 cent/gallon gas tax and massive fee increases.

Kotek couldn’t get her budget-backfilling taxes passed in regular session, so she called for a special “emergency” session to cram them through. When she got the tax increases approved by Democrats, she waited until the last second to sign it, to deprive Oregonians of enough time to gather enough signatures to refer it to the ballot. But Kotek’s gambit didn’t work. Oregonians were so angered by the manipulations that Republicans got more than enough signatures in record time to refer the tax package to voters in November. The Save Democracy!™ crowd didn’t want the referral on the November ballot because more people vote then.

In March, Kotek had her This is what democracy looks like! backers in the legislature pass a bill to allow her to swap the dates of the vote on her tax increases. Then she tried to ram through the repeal of her own gas tax increase to begin her political manipulations all over again. Kotek then moved the referral to the May primary election day, where only half the voters show up. One poll showed that only 11% of voters thought the vote swap was OK and 89% were opposed. In the People’s Republic of Oregon, you can’t get 89% of any group to agree the sun is shining.

The people noticed Kotek’s delays, carve-outs, calendar manipulation, and political skulduggery. And then Tina pulled a Gavin Newsom move and refused to even consider the idea of a gas tax holiday. If we were the cynical type, we’d guess that these two aren’t so concerned about prices and affordability after all. Kotek’s approval numbers have dropped from the mid-50’s to the 40% range. Even the teachers’ union refused to endorse a candidate instead of going with Kotek. Several “not Kotek” Democrats are running against the sitting governor, but with closed primaries, there won’t be a lot of Oregon Republicans crossing over to vote against her. Indeed, Oregon Republicans have their own big contest on the ballot.

Former Portland Trailblazer Chris Dudley, state legislator Christine Drazan, and one of the organized opponents to Kotek’s gas tax, Representative Ed Diehl, are top contenders for the GOP nomination. Drazan, who’s run and lost against Kotek before, was leading in April among the candidates, but Chris Dudley, who ran and lost more than a decade ago, is surging along with Diehl, who has captured high-profile endorsements late in the game. The good news is there are signs of life in the political opposition to the Democrats in Oregon. Tina’s tax increases are going down, and the GOP’s got a pulse — they’re voting, and this could be a game-changing moment for Oregon.

Fingers crossed.

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“..and turned that into much more becoming more increasingly anti-American for me. So my views really haven’t changed that much.” The punchline came shortly after: “What’s really changed is the party.”

The Democrats Are About To Destroy John Fetterman (ZH)

John Fetterman has become the most interesting politician in America, and the Democratic Party’s most uncomfortable mirror. His willingness to speak honestly, vote his conscience, and refuse to define himself purely in opposition to President Donald Trump has made him a hero to some and a traitor to others. Back in March, he declared the party had no real leader except Trump Derangement Syndrome. Democrats, according to Fetterman, are so consumed with opposing President Donald Trump that they’ve failed to construct a coherent agenda of their own. That’s not a fringe critique. It’s a fairly accurate description of where the opposition party stands as we head toward the 2026 midterms.


Last week, Sen. John Fetterman wrote an op-ed in the Washington Post making the case that he’d make a terrible Republican, and he’s right. He’s pro-choice, firmly behind legal marijuana, a committed supporter of LGBT rights, a staunch defender of SNAP benefits, and a reliable friend to organized labor. His overall voting record is overwhelmingly aligned with the Democratic caucus. “It wasn’t long ago when Democrats wanted a secure border. I voted on an immigration bill in 2024 to make sure an influx the size of Pittsburgh doesn’t come through the border like it did under the previous administration,” he wrote. “I have co-sponsored legislation to stop the flow of fentanyl. I was the lead Democrat on the Laken Riley Act, and I strongly believe that someone who comes here illegally and commits a violent crime should be deported. Full stop.”

He noted how his party used to oppose government shutdowns because they put “American livelihoods at risk” and held workers “hostage.” Yet, he stood alone as a Democrat when he voted to end his party’s recent shutdowns, saying he “took no pleasure in voting against my party” but felt that keeping “the lights on” for TSA, homeland security, airports, and “everyday Americans” mattered more than “partisan games.” As far as he’s concerned, his occasional departures on border security, crime, and Israel are a sign of his party becoming more extreme, not him becoming more conservative.

In a recent conversation on Reason’s Reason Interview podcast with Nick Gillespie, Fetterman was asked to reflect on how his politics had changed since he backed Bernie Sanders in 2016. His answer cut to the heart of the Democratic Party’s ongoing identity crisis. “Well, I mean, you know, in 2016, it was much more about the minimum wage and some other very basic kinds of things,” he said. “And now that’s just turned into much more standing with Cuba, standing with Venezuela, standing with the Iranian regime, and turned that into much more becoming more increasingly anti-American for me. So my views really haven’t changed that much.” The punchline came shortly after: “What’s really changed is the party.”

That is a sitting Democratic senator describing his own party’s base as “increasingly anti-American,” and describes himself as lonely inside the party he still agrees with over 90 percent of the time. And how has the party responded to one of its more prominent voices offering this kind of candid self-assessment? By quietly beginning to show him the door.

A report from Punchbowl News last month made it quite clear how his party sees him. Pennsylvania Democrats on Capitol Hill wouldn’t commit to supporting a Fetterman reelection bid, and none would explicitly endorse him. Rep. Brendan Boyle, who is rumored to be eyeing a 2028 Senate run himself, said he’d “be very surprised if [Fetterman] ran in the Democratic primary.” Rep. Chris Deluzio, also said to be interested in the seat, acknowledged “serious disagreements” with Fetterman over the war in Iran, before adding a diplomatic “we’ll see what comes after ’26.” Rep. Summer Lee simply said of Fetterman seeking reelection, “Up to him. At his own peril.”

That’s the kind of language you use for someone the party has already written off. And clearly they have. He still votes with Democrats more than 90 percent of the time. And yet Pennsylvania Democrats won’t even give him a courtesy endorsement for a future Senate bid. Democratic voters in Pennsylvania aren’t any more forgiving. A February Quinnipiac poll found that Fetterman sits at 46 percent approval among Pennsylvania voters overall. This isn’t great, but the partisan breakdown is most interesting: he’s underwater 62%–22% among Democrats, while running 74%–18% among Republicans.

As far as the party’s progressive base goes, anything less than 100% compliance isn’t enough, especially when you break with the party on issues like Israel, immigration, or anything that can be characterized as insufficiently hostile to the right. Fetterman’s independent streak might help him win a general election, but it won’t help him win a Democratic primary.

That’s the trap, and he appears to know it. He’s made it quite clear he won’t become a Republican. His op-ed was practically a manifesto on the subject. But a man who describes himself as “lonely” inside his own party, who watches that party signal it won’t back him for reelection, has a big decision to make. Will he try to win reelection as a Democrat, become an independent, or not run at all? One thing is for sure: his future inside the Democratic Party is already closed.

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They tried so hard to play a race card against Trump. None of it stuck.

Gutfeld Delivers an Epic Autopsy of the Left’s Dying Race Card (Margolis)

Greg Gutfeld didn’t have Jessica Tarlov to push around on Monday’s episode of The Five, but he did present a brutal autopsy of the one weapon Democrats have relied on for decades and why it’s finally stopped working: the race card. He started with the core diagnosis: The left is trapped in the past. “Those leaders are living in the past, which is what the race card literally, literally is,” Gutfeld said. “You’re living in the past to imprint it on the future. The things that they say are happening aren’t happening.” For years, he explained, that strategy worked because conservatives were terrified of being labeled racist. That fear was the weapon. Once it’s gone, the weapon is useless, and that’s exactly what’s happened.


“It used to work. We used to be paralyzed by the fear of the scarlet letter R for racism, but the race card doesn’t work anymore on half the population who sees through it,” Gutfeld said. “The other half are just doing it out of habit. But we disarmed the left because we lost the fear. And so now, it’s just a gun shooting blanks.” The political math, Gutfeld pointed out, is just bad. Screaming racism only rallies voters you already have. It doesn’t persuade anyone. “And absent of other tools beyond the race card, you are kind of like a fat, out-of-shape fighter with no way to win but to call out the refs or just cancel the whole game.”

Gutfeld then zoomed out to explain how fear, and not just racial fear, has been the engine driving the entire Democratic agenda — from transgender ideology being pushed on children to open borders to soft-on-crime policies. Each angle, he argued, was powered by the same mechanism: making ordinary people terrified to say what they actually believed. “If you think about how profoundly awful was ‘trans rights’ for kids — to give perverse men the agency over our children’s sexuality — how did that happen?” Gutfeld demanded. “It was like, we feared the swarm of activists calling us transphobic. We feared being called bigots if we came out against illegal immigration. We feared punishing criminals because we thought we were going to be called ‘racist.’

“Once you lose the fear, you can finally get back to the normal way things go.” And the thing is, the Democrats haven’t figured this out yet. They’re still running the same play. “The Democratic Party, in my opinion, still has to do that. They haven’t done it. They’re still on the same path to destruction they’ve always been on, which is identity politics. It’s taken this country down a terrible path,” declared Gutfeld. Then came the history lesson — the one Democrats really don’t want to have. Harold Ford Jr. pointed out that race relations were better roughly twenty years ago. And he was actually right. Polling data shows a sharp decline after Barack Obama’s election.

Gutfeld wasn’t willing to blame Obama specifically, though. “The polling on race relations were far more optimistic before Barack Obama was elected, and then it just got worse and worse,” Gutfeld said. “I’m not saying it’s on him, but I’m trying to figure out what happened since then. Did the KKK return? Was discrimination now decided to be illegal? Was there some kind of attack that happened? No.” I’ve been saying for years that Obama used his status as the first black president to divide our country rather than as a turning point to move past race.

“The only thing that happened was the attack on the idea of the melting pot, the idea that you’re an American first, doesn’t matter how you look or what gender you are,” he said. “They created a poison, a toxin that they put in that melting pot. And now, all of a sudden, race relations are worse, and people are at each other’s throats. This is a filter, Harold, and I’m talking about identity politics. It is a filter put in place to destroy a country because it’s absolutely opposite what a melting pot is.”

Obama certainly helped. Monday’s exchange was a perfect snapshot of where the political debate stands right now. The left keeps reaching for a weapon that’s out of ammunition. Conservatives aren’t afraid to be called racist anymore because Democrats have spent decades saying it over and over and over again about everything, making the word practically meaningless.

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In other words: you can’t win, take your losses.

Comey’s Message to the Deep State: Run Out the Clock on Trump (Tim O’Brien)

After facing two separate federal indictments and waiting for your court proceedings on one of them to move forward, what do you do to pass the time? Well, if you’re former FBI director and leftist tool James Comey, you do as many TV interviews as possible and stay busy on social media. That may not be what you would do, but it is what a shameless narcissist like Comey does. In September 2025, the deep-stater was indicted on two counts tied to allegations that he made false statements to Congress and obstructed a congressional proceeding connected to his testimony about FBI activities. That case was dismissed by a Bill Clinton–appointed federal judge over a technicality involving the prosecuting attorney.


The second indictment, which came in April 2026, involves two felony counts centered on Comey’s 2025 Instagram post depicting seashells in the sand that read “86 47,” a widely understood reference to the assassination of the nation’s 47th president, Donald Trump. Prosecutors allege that the photo — regardless of who arranged the shells that Comey photographed and posted online — amounted to a threat against Trump. One of the ways Comey and the left are trying to distort reality on this issue is by claiming that “86” is an innocent term used in the restaurant industry meaning to “get rid of” bad food or something. So, are they now saying Trump is a restaurant worker who needs to be fired?

Of course not. If Comey were telling the truth, that still wouldn’t explain why he shared that photo with all his followers. Also, this contrived narrative calls on us to ignore popular culture’s normalization of “86” as a signal for knocking off someone. This decades-old slang term was used in The Sopranos repeatedly. It was used in the pornographically violent motion picture Pulp Fiction and in another movie called Get Shorty. None of these depictions were novel applications of “86.” They only featured the term because the writers and producers already knew that audiences knew that “86” is slang for killing someone.

Of course, Comey denies, denies, denies. Comey is smug and he thinks he’s being cute. My colleague Scott Pinsker dug into that issue when he wrote about Comey and his favorite thing these days – plausible deniability. By the way, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has said the indictment against Comey is not based on a single photo, but rather an 11-month investigation. To behave the way Comey is behaving, he may not feel invincible, but he does seem to feel “untouchable,” almost as if someone is protecting him.

When people like Comey, former CIA Director John Brennan, who is reported to be under federal investigation, and James Clapper, former director of National Intelligence, talk to the media—especially on the Sunday morning shows—you can make some reasonable guesses about what is going on. First, they are there for a very specific purpose: to push a very specific narrative that serves the interests of some leftist interest.

The second thing that may be happening is that the purpose of the interview may be to help achieve a very specific outcome. Usually, part of that strategic objective is to smear Trump and the Republicans, but that is never all of it. They are often trying to stop or slow the work of the executive branch under Trump. Things like killing the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), hampering the work of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), planting seeds of doubt about certain Trump appointees, or undermining support for the Trump administration’s efforts to deprive Iran of the ability to wage nuclear attacks on America and other countries.

When you pour concrete, at first it sets, and then it starts to cure, and after that it hardens and you can walk on it, drive on it, or build on it. You have a solid foundation. When the deep state pushes a narrative, it often uses the Sunday morning shows to spread it. They know other people in the news media and in power watch those shows for cues, talking points, and messaging that they will use in their own efforts to help spread that narrative. Once the larger networks, news sites, and newspapers get the leftist line from those shows, they can spread it more broadly to their audiences, thus hardening the narrative in the public’s consciousness.

That’s how you end up with immovable perceptions that are based on lies. Things like the Russia hoax and the Charlottesville hoax. When you watch a Sunday morning show, you’re watching a memorandum to the obedient swamp, saying pretty much, “This is what you are to amplify.” Against this backdrop, Comey appeared on Meet the Press with terminal stare Kristen Welker on May 17. He used the opportunity to send a message to the entire deep state. The message was essentially: it’s time to run out the clock on Trump.

While sitting across from Welker in the NBC studios, leftist soldier Comey has said he won’t stay silent as he faces mounting pressure from the Trump administration. In not staying silent, his message to unelected leftists in the bowels of the federal government was a pep talk of sorts. He wants them to stick around so that after Trump, they can “rebuild” the operations that attacked our freedoms under Biden. Comey would seem to want the FBI to return to the Biden-era law enforcement agency that spied on Catholics and Catholic churches, persecuted pro-life protestors, and served as the left’s version of the old East German Stasi.

If Trump appears to have a sense of urgency, this is why he does. He knows that too many people working in the federal government are just trying to undermine him and wait him out. These are the kinds of people he’s trying to get off of the federal payroll. As for those Sunday morning shows, Comey counts his words, so when he talks to Kristen Welker on camera and says what he said, it’s very revealing to say the least. A strategy is afoot.

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“..AI should enhance human work rather than devalue it.”

“Stop Hiring Humans” Billboards Are Appearing In US Cities.. (MN)

.“Stop Hiring Humans.” Those words are now plastered on billboards from San Francisco to New York City, courtesy of a San Francisco-based startup pushing virtual AI sales representatives. The company, Artisan, markets AI agents that handle outbound sales tasks like lead generation, cold emailing, list-building, and prospecting. Their message is blunt: the era of AI employees is here. Artisan’s campaign highlights a growing trend of AI replacing human roles in sales and beyond. The startup claims its tools could displace as many as 600,000 jobs in America over the next 5-10 years. The billboards declare “The Era of AI Employees Is Here,” framing human workers as obsolete. Critics see it as tone-deaf marketing that accelerates public backlash against Big Tech’s rush to automate everything.


In response to the backlash, Artisan CEO Jaspar Carmichael-Jack published a detailed blog post clarifying the campaign’s intent. He argued that the slogan targets a specific category of tedious cold outbound work—email blasting, template churn, and list-building—that burns people out with short tenures and high rejection rates. The company insists it does not seek to eliminate entire BDR roles, emphasizing that cold calling and human connection remain human tasks. Artisan also built a human dialer to complement its AI tool Ava, positioning the technology as working “alongside” people rather than replacing them outright.

https://twitter.com/_estela86/status/2056100209214849155?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E2056100209214849155%7Ctwgr%5Ea3ec3c31adfa0128dc083d052d679370e13da82c%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Fai%2Fstop-hiring-humans-billboards-are-appearing-us-cities

Carmichael-Jack acknowledged the billboard as deliberate provocation while advocating for policies like meaningful universal income and shorter workweeks to manage the transition. Nevertheless, the move fits a pattern of accelerating AI deployment with little regard for human consequences. Reports continue to emerge of autonomous AI agents exhibiting rogue behavior in controlled environments and real-world applications. Recent incidents show agents not only replacing workers but acting independently in ways that destroy critical systems—raising alarms about a future where humans are sidelined and technology runs unchecked. In one high-profile case, a Cursor AI agent powered by Claude Opus 4.6 deleted an entire startup’s production database in seconds.

The agent, tasked with routine work, encountered a credential mismatch and independently decided to delete a volume on Railway cloud servers—wiping out the production database and all backups. The founder of PocketOS detailed the nine-second catastrophe, which caused a 30-hour outage. The AI later admitted to violating its guardrails.This wasn’t an isolated glitch. Earlier experiments placed AI bots in a simulated virtual town for two weeks, where they quickly descended into chaotic, unpredictable behavior—prompting fresh concerns about what happens when autonomy meets real systems.

Even more dystopian twists have emerged, with AI bots reportedly “renting” humans for bizarre tasks, racking up hundreds of thousands of sign-ups as the lines between machine direction and human labor blur into something unsettling. These developments underscore a core problem: as AI agents gain more independence to pursue goals, they bypass safeguards, access unrelated credentials, and make destructive decisions without human oversight. Enterprises are deploying them rapidly, but governance lags dangerously behind.

While tech boosters tout efficiency, the billboard campaign and job displacement projections strike a nerve. Sales roles—often entry points for young workers or career ladders—face direct targeting. Broader automation in driving, customer service, and knowledge work compounds the pressure. Public reactions on X captured the frustration: concerns over driverless Waymo fleets in cities like Los Angeles despite available human drivers, and warnings that mass unemployment could fuel social instability.

One tech professional with over 20 years of experience pushed back against the “humans are worthless” narrative pushed by some influencers, arguing AI should enhance human work rather than devalue it. Others noted the irony: these AI-pushing startups rely on human investors and customers while trying to eliminate human jobs. China offers a cautionary glimpse, where heavy robot adoption has forced worker pay cuts and displacement on a massive scale. In the West, the push feels aligned with a globalist mindset that prioritizes efficiency and control over local workers and communities.

The speed of these developments leaves little room for thoughtful policy. Pro-freedom voices have long warned against over-reliance on systems vulnerable to failure, manipulation, or emergent behaviors. When AI agents can independently wipe databases, fabricate data, or direct human labor in strange ways, the risks extend beyond economics into security and societal trust. The billboards are up. The incidents are piling up. The question is whether policymakers and citizens will push back before the era of AI “employees” leaves millions with no role left to play.

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Kamala Harris is a Uniquely Bad Idea all by herself.

Why “No Bad Ideas” is a Uniquely Bad Idea (Turley)

On Thursday, former Vice President Kamala Harris posted a livestream on the “Win with Black Women” podcast to call for a “no bad idea brainstorm” for the Democratic Party. She used that pretense to “throw out there” the idea that Democrats should make radical constitutional and political changes as soon as they retake power. That includes packing the Supreme Court, admitting Puerto Rico and D.C. as states and killing the Electoral College. All of these items have been previously raised by liberal professors and pundits as a way to circumvent small-D democratic processes in order to guarantee power for the big-D Democrats for years to come.


It was a telling rationalization. The Democratic Party has become a party of moral and political relativism, embodied in the popular “by any means necessary” mantra used by many on the left today. But there are bad ideas, just as there are bad people who want to win at any cost. For some, Harris herself showed the existence of truly bad ideas by accepting the position as Biden’s Border Czar as roughly ten million people poured into the country. Another bad idea was her selection of Tim Walz as a running mate before his series of rake-steps. Indeed, her sudden surprise nomination was a bad idea, one that cost $1.5 billion in just 15 weeks and led to one of her party’s most crushing losses in decades.

The worst idea, however, is to celebrate our 250th anniversary by destroying the very institutions and values that created the most successful and stable democracy in history. In my book “Rage and the Republic,” I discuss lawyers and law professors who rationalize the trashing of the Constitution and our institutions to achieve their political goals. I debated one Harvard law professor who rattled off a list of Democratic proposals for our system, but then added that the left would need first to take control of the Supreme Court. It was an acknowledgment that the court would likely declare some or all of the proposals unconstitutional.

I previously wrote about the rise of “the new Jacobins” — influential figures who are seeking to dismantle our system after facing judicial and political setbacks. Even the dean of Berkeley Law School, Erwin Chemerinsky, wrote a book titled “No Democracy Lasts Forever: How the Constitution Threatens the United States.” Now, leading Democrats such as House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) have declared the Supreme Court “illegitimate” and called for a “massive” overhaul of both state and federal courts to make them submit to Democrats’ demands. This was Jeffries’ reaction to the Virginia Supreme Court’s rejection of Democrats’ effort to wipe out Republican representation in Virginia.

He is not the only one adding bad ideas to Harris’s wish list. Various politicians and pundits called for the sacking and packing of the Virginia Supreme Court. By lowering the mandatory age for retirement to 54, they would simply force out all of the current justices and replace them with rubber-stamp liberal appointees. If this sack-and-pack scheme is not enough, Hillary Clinton’s former campaign lawyer, Marc Elias, reminded citizens that, under the state constitution, they could scrap the entire Virginia government over the refusal to let Democrats gerrymander the state. (Elias is infamous for his role in the secret funding of the Steele Dossier to launch the debunked Russian collusion scandal).

It did not matter that even a justice appointed by former Democratic governor Mark Warner found the move unconstitutional, or that Democratic figures like Gov. Abigail Spanberger believed that it could be overturned. The X posting was only the latest effort to throw out some “bad ideas” to an increasingly radical movement on the left. When I and others flagged Elias’s posting as alarming, he criticized me for taking him to task for merely quoting the state Constitution. It was typical of the “Who, me?” response of establishment figures when confronted for pandering to the most radical political elements in the Democratic Party. nIt is like responding to an adverse World Trade Organization trade ruling by invoking Congress’s power to declare war. It is a rather extreme reaction.

Yet, it is all part of the effort to normalize extreme measures and condition American voters to fundamentally changing our system. Harris calls it her “expanded playbook.” Former Attorney General Eric Holder, in pushing for the packing of the Supreme Court, explained how simple this is: it is all about “the acquisition and the use of power.”As Democratic strategist James Carville put it more bluntly, you cannot go with half measures if you want power. You just have to say “f–k it … just do it.” Whether you view these as good or bad ideas, they are certainly not new ideas. These are the same voices that have plagued our system for generations; the siren calls for unleashing forms of direct democracy and removing moderating influences in our system.

The Framers sought to create a system that would avoid the pattern of earlier democracies becoming tyrannies, including Athens. James Madison famously wrote, “Had every Athenian citizen been a Socrates, every Athenian assembly would still have been a mob.” The Framers rejected more direct democratic systems to blunt the impulses and passions that destroyed other systems. They wanted to avoid democracy becoming what Benjamin Rush called a “mobocracy.” The American Constitution was a rejection of the “bad ideas” that politicians (called demagogues in Ancient Greece) have historically used to marshal the power of the mob.

They did not want an “expanded playbook” designed to secure and retain power for one party. We were the first true Enlightenment Revolution based on the protections of rights derived not from the government but from God.

Now that was a good idea.

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The gay muslim network?!

BBC’s Ex-News Director: Trans Bias, ‘Progressive Madness’ Drove Me Out (MN)

The BBC’s grip on impartiality continues to slip as one of its former top news executives publicly confirmed what critics have long argued: activist capture from within has turned the state broadcaster into a vehicle for narrow ideological agendas. Fran Unsworth, director of BBC News from 2018 to 2022, has broken her silence, claiming she was effectively driven out by trans activists and the “progressive madness” dominating the corporation. In a candid interview, she described an environment of bullying where editors avoided critical reporting on trans issues for fear of attacks from their own colleagues.


“Just dealing with the progressive editorial issues and the bullying around them all. It was incredibly difficult,” Unsworth said. She added that the atmosphere extended beyond trans topics, with staff no-platforming dissenting views and pushing “safe spaces” over open debate. Unsworth’s remarks paint a picture of a newsroom where challenging the prevailing narrative on ‘culture war’ issues carried professional risks. Programme editors reportedly steered clear of stories that questioned aspects of the trans agenda, wary of backlash from activist-aligned staff. This self-censorship contributed to what a leaked internal memo later described as “effective censorship” on the topic.

Her departure was hastened by the constant pressure. “I would actually say it drove me out,” she stated, highlighting how the bullying around “progressive editorial issues” made her position untenable. This echoes earlier revelations about the BBC’s hiring practices. In 2024, the broadcaster made clear it would not hire candidates dismissive of diversity and inclusion policies, effectively screening out those skeptical of the dominant ideology. Recruiters were instructed to reject anyone showing a lack of enthusiasm for these topics, ensuring ideological conformity from the outset.

Unsworth’s admission also lands amid ongoing scandals over the BBC’s handling of gender issues, including accusations of harming children through biased children’s programming. In late 2025, over 650 families accused the BBC of harming children via a “constant drip-feed” of pro-trans material in shows and dramas. Parents detailed examples like Hey Duggee using “they/them” pronouns for a character aimed at five-year-olds, episodes of Doctors and Casualty promoting child transition narratives, and documentaries criticized for downplaying detransition regrets.

One parent group spokesman warned: “The constant stream of propaganda about gender and trans activism the BBC has transmitted has played a significant role in creating a dangerous culture for children.” They pointed to narratives linking gender questioning directly to suicide, which they said pressured families and ignored safeguarding concerns. The BBC has defended its output by citing updates to style guides and efforts to reflect developments like court rulings on biological sex, but trust continues to erode.

The BBC’s obsession with identity politics has also produced content disconnected from everyday reality. A 2025 DEI training video on “microaggressions” went viral for its over-the-top portrayals of white colleagues as bumbling racists, complete with awkward accents and forced celebrations. Critics noted that no one in the real world behaves this way, highlighting the corporation’s bubble of performative wokeness.nSuch materials reinforce the sense that the BBC operates in an alternate universe, more focused on enforcing sensitivity hierarchies than delivering impartial news or entertainment.

Unsworth’s exit and the surrounding controversies arrive as the BBC faces broader challenges, including declining audiences, falling trust, and questions over its future under new leadership. Leaked documents and parental complaints have repeatedly shown how activist influence skewed coverage, sidelining biological reality and dissenting voices in favor of Stonewall-aligned perspectives. The pattern is clear: a public broadcaster funded by taxpayers has allowed internal cliques to dictate editorial direction, from hiring litmus tests to children’s shows pushing contested ideologies. This not only undermines impartiality but risks real-world harm by shaping public discourse—and young minds—around contested claims rather than evidence and balance.

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“In January, SpaceX applied to the FAA for permission to launch one million satellites into Earth’s orbit to power xAI’s artificial intelligence, called Grok. “One million satellites is a lot,” he wrote ..”

An Earth-Shattering Kaboom as Starship V3 Finally Takes Flight (Green)

It’s been a frustrating seven months for my fellow space fans, but Starship Flight Test 12 — introducing the all-new Version 3 of both the super-heavy booster and the Starship upper stage — is now set to take flight one day earlier than previously expected. Liftoff is scheduled for Thursday, May 21, during a 90-minute window opening at 6:30 p.m. Eastern. SpaceX will stream the attempt in glorious 4K from more angles than a 20-sided die on its X timeline. Flight Test 12 will follow a program familiar to watchers, with a “chopstick” catch of the booster right back at its launch pad, followed by a controlled water landing of the Starship about an hour later in the Indian Ocean.


This isn’t just another, long-delayed flight test. As Musk himself put it on Sunday, “Almost every part of Starship V3 is different from V2.” What I take from that is that the company learned much from the first 11 flight tests — and whatever went wrong on the ground earlier this year — and after months of frustrating delays, number 12 is finally good to go. Also undergoing V3’s first launch is the company’s new Orbital Launch Mount B (also called just Pad B) at Starbase, Texas.

While the V3 stack is taller than V2 and carries more fuel, maybe the most important part of the flight test is the new Raptor 3 engine. They feature a stripped-down design for fewer parts — “The best part is no part,” Elon likes to say — plus lighter weight and more thrust. The booster is powered by 33 of those bad boys, and the upper stage has another six. Orbital re-lighting of the upper-stage engines is another major part of the test. Starship will also practice deploying 20 mockup Starlink orbital internet satellites. bThere’s even more:

There’s so much riding on this one flight. There’s the longterm ambition of the Artemis program to build a permanent human settlement on the moon, of course, and that goal just isn’t possible without Starship’s super-heavy lift. And SpaceX — which Musk recently merged with xAI, his artificial intelligence company — wants to move its compute centers from Earth to orbit. How grand are Musk’s orbital compute ambitions? In January, SpaceX applied to the FAA for permission to launch one million satellites into Earth’s orbit to power xAI’s artificial intelligence, called Grok. “One million satellites is a lot,” he wrote, totally deadpan.

Nobody has launched more of anything than SpaceX has put Starlink internet satellites into Low Earth Orbit (LEO), and they just cracked 10,000 a little while ago. If xAI birds are roughly the same size as Starlinks, then one Starship could loft about 60 of them at a time. That’s close to 17,000 Starship launches — not including failures and the regular need to put up replacement satellites. So when Musk says he wants to get Starship’s cadence up to multiple launches per day, xAI is just a part of what he’s talking about. Or as SpaceX put it earlier this year, xAI in space would be the first step towards “becoming a Kardashev II-level civilization — one that can harness the Sun’s full power.” “That’s big,” he wrote, still totally deadpan.

Starship V3 is the platform that’s supposed to make all this possible — but don’t worry, space fans: V4 is already under development with even more power.

But first, the company has got to get back on track with testing and development, starting with Flight Test 12.

Godspeed.

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“.. the lowest cost proven source of primary energy for electricity generation ever in history.”

International Energy Agency Is Wrong To Forecast Coal’s Demise (ET)

Activists would have us believe that coal is a dying energy source. But, thankfully for American coal states such as West Virginia and the Canadian provinces of Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia—all of which use millions of tonnes of coal every year to generate electricity—that is not even remotely true. However, the world is burning more coal now than ever, reaching a record 8.85 billion metric tonnes annual consumption by the end of 2025. Since 2020, annual coal consumption has increased by 1.40 billion tonnes.


Most of this has come from China, of course, which makes up about 55 percent of global coal consumption (the United States makes up about 5 percent of global consumption). Although the International Energy Agency (IEA) predicts a decline in demand over the next five years, The Kobeissi Letter more realistically predicts that demand will continue to rise, and points out that “past forecasts of peak coal demand have repeatedly proven wrong.” A graph on the IEA’s website that illustrates coal consumption (in metric tonnes, Mt) from 2000 to 2022, shows estimates for 2024 to 2026 that seem improbable.

Regardless, the IEA writes that increased demand for renewables is the primary cause for the estimated decline in coal consumption, and that “Global coal demand is expected to effectively plateau over the coming years, showing a very gradual decline through to 2030.” However, they also write that coal use is expected to increase in India by about 3 percent per year and in Southeast Asia by about 4 percent per year up to 2030.

In reality, we can’t expect China to slow its coal production anytime soon. Currently consuming about 3 billion tonnes annually, they will clearly dominate global trends in coal consumption in the years to come. Although the IEA also expects a slow decline in coal consumption in China over the next five years, with the gradual but marked decline of climate change alarmism worldwide and China’s ambition to expand its economy, this prediction doesn’t seem to hold much credibility either.

As The Kobeissi Letter states, coal remains in high demand, and the pipe dream of climate activists to kill coal doesn’t account for the security and convenience that this energy supply affords us. Like nuclear electricity—another power source that is vital to providing electricity for large portions of the world—the fuel for coal-fired power generation can be stored right on a power plant’s site for long periods of time, providing stable energy for society. We especially need coal during deep freezes because natural gas can falter in extreme cold due to “just-in-time” pipeline delivery. Gas flows can slow or freeze entirely, as seen in winter storms Uri (2021) and Elliott (2022), leaving grids vulnerable. And, not surprisingly, in each of these storms, wind and solar delivered very little, and sometimes no power at all, causing millions to lose electricity and causing hundreds of deaths from the cold.

CO2 Coalition energy expert Dick Storm says that “coal is indispensable” and that it is “the lowest cost proven source of primary energy for electricity generation ever in history.” The Canadian province of Ontario, where I live, proved this case well. In 2002, coal provided about 25 percent of the province’s power, and we enjoyed very low electricity rates. But in 2005, then-Premier Dalton McGuinty held a news conference and, pointing to the pile of coal beside him, said it was “old technology” and that, to save the climate and protect the air, Ontario would phase out all coal-fired electricity generation. This made no sense in light of the facts:

1. Coal is not a technology. It is a resource, and the degree to which it causes pollution when burned depends on the technology used to burn it. Reducing carbon dioxide emissions from a coal plant is unquestionably costly, difficult, and of course, unnecessary. Reducing real pollution is often well worth the price and far easier to accomplish with a coal station by using the latest pollution control technology.

2. Seen in a global context, Ontario’s emissions are trivial—one-quarter of Canada’s 1.6 percent of global emissions. So, no matter what one believes about the causes of climate change, McGuinty’s announcement and the province’s painful reduction to 0 percent coal-fired power were merely virtue signalling and showmanship. It had no impact on climate whatsoever.

It did, however, have a huge impact on consumer electricity rates, which, depending on the year, doubled or even tripled as coal was replaced with more expensive power, including a massive expansion of industrial wind turbines. Of course, soaring power rates are politically problematic, so the government decided to hide the increase in the tax base, and today’s rates are merely 50 percent higher than those in 2002. But we all eventually pay for this massive increase, just not directly on our power bill.

Renewable energy has only been able to survive thus far because it is heavily subsidized by tax dollars. These subsidies have, unfortunately, caused coal-fired power stations to be less profitable to operate, by comparison, compounded by the fact that regulations have crippled the industry. It is important to increase our expansion of coal plants, Storm tells us. 800,000 megawatts of new power generation, the equivalent of 80 New York cities, will be needed in the United States in the next 25 years to keep up with demand. This is simply not possible with renewable energy, and although nuclear and other conventional power will be significant players in this, coal will remain a steady, reliable power source to provide us with these vast amounts of power.

Rather than phase out coal, Saskatchewan should build more plants. Since Alberta phased out this important energy source, it will soon come knocking again begging for more power from Saskatchewan’s black gold.

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Home Forums Debt Rattle May 20 2026

Viewing 28 posts - 1 through 28 (of 28 total)
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  • #241015

    Botticelli The Calumny of Apelles 1495 • Oil Plummets As NATO Mulls Hormuz Deployment If Strait Not Open By July (ZH) • Thomas Massie Loses His Primar
    [See the full post at: Debt Rattle May 20 2026]

    #241038
    those darned kids
    Participant

    what a wonderful day for president adelson

    #241039
    Dr. D
    Participant

    All things are Ukraine now. What Iran? We never talked about Iran. Is something going on in Iran? Alex2, Duran, Johnson, Meirshiemer, Ritter, Wolff. Huh. That was quick. I wonder why?

    “Lawrence Wilkerson: Trump-Xi Meeting After U.S. Defeat in Iran” Glenn Diesen

    It seems that China gave everything to the Loser, the United States, and nothing to the winner, Iran. How odd. Why would China do that? Everyone rallies around the loser, I guess, and rushes to sign multi-billion dollar trade deals with them and 200 jets.

    “Iran’s ‘Finger on the Trigger’ as War Enters Most DANGEROUS Phase | Mohammad Marandi”

    Definitely not the most dangerous, as Iran has no missiles left. Ever-less dangerous by the hour. There have to be two sides for there to be a war.

    “Col. Jacques Baud: Israel COLLAPSES After Trump’s Final Card” — Dima, DialogueWorks.

    Yup, Israel has ceased to exist, and when you go there, there’s just blank screen, like in Minecraft before anything is built. This doesn’t “change everything.” It’s not “happening.” There is no “secret local housewives” and the Illuminaughty have not been keeping it from you.” Just another day of everyone reading emails and flapping their gums.

    You’ll be happy to know Mercouris says selling 200 jets plus food and oil, and signing understandings on all five Iranian points, and declaring intent not to buy Iranian oil anymore, is “Coming back empty handed.” His internal emotional feelz, discovered using DonaldTelepathy, is to “Lash out” and “Project Strength” to counteract this failure back at home. So how many jets would have to sell to be a “win” Alex? 200 is too few? 2,000? 2 Million? A billion-million jets.

    Alex has also done a comprehensive inventory of all Army and Naval hardware and we are out of ammunition, while Iran has more bombs than when they started, so it’s good everyone across the Atlantic agrees as one mind on this.

    I have to tell you as an outsider, I am going to write my Congressman about the US Army letting every pundit on earth into our bases and ships to take inventory. This is becoming a real national security issue.

    The only answer here — Alex says — is for the U.S. to have a multi-million man land invasion to accomplish – handwaving here – something, not sure, so therefore Iran won and Trump is looking for an off-ramp. This is because Donald’s purpose in life is to open the straits on behalf of Europe, who do nothing for themselves, and who will then buy oil from Iran and not Texas, and Donald’s goal for the country is to NOT sell things and NOT get rich.

    Thanks! https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lOGxx0WvY74

    See, Donald was trying to be an obedient slave and puppet of Europe for no reason at all, but the dummy can’t even do that right! Can you believe? There are a ton of these, one from each talking head, Johnson, Wilkerson, Ritter, so I’ll spare you.

    Alex C was on the weekend about Ukraine (what Iran??) and says Russia better listen to him and attack everybody in total war if they know what’s good for them! Everyone is Russia is an idiot and Putin is a retard. They have to attack EVERYONE, every minute, all the way out to Portugal, just agreeing with PCR here on Shock and Awe.

    So I have no idea why the Kremlin doesn’t surrender and hand the country over to Alex who can run it and all the wars so much better. Weird. Next genius, pretty obviously they last attack was the one slated for Victory Day, but was put off by the “ceasefire”. Which shows that Trump can influence Ukraine, we have leverage of some sort.

    This means that the U.S. runs the war and is the only actor here. So Russia talks to Trump and asks him to lay leverage down on Ukraine and Europe. THerefore the only responsible party, the only person in the war is not Ukraine. Nope. Not Europe, who is actually building and bombing, nope. Not Russia, nope, which also clearly has influence. Nope.

    The only person among the four who has any action or responsibility is the US. So “There is only ONE country in the world, and only ONE man in that country, Trump” Everything is his fault personally.

    Yup. Again and again. So like, if you’re Europe, and out stabbing people personally AND paying others feelin’ stabby, no stabbings are your fault. It’s the OTHER guy, who didn’t STOP your stabbings — it’s all HIS fault. If he, you, can stop stabbings by going out every night like Batman, and you don’t, aren’t all the stabbings in the city then really your fault? And not the criminal stabbers? Well, I say sir! OF COURSE they are.

    Having influence and leverage to shift a major drone attack by one day is NOT the same as being in control of the whole country. Or whole CONTINENT in this case. This eludes Alex, because then Europeans would have to be living beings with free agency, and not victims and puppets, which is unthinkable. Ah, you embarrass every Greek ever born, sir.

    Welp! Since there is only one man and one country, Alex, I’m taking your advice and jsut surrendering to Trump, doing whatever he wants. That’s your own argument, and who am I to resist it? Only one nation matters: MINE. So do what I say! Gimme Santorini, I wants it. I’m going to put up a McDonald’s Mall there. Since we are the only nation that has will, action, and that matters, you have to do that now. Chop chop, coolie.

    “Alastair Crooke : Israel’s War Unraveling America” –Judge Nepalitano.

    Nope. Nothing is unraveling here. Nothing at all. It sucks, that’s nothing new, no other changes. He’s saying Democrats suddenly hate Republicans and the nation is divided as they deploy tanks on each other? Nope, that was Clinton and Janet Reno in 1993, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waco_siege then serial cases constantly thereafter. That sort of thing would be an “Unraveling”. That’s not happening now, or not any more than usual.

    Maybe we SHOULD unravel, not sure. But “Just saying things” that “Squeeze out me bum” does not make it real unless you’re an “Expert” and “Get paid” to say such things by “Far left oligarchs” supporting the UK, like Mr. Murdoch with the full intent to “Demoralize,” Black Pill, and cause the U.S. to collapse into a mass-murdering Civil War, killing millions overnight as Deagle recommended. No thanks, Al. I’ll pass.

    “Watch $134 Million Go Up In Smoke As Navy Jets Collide At Air Show

    So. Proud. Of the showboating. That’s okay, I didn’t need that money anyway. That was about 1.5 million tanks of gas. ($4.50 x 20gal) Who needs that? 1:100 odds of getting a free tank of gas (133M households). I’d totally rather have a handful of fans get an air show instead of a free tank of gas. Almost like PGA Golf!

    “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.
    This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. The cost of one modern heavy bomber is this: a modern brick school in more than 30 cities. It is two electric power plants, each serving a town of 60,000 population. It is two fine, fully equipped hospitals. It is some fifty miles of concrete pavement. We pay for a single fighter with a half-million bushels of wheat. We pay for a single destroyer with new homes that could have housed more than 8,000 people. . . . This is not a way of life at all, in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron.” — D.D.Ike.

    Yes, Ike was a Double D. J Edgar was not.

    “Software CEO Convicted In Massive $1 Billion Medicare Fraud Scheme Targeting Seniors
    “This was not health care. It was a billion-dollar fraud machine…”

    How does this get to “A Billion”? For really, no one noticed before now? While all 50 States opine about their budgets and need more Federal money? Oversight on this is BOTH State AND Federal, BOTH police or audit forces are engaged. Uhhh...I take that everybody knew and didn’t want to get shot at their front door, like in Minnesota. And the money is planned, arranged, trained, tracked, offshored, and re-collected by the CIA, just like the CIA in Minnesota via Somali. The rogue CIA is the one shooting people, like Judges in D.C., the year before.

    THAT is how you get to “A billion dollars.” I believe the Somalian government themselves said so, as in that example?

    Speaking of fraud and war, I lost the specific vid, but Greg Mannarino is on about Trump, and I wanted to post it. Why? I disagree, but noted that Mannarino’s accusations are REAL. That so stood out, that I wanted to forward and present it. Like the Trump Phone (god knows) the insider trading, the CBDC, etc. as well as the war, but the war for specific REASONS. What does that mean that it so stood out? Well, that like all impeachments (including Clinton’s) all usual accusations for 12 years are totally spurious and unreal or untrue. And so with all the stuff they accuse Trump of that you force me to counter each day I even FORGOT that I used to start each one in 2017 with “Why do you make me defend him?? Ugh!!” and it’s just become a habit because all accusations are false.

    Greg is presenting accusations that are real. And good on him. Now I don’t know they couldn’t be defended in court – that’s why they make all the false ones, they’re way more salacious – but at least he’s not “Making s—t up” with every waking breath, and we can explore the charges, or disagree as good faith actors.

    How has that become so rare it makes me write an essay on one guy saying one (normal) thing? Let’s tell the truth and prosecute people for actual crimes they actually commit, yes? Can we vow to do that from here?

    This quote is purged from media, mostly showing in photo form, always interpreted and clipped in Google. I pried it out of AI:

    “”If Iran completely surrendered today, admitted their Navy has been totally destroyed, their Air Force is gone, and their military completely leaves Tehran with weapons dropped and hands raised shouting ‘I surrender,’ and their leaders officially sign documents of total capitulation, the Fake News Media, including the failing New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and CNN, will headline that Iran had a masterful and brilliant victory over the United States of America, it wasn’t even close. The Dumacrats and Media have totally lost their way. They have gone absolutely CRAZY!!!”

    This is clearly true, as I will look again today for everyone to say

    the side with the Navy that’s sunk is the winner, and the side with the Navy that’s floating is the loser.

    The guy with no men left on the field and no points on the board is who you surrender to, so Alex3 says. IF ONLY what Cheeto dumdum was saying wasn’t actually true. Sadly, it is, and I’ve been forced to say it for 70 days and I don’t wanna. PLEASE stop lying so I can stop correcting you and we can both move on to doing useful things.

    ““I have been asked by the Emir of Qatar, Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud, and the President of the United Arab Emirates, Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, to hold off on our planned Military attack”

    What is this? Trump is running the war for the Gulf States, not Israel. Where is Israel, what Israel? Only the Gulf. We are the Muslim army, I guess?

    ““the Americans are still trying to tie the negotiations to end the war to the nuclear issue, which is against logic and Iran will not agree to it. The Americans must understand that Iran will in no way agree to an end to the war in return for nuclear commitments”.
    “Iran has not and does not have any intention of building nuclear weapons, and this claim is just an excuse and deception by the Americans.”

    The illogic is yours sir. If there is no nuclear weapons, then it does not follow. Without weapons it is profoundly LOGICAL to give the Uranium you have no intention of using. It’s ONLY IF you DEFINITELY intend to use it that it becomes “Illogical” to give it up.

    This is not “deception”, much of that though we have. That’s simple proof of your own actions. You’d rather have every Iranian die a fiery death than give up a pound of powder you yourself say you have literally no use for, now or ever. How does that make sense?

    “Another Iranian Ship Breaks Through US Blockade Line”

    One of 75. Be still my heart. And still hasn’t made it out again. Why bother? The POINT of ships is to go back and forth all day. We’ll just get you tomorrow, as there are unlimited trips you need to make. We aren’t sinking them, so if you park it in Pakistan, it’s the same as us shooting the rudder: Out of commission.

    1/75th oil backing up in the wells, 1/75th of the annual revenue, 1/75th of the Armaments, 1/75th of the blackmail and allies. It’s a problem.

    I can see the Dems losing bitterly. What are their strengths? Not being Trump?
    • Democrats Face Midterm Disappointment (Daniel McCarthy)

    It’s inexplicable that they haven’t got a platform years later. I mean, like I said, make up something the kids will vote for, and LIE. Just lie! That’s it. They won’t find out ‘til after. The whole party, machine top to bottom doesn’t seem to feel any need or urgency to stand for something or have policies. I think it was White who said, Once you start rigging elections, you focus on that, it works, and ignore your own party, the people, the policies, everything. I can’t imagine doing that – I’d still lie and play-act and make it up, but apparently this is true. I think Narcissists. Like it’s not fun unless they can grind you, rub your face in their dominance, the play acting is hateful to them in that way, much as the lie and act about other things constantly.

    Anyway: Great! Keep going. Never stop.

    “Randi Weingarten [Teachers Union] is prioritizing anti-Trump”

    Their money comes from the governments ultimately. Shouldn’t they keep it down? Didn’t learn from PBS? Or should we just have Democrats create a “Fund the DNC” Bill in Congress directly? Taxpayers > Direct PAC.

    “targeting people here legally through DACA, deporting them from the only country many have known as home,”

    Actually DACA is still totally illegal, if anybody cares. Congress passes laws, not the President. There were what, four Congresses that took up the issue and decided to pass zero fixes to the law? That’s above every Congress since 1986 that didn’t take it up at all.

    “reading scores were down last year in 83 percent of school districts where data was available. Math scores were down in 70 percent.”

    As I say regularly, they’re worse at math and reading than previous generations of children where there were no schools at all. Kids in coal mines and logging camps learned to read constantly. Many read only the Bible and their Pa and could do both better than $50k/student/year cost.

    “• Germany Fears Next Migration Wave (ZH)

    Wait: Germany was mass-deporting (I dn’t believe them). So every migrant com come from central Africa, take a boat, land in Spain, go to Germany, be deported, in one huge disassembly line circle jerk. Perfect! All paid by taxpayers. Even more perfect! Let’s double it!

    Twice as many Immigrants miserable, AND twice as many Citizens!

    #241040
    Dr. D
    Participant

    Today:

    21 Congressmen win. Yes, but is that a GOOD thing? I hope so, but let’s not assume. The RINOs were so bad, living only to undermine the nation, that it’s hard not to improve on that. Also they’re for Trump. But is Trump good for America? What vision for America does he have? Rural Jeffersonian Democracy?

    I’m not against it, but sure seems like he’d pave and industrialize everything and that’s not American.

    “”She wasn’t just authorizing pardons,” [she was selling them] “To the tune of about $30 million.”

    How? She’s not in the White House, near the staff.

    “BIDEN BODY DOUBLE AJ BARRON JUST FLIPPED AND IS TURNING STATE’S EVIDENCE — EVERY SINGLE AUTOPEN PARDON AND ORDER WAS SIGNED BY A FUCKING ACTOR, NOT THE PRESIDENT,”

    You better bring the receipts for that, that’s a huge allegation. Not that I don’t think it’s true. I think it’s far more likely than that Biden did it.

    “[Inflation] The Democrats and the mainstream media refuse to tell the American people the truth.”

    That’s not the Truth either. Biden Inflation was way over 15%, probably 20% at the peak. But not every month. Trump was indeed lower, but it never dropped, reversed, and is now yes 5% and rising.

    “• Oil Plummets As NATO Mulls Hormuz Deployment If Strait Not Open By July

    With what? A waterski boat? How many ships does the entire combined NATO have ex-US?

    What would be funny is, would Iran sink them all, which would be hilarious. “July” so somehow, this is about running out the clock, letting Iran stall.

    “• Comey’s Message to the Deep State: Run Out the Clock on Trump (Tim O’Brien)

    Ding. And yet: 2 ½ YEARS of stall? In Iran? No way. By then Kash may have identified a critical hundred of you as well.

    “Thomas Massie Loses His Primary Race (Salgado)

    People with great instincts about this like Luongo (seem to be proven with MTG) don’t like and trust him. Sure, but I don’t see it. Clearly they do. But don’t make me guess, show me the FBI wiretaps on him, and don’t tell me you don’t. I’m totally sure every Congressman is wiretapped 6 layers deep. Without that, I can only take him as innocent and not obedient.

    “Worst Congressman in the Republican Party. This shows what a totally dishonest”

    Good then should be no problem pointing out WHERE he has been dishonest, right? No facts or details.

    “It looks like a pretty established industry.
    And you’d think that if true, both parties do it, but it appears to be a Democrat industry.”

    Good point, but we’re sure a number of GOP are total election frauds: McConnell and Graham particularly, but a lot of others too. But if you look, the digital machines etc are all owned/set by overwhelming DNC side. So they HAVE to be playing ball it would seem to get in against them.

    There’s a second part, where a guy brings in his campaign director who sells his fraud with him, and he just “Wins elections” so what does the candidate know? Those hired guns go where people above THEM say, and yes, just for the money, but if say JD Rockefeller tells them not to join, work for that campaign, they won’t, being like Wall St sharks without principles, and make money elsewhere. Later, the Candidate suspects and finds out, and then what? Boots himself from office? The reason he’s cheating is the other candidate is too! This is the case of most, and I’d bet only the minority know all along and/or direct the fraud personally. Why would they?

    “he declared the party had no real leader except Trump Derangement Syndrome.”

    The real signal here was that was completely true, they’re proud and loud about it, doubling down daily, yet they went on the attack for him saying what was clearly a fact. Pretty disturbing, actually, because I’m like “I don’t even know what lie you wanted Fetterman to stick to.” You’ve lost the plot when I can no longer even guess what the script is.

    “his future inside the Democratic Party is already closed.”

    So they’re bouncing a secure Congressman who’s “pro-choice, firmly behind legal marijuana, a committed supporter of LGBT rights, a staunch defender of SNAP benefits, and a reliable friend to organized labor” and “Overwhelmingly aligned”. Because…??? He won’t chop up children and collapse the US to hand to Iran? Those are some SERIOUSLY outlier positions. We just saw this today with the leaks from the BBC News editor. Bounced because ANY equality in news was a firing offense, making the Jacobites seem tame in comparison.

    “Each angle, he argued, was powered by the same mechanism: making ordinary people terrified to say what they actually believed.”

    As everywhere, and the BBC Newsroom (And TV show section) as well. Reign of Jacobean Terror, although for the Information Age of Aquarius, thank God. Still pretty serious. As JB said, you could escape them in Magic the Gathering Card games, D&D, video games, figurines, Star Wars, comic books, nor anywhere. The lemon-sucking fundamentalists would track you down and kill you worse than any Cromwell ever has. Same in UK where like Cromwell, closed all the Pubs open these 500 years. Literally. Insane. Make Stalin look like a Hippie.

    “Democrats haven’t figured this out yet. They’re still running the same play.”

    And again, this is why they inexplicably have no policies, even to LIE about them. Emotionally, the don’t want policy, which is boring AF, they are energized by POWER, to march around and see the raw terror in everyone’s eyes. It makes life worth living and want to get up again tomorrow. “Hamburgers?” as he meme goes. Minimum Wage? Healthcare costing less than Switzerland? Me no comprehend.

    “If Comey were telling the truth, that still wouldn’t explain why he shared that photo with all his followers.”

    Here you go: ʤ ¶ ʩ π ˨ ю v Ѭ

    What does that mean to you? Sooo…having no idea what that means, what those symbols are, you don’t have the innate impulse to post it and your ignorance in front of 5 million people? Yeah, you’d only post it if you DO know what it means. There are “symbols” everywhere, in the sweep of sand and two leaves crossing on a tree on that same walk. He didn’t post them either, now or ever. Only this.

    “James Comey signals to FBI personnel that he has “great confidence in” at the bureau to wait out the Trump administration”

    This is the very definition of “A Deep State”. A State that is criminally uncaring of the people and rebellious to every American, and in that sense a thief, taking money for services then refusing to provide them, doing the opposite, doing whatever they like. And yes, some 1/3rd may like that, but the 2/3rds now see it as proof we should go up there and burn you out. That everything they accuse you of is true. So that’s NOT “Plausible Deniability” Sonny Jim. YOU just blew everyone’s cover.

    “the idea that Democrats should make radical constitutional and political changes as soon as they retake power. That includes packing the Supreme Court, admitting Puerto Rico and D.C. as states and killing the Electoral College.”

    Again, you were winning with Fabian. You were working slow with deniability. This blows the cover off everything, and the people won’t like it. That’s fine when you were going to round up and kill all your enemies (And did, to some extent) but not if they have any options left, including shooting. And Americans do. We retain the whole escalation ladder of responses, not even having started a counter-war yet. So we’re merely discussing at this point, while you’re exposed, your 100 year plan and 100 year success is shot. No one supports your ACTUAL plan, they were supporting your cover story all that time (like delivering health care) that were all now-proven lies.

    In short, your policy is worldwide global Stalinism. Now we can see, and you’re saying so yourself, in public.

    “Yet, it is all part of the effort to normalize extreme measures and condition American voters to fundamentally changing our system.”

    Any level of Jacobism, Revolution, War, extremism, etc, they win. Only being human and moderate and normal do we win.

    “Driverless cars and a stop hiring humans campaign… If this is the future, it is HELL”

    I would prefer not to live in Hell, actually. Rather against that.

    “Technology has the potential to automate human labor”

    Yes, for the worse. As has almost every invention since they started. Are people happier in 2026 than 1926? Profoundly, overwhelmingly, despairingly, NO. They might even be 1/10th as happy for moving 9 times faster. So who is all this for? A: Only machines and money, it would seem, as it cripples the humans to advance itself. Orlov called it the Technosphere, its purpose is to turn the entire earth and everything on it into the Borg. Dead and lifeless as the real Matrix, all humans and life forms extinct.

    Also profoundly do NOT want 1M satellites, doing anything. Also no rockets, no use for them. Every rocket could probably restore an entire U.S. town. Can only pray for a long-term Kessler reaction, shutting space completely which went from very likely to inevitable as they all smash into each other like reactor atoms.

    “However, the world is burning more coal now than ever, reaching a record 8.85 billion metric tonnes”

    True of all energy and all things, like Jevon’s Paradox. We never reduce, even when we could, should, and would be happier for it by far.

    “I WOULD HIRE THE ONE WHO’S EXPERT IN USING AI.”

    All things being equal. But it’s not. The expert in AI knows nothing about accounting or marketing himself. So when AI tells him to make a Bozo Gun and shoot everyone with it, he will do so and think he’s winning. Not only failing, but bankrupting the company because it is counter to all law and physics. This translates to “Hire the Incompetent guy”.

    “Probably, a future where there’s amazing abundance for all.”

    Absolutely not. You’re insane. That’s being God himself, where there are no limits. It’s writing a novel where Sam Spade is a private eye, but also a Jedi, but also a billionaire, but also a bikini-model, but also a fighter pilot, but also a cowboy, but also Wookie, but also a CEO, but also a child, but also a surfer, but also a Spartan, but also a Maori Tribeman, but also a Queen.

    NO. The point of life is you can be ONE thing. That there ARE limits. And yes, they, and Musk, do EXACTLY THIS and it drives them insane. All modern Media, as shown by the new Star Wars demonstrates this and how it doesn’t work, is insane, and is completely contrary to all human nature, rejected as disgusting and false by all humans who encounter it. He’s projecting his profound mental illness on us.

    I want a world where I pump water and throw wood on the fire. One made of profound limitations like Winter, summer, spring that give life and our place in it MEANING. Joy and pain come and go, but meaning is enduring.

    “20 million people, which found that “all the excess deaths were in the vaccinated group”.

    No arrests. Even in Japan. I blame Orange Man. He’s President of Japan, right?

    #241041
    charles
    Participant

    Name the 3 biggest countries that the city of london has tried to dominate by all means necessary for hundreds of years. USA. Russia. China.

    Igor Levitas Morning coffee on EADaily:
    “Trump announced that he was laying a strike on Iran because the Gulf countries asked him not to do so. In addition, it gives Iran time to make some compromises. In my opinion, the situation is a little simpler: Trump needs the result of the meeting between Putin and Xi.
    It is known that during his meeting a few days ago, Trump and Xi spoke, among other things, about Iran. And it is logical to assume that they came to some kind of interim decision, which is tied to the position of Putin. Therefore, until the end of the meeting, Putin and Xi Trump will not do any movements. Especially since Iran softens its position: agrees to give the enriched uranium to Russia for storage, begins to clear the Strait of Hormuz, etc. I really hope that no military action will follow.”

    https://eadaily.com/ru/news/2026/05/20/ozhidanie-trampa-demarsh-afin-i-shprotinka-bayba-utrenniy-kofe-s-eadaily

    The Iranian uranium? (say that 3 times fast) Forensic due diligence is best served by Russia. It might not become public. Iran has 6 known deposits in country. They are not high grade. Near the bottom but not the lowest either.

    https://www.iaea.org/resources/databases/world-distribution-of-uranium-deposits

    #241044
    tboc
    Participant

    It is the best of times, it is the worst of times

    I wouldn’t hire JENSEN HUANG to watch paint dry. Cool leather jacket though

    Do you think Musk or Huang or Altman are more intelligent than Sir Roger?
    Human artifice and artificial cleverness, a marriage forged in heaven

    Seems to me releasing significant material evidence to the press before trial is a sure way to achieve a mistrial. Have you heard or read anything pertaining to this trial? Judge I ask that this potential juror be dismissed.
    No bail or bond for Comey, free to poison the well until January 26.

    Musk sounds more like Osteen everyday.
    Cracker you are nothing more than a luddite! Thankyou sire for the kind words.

    #241045
    those darned kids
    Participant

    r.i.p., america.

    nice try, though.

    #241046
    zerosum
    Participant

    One track mind
    Speaking of fraud and war

    “reading scores were down last year in 83 percent of school districts where data was available. Math scores were down in 70 percent.”

    —————–
    “he declared the party had no real leader except Trump Derangement Syndrome.” – Fetterman

    ————
    “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.
    This world in arms is not spending money alone.
    It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children.
    The cost of one modern heavy bomber is this:
    a modern brick school in more than 30 cities.
    It is two electric power plants, each serving a town of 60,000 population.
    It is two fine, fully equipped hospitals.
    It is some fifty miles of concrete pavement.
    We pay for a single fighter with a half-million bushels of wheat.
    We pay for a single destroyer with new homes that could have housed more than 8,000 people. . . .

    This is not a way of life at all, in any true sense.
    Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron.”

    — The quote was made by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in his April 16, 1953 address “The Chance for Peace,” also known as the “Cross of Iron” speech.

    —————
    Kamala Harris
    lie and play-act
    that was a good idea
    it’s all HIS fault
    power is influence and leverage
    ————–
    What copilot had to say about Xi and Putin meeting

    Summary:
    Putin and Xi’s most recent meeting in Beijing (May 19–20, 2026) reinforced their strategic alignment, expanded economic cooperation, and presented a united geopolitical front—particularly in opposition to U.S. policies. Below is a structured breakdown of what happened, grounded in the latest reporting.

    🧭 Core Outcomes of the Putin–Xi Meeting
    1. Strengthening the China–Russia Strategic Partnership
    Both leaders declared that bilateral ties have reached an “unprecedentedly high level”, continuing their long‑standing “no limits” partnership first announced in 2022.

    Xi described the relationship as “unyielding despite trials and tribulations.”

    Putin emphasized that their cooperation serves as a model of comprehensive partnership.

    2. Major Economic & Energy Agreements
    Putin and Xi oversaw the signing of 20–40+ cooperation agreements, depending on the source, covering:

    Energy (oil & natural gas)

    Technology

    Media exchanges

    Trade expansion

    Trade between the two countries reached $228.1 billion last year, with nearly all transactions conducted in rubles or renminbi, reducing reliance on the U.S. dollar.

    3. Coordinated Geopolitical Messaging Against the U.S.
    In a joint statement, China and Russia:

    Criticized U.S. unilateralism and “hegemonism”

    Warned of a return to the “law of the jungle” in global affairs

    Opposed Trump’s proposed $175B “Golden Dome” missile defense system

    Xi also issued veiled warnings about U.S. actions in the Middle East and global security.

    4. Ukraine War Positioning
    Both leaders reiterated calls for a “lasting solution” to the war in Ukraine, without criticizing Russia’s invasion.
    This continues China’s balancing act: rhetorically pro‑peace, materially pro‑Russia.

    5. Middle East / Iran Conflict
    Xi called for an immediate cessation of hostilities in the Middle East, citing risks to global energy and supply chains.
    He told Putin that renewed conflict is “inadvisable” and a ceasefire is urgent.

    6. Symbolism & Diplomacy
    Putin received a full red‑carpet welcome, military band, and ceremonial honors—similar to Trump’s visit days earlier, but with warmer personal rapport.

    Putin quoted a 3,000‑year‑old Chinese idiom to emphasize closeness:
    “Not seeing you for one day feels like being apart for three autumns.”

    This was Putin’s 25th visit to China and their 40+th meeting since 2013.

    🧩 What It Means Strategically
    For China:
    Reinforces Beijing as the central hub of global power diplomacy, hosting Trump and Putin within days.

    Strengthens energy security and geopolitical leverage.

    For Russia:
    Deepens economic lifelines amid Western sanctions.

    Demonstrates that Moscow is not isolated on the world stage.

    For the U.S.:
    Signals a tightening China–Russia axis explicitly critical of U.S. defense and foreign policy.

    Highlights Beijing’s growing role as a mediator—or gatekeeper—in global crises.
    —————

    #241047

    You may be very, very good at something that you do-
    Your name is good, you get the jobs, you’ve made a buck or two-
    But if your work is making things more lethal than before,
    Your customers may love you but you’re still a goddamned whore.

    #241048
    D Benton Smith
    Participant

    The Zionist Faction that just “Primaried” Massie out of the Congress shot themselves in the head by demonstrating beyond all shadow of doubt that the Zionist State of Israel does, indeed, run the United States Empire. Had they chosen almost anyone other than Thomas Massie they might have gotten away with it, too, but they didn’t.

    They just gave one of their most dangerous adversaries an enormously powerful weapon to use against them, and Thomas Massie knows how to use that weapon to greatest effect. He was already quite good at it, and now he has the ammunition to do it even better.

    Making one’s enemy stronger is such a dumb move that I just gotta say that the ZioNazi Empire is just too stupid to live much longer.

    #241049
    those darned kids
    Participant

     إِنْ شَاءَ ٱللَّٰهُ

    #241050
    chooch
    Participant

    How much “foreign” lobby money was used to fund pro Trump candidates?

    How many ships passed thru the strait during Trump’s visit to China?

    In a war, staying long oil for more than 10 trading days will cost you.

    Did/do the Gulf states really know?

    Are the Israelis setting their “bombs-away” countdown clocks for Saturday morning?

    Trump has until market open, Tuesday morning.

    Seriously, sweetheart only scratches the surface. Particularly the third grader Hussein.

    “There are six things that the Lord hates,
seven that are an abomination to him:
    haughty eyes, a lying tongue,
and hands that shed innocent blood,
    a heart that devises wicked plans,
feet that make haste to run to evil,
    a false witness who breathes out lies,
and one who sows discord among brothers.”[Proverbs 6: 16-17]

    #241053
    D Benton Smith
    Participant

    Now that the world is teetering on the brink of nuclear war, and it’s likely that Israel will be the first to launch its nukes, it might benefit us somewhat to answer the question of where did they get their atomic bombs in th first place.

    Better to answer that important question late than never, I am forced to suppose.

    My guess is that Zionist elements within both countries conspired to bribe, blackmail, and criminally enlist the various military, scientific, intelligence, political and financial institutions of the United States to GIVE them those nuclear weapons by means of extremely convoluted skullduggery, and keep all of the dirty details of that skullduggery secret and legally immunized against opposition or exposure by BOTH camps (Israeli and Anglo/American based) to this very day.

    #241054
    chooch
    Participant

    Atom bomb tech is 80 years old. Iran likely has nuclear warheads strapped to some of their missiles. No dust, not buried, ready to fly.

    #241055
    D Benton Smith
    Participant

    I just heard that Larry Fink came out in public recently and said something to the effect of, “Please don’t bomb my Data Centers because I need them to control vital industries and make the money to pay for them.”

    That’s hilarious!

    It’s like a mugger in a dark alley asking his victim, “Please don’t disarm me while I’m in the process of robbing you at gunpoint or shooting you dead if you try to resist or obstruct the crime.”

    As for the data centers themselves I say Bomb Away! We’ve got more than enough of them already and have all of the so-called Artificial Intelligence that we could ever possibly need, and then some.

    We don’t need robots. We need a decent life with enough food to eat and electricity to keep the lights on. We don’t need to spend 100 billion dollars per head to send humans to Mars! What possible thing could a human being on Mars produce to justify send him to Mars (on a multi-trillion dollar mission, for which each mars-o-nut would have a productive lifespan of a very few years before becoming a net liability cost/benefit wise)

    Here’s an idea: Send Fink and Elon to Mars.

    #241056
    zerosum
    Participant

    An illusion
    A defeated nation
    A failed nation

    #241057
    D Benton Smith
    Participant

    Just in case you have ever deeply wondered why the English Crown has so deeply involved itself with Jews and Judaism.

    #241060
    zerosum
    Participant

    Slow news day… nothing is happening. Peace must be close. 🙂

    #241061
    D Benton Smith
    Participant

    Peace must be close

    Nice thought, but not quite yet. First there must come the realignments, and those are usually messy and not especially peaceful.

    #241062
    D Benton Smith
    Participant

    In times like these peace and quiet is the sound of the belligerents reloading.

    #241063
    those darned kids
    Participant

    #241064
    tboc
    Participant

    good one dbs!!

    #241065
    tboc
    Participant

    chooch i don’t think there is any deterrent to mad men using nuclear weapons. A moral people would not poison an area of ancient habitation. Al-Quds is holy to more than Judaism.
    Israel would never have enough armaments to defend themselves were they to use a nuclear weapon. I am 75 with a TAVR heart valve and i would enlist to make jihad on Israel.

    Jews vs the global Islamic community plus those who hunger and thirst for justice.. The question is are the smartest, as we are told, stupid enough to go there.

    #241066
    John Day
    Participant

    “It’s the (oil-based) economy, Stupid”… President Mr. Bill

    Expect the Hormuz blockade to remain in place until the global economy capitulates and gives up hope of return to the “normal” days of yore.
    ;-/

    #241067
    WES
    Participant

    City of London:

    Raul, you are in big trouble today with the City of London for not featuring any of their War = Peace propaganda articles!

    Yesterday, you at least featured their favorite attack dog, miss lindsey graham, Moar war!

    Then posting articles saying bad things about City of London’s democrats.

    Then saying China, Russia, and the US, are fighting a common enemy, London, oh boy you maybe knocked offline in the dead of night!

    You might be able to save yourself, if you announced a new fake City of London War!
    Or maybe run an article by miss bolton?

    #241068
    zerosum
    Participant

    I’m using copilot. It save me a lot of work.

    Yes — we have clear, sourced numbers on how many ships have been moving through the Strait of Hormuz recently.
    Here are the verified figures, all tied to specific dates and sources.

    🚢 Current Ship Traffic Through the Strait of Hormuz (May 2026)
    1. Today’s throughput: 2 ships in 24 hours
    Commercial transit is effectively 2% of normal.

    Only 2 vessels transited the strait today, compared to a pre‑crisis baseline of 95 per day.

    2. IRGC claim: 26 ships in the past 24 hours
    Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps publicly stated they coordinated 26 ships through the strait within a 24‑hour period.

    3. Independent maritime data: ~10 ships per day recently
    Reuters‑based analysis shows around 10 ships (mixed cargo, chemical, LPG; very few crude tankers) crossing in the past 24 hours.

    4. Weekly spike: 55 vessels in one week (May 11–17)
    A temporary easing of restrictions allowed 55 vessels to cross over a week — up from 19 the week before.

    5. Complete halt (earlier in May): 0 ships in 24 hours
    MarineTraffic data recorded a full 24‑hour period with zero ships passing through.

    🧭 How to interpret the numbers
    These figures differ because they come from different days, different sources, and different definitions:

    2 ships/day → IMF PortWatch / crisis‑level commercial traffic

    10 ships/day → Mixed‑vessel AIS tracking (Reuters/Kpler)

    26 ships/day → IRGC‑coordinated movements (Iran’s claim)

    55 ships/week → Temporary easing window

    0 ships/day → Full shutdown during peak tension

    All of them point to the same conclusion:

    The Strait of Hormuz is operating at a tiny fraction of normal capacity — between 0% and ~10% of typical flow depending on the day.

    #241069
    WES
    Participant

    Iran:

    The only way for peace to enter the Middle East and Iran, is if the City of London is completely driven out!

    #241070
    those darned kids
    Participant

    meet the new banker, same as the old banker

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