EU Globalists and Neocons to Wage War on the World
Today’s Globalists and Neocons make Hitler look like a pipsqueak, as they push for rulership over the entire world.
Citizen Writers Fighting Censorship by Helping Americans Understand Issues Affecting the Republic.
Today’s Globalists and Neocons make Hitler look like a pipsqueak, as they push for rulership over the entire world.
Like many Americans, I watched the extraordinary meeting between President Trump and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa last Wednesday. It was one of the most fascinating encounters I have ever witnessed.
The UN must acquire independent revenue streams financed by some type of global taxation. In 2025 they are just months away from implementing this end run around the needs/wants of citizens of every nation and to beginning to suck the life out of every nation.
Europe made the mistake of the millennium. They invited and let in millions of poor Muslim migrants with a culture totally incompatible with Western civilization.
In its latest effort to intimidate neighbors, China is claiming the Philippine island of Palawan and part of the Philippine Sea as national territory. This move angers the Philippines but is no surprise to those who have followed the Chinese Communist Party’s territorial claims for years.
The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) has been hard at work to creating a workable Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC), in violation of Trump’s ban. Fed Chair Powell is conspiring with them.
The recent disclosure of a Signal thread by high level officials shows sloppiness, but not unauthorized disclosure of classified information.
Imagine this: you live a peaceful, self-sufficient life. You raise livestock, grow food, worship freely, and ride a horse-drawn buggy into town for flour and fence nails. You don’t own a smartphone -Then one day, the Canadian federal government says, “Download this app or we’re putting a lien on your farm.”
America was willing to go to war with the Soviet during the Cuban Missile Crisis, a military incursion on our border. Is American willing to go to war with Russia over one of its neighbors?
In the wake of President Trump tossing Zelensky out of the Oval Office on Friday, I repost tonight this newsletter from January 31, 2023. I will allow readers to decide what has changed on the last 25 months. I mean, besides Trump’s second re-election.
Once again the rapier wit of Don Surber looks at last week’s significant events and provides his own, somewhat ribald interpretation, while enjoying our experience of a new day in America
Four years ago, Trump’s political career looked deader than a Norwegian blue parrot pining for the fjords in a Monty Python skit. But Trump did not come back for spite. He came back to finish the job and save the world.
While pictures out of Syria show people celebrating the removal of Assad, I’ll provide some key points about the factions, possible strategic consequences, and a few words of caution.
South Korea has always had a power struggle between the President and the parliament. Tuesday’s declaration of martial law escalates this conflict from a slow simmer to a boil.
As regional tensions continue to escalate in the Middle East, particularly with the ongoing conflict between Israel and its neighboring territories, the geopolitical landscape could shift in ways that elevate the role of countries like Pakistan.
The greatest risk to America comes after a Trump victory and before the inauguration.
Afghanistan was such a disaster not only due to the preventable loss of thirteen brave Americans at the Abbey Gate but also because of the message of weakness heard around the world.
The same country that chants “Death to America” got a financial lifeline from—you guessed it—America. And what did the U.S. get in return? Peace? Stability? No
The October surprise this year isn’t the media calling Trump Hitler and his supporters Nazis — or some chick in her 50s claiming Trump touched her 30 years ago.
A few days ago, Moldova, the second poorest nation in Europe after beleaguered Ukraine, held a national referendum where their people approved, by a slim 50.4%, to join the European Union.