As I prepared for my Thanksgiving superspreader event, I listened to the Pennsylvania state legislature’s four-hour public hearing on irregularities witnessed by polling observers in the 2020 election. I expected the testimony would simply be a repeat of what we’ve heard from the Trump legal team. It turned out to be far more powerful, persuasive and riveting than anything I’ve heard before.
“We know when we start going through the concerns that people have, they’re very worried about anything that has been rushed or they might perceive has been rushed. They’re very worried about anything that might have side effects associated with it,” said Darrell Bricker, CEO of Ipsos Public Affairs.
The viral video offers a rare moment of truth from the anti-Trump network as more and more Americans are waking up to the historic levels of fraud conducted during the 2020 presidential election.
I was eleven years old in November 1960 when my father and I watched Richard Nixon concede the presidential election to John F. Kennedy. My father, a former FBI agent, shook his head. “Another victory for Mayor Daley of Chicago,” he said.
“What does that mean?” I asked.
“It means Mayor Daley stole the election,” he answered.
“Then why doesn’t Nixon do something about it?” I asked indignantly.
“Because it would tear the country apart, and no one wants that.”
“Why not?”
“It doesn’t work that way,” he replied. “Nixon is being a gentleman.”
Of course, it wasn’t just my dad who felt that way. I heard his sentiment echoed many times after that election by teachers, news commentators, and my friends’ parents. The election might have been stolen, sure, but these things happen. Move on.
Newt Gingrich: 2020 Election May Be ‘Biggest Presidential Theft’ Since 1824
On Saturday morning, Gingrich encouraged Republican state legislators to read an analysis from Patrick Basham, founding Director of the Democracy Institute and senior fellow of the Cato Institute. Basham lists ten “peculiarities” which he believes lack “compelling explanations,” including swing states halting their ballot counts on election night and removing observers, statistically abnormal vote counts, and “historically low absentee ballot rejection rates.”
5 takeaways from Israel’s assassination of Iran’s top nuclear weapons scientist
By assassinating the figurative and literal godfather of Iran’s nuclear ambitions, Israel is laying down a marker to the incoming U.S. president. Fakhrizadeh was involved in nuclear weapons research, something the Israelis know that the Biden team knows. This attack serves as a message from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to President-elect Joe Biden that he intends to escalate his covert action on Tehran regardless of Washington’s policy. The Biden administration will not be able to ignore this pressure and pursue U.S. policy separate from it.
PMOops: Trudeau’s office releases account of him scolding O’Toole before he does it
A spokesman for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his office accidentally sent out an account of a phone call with Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole that hadn’t happened yet.
DZSRUDZSA: Out of touch mainstream media has lost the trust of Canadians
Mainstream media journalists were in for an unpleasant surprise this week when they descended upon Adamson Barbecue in Etobicoke, Ont.
Instead of being welcomed with free poutine (courtesy of the prime minister) and the collegiality they’re accustomed to in the Ottawa Bubble, reporters were corralled onto the street by BBQ-joint owner Adam Skelly.
Trudeau program defends $12.8m to create jobs in Kenya
Trudeau’s $300 million FinDev Canada program gave nearly $13 million to a company in Nairobi which went on to lay off 150 employees two weeks later.
Announced as a five-year program under Export Development Canada in 2017, FinDev is designed to support business in developing countries with a focus on Latin America, the Caribbean and sub-Saharan Africa.
In her Georgia complaint, Sidney Powell included the declaration of Navid Keshavarz-Nia, an expert witness who stated under oath that there was massive computer fraud in the 2020 election, all of it intended to secure a victory for Joe Biden. Dr. Kershavarz-Nia’s name may not mean a lot to you, but it’s one of the weightiest names in the world when it comes to sniffing out cyber-security problems.
A new book exposes the origins, nature, tactics, and aims of this dangerous “idea.”
The other day on Facebook a friend posted something critical of the domestic terror group known as Antifa, and someone came to its defense by echoing Clueless Joe Biden’s recent, bizarre declaration that Antifa is not an organization but “an idea.”
Dare to suggest Labour combine socialist economics with the politics of place and they’ll get the pitchforks out
Imagine you wrote a book warning of the dangers of drugs, only to find yourself labelled a ‘junkie’. Or perhaps one in which you argued the case for women’s equality and were immediately denounced as a ‘misogynist’. Then imagine that your accusers, before casting these aspersions, hadn’t even read the thing.
Well, something along those lines happened to me this week. My book, Despised: Why the Modern Left Loathes the Working Class, analyses the rupture between the British Left and working-class voters, and concludes that a contributory factor was the former’s increasing tendency towards authoritarianism and its habit of shutting down legitimate debate by dismissing opponents routinely as ‘fascists’, ‘xenophobes’, ‘racists’, and suchlike.
The FBI last Wednesday released new details about the case of Faisal Mohammad, who in November 2015, while he was a freshman at the University of California, Merced, entered a classroom and stabbed four people. It was already known back at the time of the attack that young Mohammad was a jihadi: The College Fix reported that he “was found to have an image of the ISIS flag, a handwritten manifesto with instructions on how to behead someone, and reminders to pray to Allah.”
To even the casual observer, it should be obvious that there was a whole lotta cheatin’ going on in the Pennsylvania election. How can you be winning by 700,000 on election night and be losing by the next day with almost every single vote for one candidate? One particularly pathetic candidate at that. The Pennsylvania legislature has swung into action.
Jerk chicken – which is sweet, spicy and smoky – originates from Jamaica, but some customers have complained that the fast-food giant’s version is nothing like it should be.
One woman said on Facebook: ‘How is this jerk? Cultural appropriation yet again.’
Love them or hate them, electric vehicles (EVs) are in our future. If you doubt that, look at signs. Car companies around the world are in a mad rush to pivot to EV manufacturing. Some examples follow.
“Since March 2019, General Motors has committed to invest more than $4.5 billion in three U.S. manufacturing sites to prepare for EV-related production. The company announced it plans to release at least 20 new electric vehicles globally by 2023.” This includes a monstrous Hummer which GM is repositioning as a pickup truck to compete directly against Tesla.
A shadowy Islamic State fundraising cell seeking to free Western jihadi brides from Kurdish refugee camps in Syria has been exposed by The Mail on Sunday.
Undercover reporters spent weeks communicating with a ‘fixer’ in Turkey before catching a ‘courier’ on camera in London last Friday picking up what he thought was a £4,500 donation to the terror group’s cause.
In fact, the brown envelope left at the ‘dead drop’ contained only a crossword puzzle book.
“Well boys, I guess we’re just gonna have to go in. Fix your bibs.”
“Whadaya think, Sheriff? Things gonna get messy?”
“Boys, when you’re a-starin down a barbecue outfit, and the ribs start flyin’ and the dip starts coming at you in bowlfuls — tomato-based, vinegar-based, it don’t matter none — it gets messy and then some.”
Massive crowds gathered in central London on Saturday to protest lockdown measures designed to combat the Covid-19 pandemic, and police followed through on their promise to arrest demonstrators, leading to multiple clashes.
Ahead of the protest, Metropolitan Police released a statement warning anyone planning to travel to King’s Cross that current lockdown measures do not permit massive crowds.