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“Why is it a scamdemic? It is one of the most deadly pandemics in human history.”

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Comedian Rob Schneider sets podcast host Konstantin

MIKE BENZ: “I am on record saying that both Bitcoin and Jeffrey Epstein, the main way to understand them is the money laundering role. And these emails come out with Larry Summers, who was the head of the U.S. Treasury.”

  • Bitcoin’s origin story is a public paper, public code, and a decade+ of open analysis. If you’re claiming “Epstein/CIA,” show the receipts: cryptographic fingerprints, early miner linkage, funding trails. Otherwise it’s just conspiracy content farming. Also: Bitcoin is a terrible money laundering tool compared to cash. The ledger never forgets. – Rowdy American

  • This is a claim that sounds provocative but collapses under scrutiny. Bitcoin’s origins are unusually well-documented for a technology project: the 2008 white paper, the public cryptography mailing lists, the open‑source code, and years of transparent development by independent contributors. There’s zero credible evidence tying its creation to Epstein, the CIA, or Treasury officials. Suspicion isn’t proof.  SA

Full thread at X

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Did Jeffrey Epstein create Bitcoin? Was it the


This is Mind Blowing “California — they are actively working to replace the White population with the Hispanic population” – Los Angeles Unified School District students are 74% Hispanic and only 10% white – 20% of the students in LA Unified School District are English learnes. So they don’t speak English properly “Why do I have a problem with that? — Economically it’s not sustainable because the Hispanic population in California is majority on welfare and the white and Asian population is fronting the bill. — Second problem I have with it is if I wanted to go live amongst Mexicans, I just moved to Mexico. I actually like America being a majority white country. I would like to preserve that because I have something called survival instincts, and I haven’t been stupid enough to be brainwashed into hating white people who have advanced civilization far more than any other demographic.

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This is Mind Blowing “California — they are

Yolanda Díaz, Spain’s Deputy Prime Minister under Pedro Sánchez, says that Spain intends to impose massive fines and regulations on Elon Musk and X until he learns to obey

The Trump Admin better wake up to what is happening and get infrastructure in place! The EU Censor-Plex Is Completely Encircling The MAGA Movement And The White House Is Not Doing Nearly Enough

While the White House could do more, the president needs help from Congress to shut down European censorship of Americans.

Want to know more? Alex Jones is on it – – –

EU Moves To Arrest Elon Musk: Will Trump Defend Him and Stop This BS?

  • When citizens lose their freedom to speak freely about their government, they’ve lost it all. Neither prison nor violent conflict are good options, but those appear to be the grim choices when freedom is lost. So very sad what is happening in Europe. – Skylark
  • So, if you disagree with her, you are guilty of hate. Middle school level name calling. – Mike Schultz
  • A true psychopath and enemy of spain. Take off the makeup and I bet there’s a demon underneath! – AL
  • If you don’t like the people in Spain criticizing you, Deputy Prime Minister Diaz, maybe politics is not your line of work. – DC
  • Translation for everyone “You must comply!”  DG
  • Guess she won’t be getting StarLink any time soon  BS

To see how this happens, begin with a basic fact about the modern internet. Major platforms operate with global content moderation rules. They do so not out of ideology but out of necessity. Country-by-country speech codes are technically burdensome, expensive, and often incompatible with user privacy. As a result, when a regulator with real enforcement power demands changes to platform rules, those changes are implemented worldwide. This is the pressure point that the European Union has exploited for more than a decade.
The Digital Services Act did not emerge in isolation. It is the culmination of a long campaign by European regulators to shape online discourse. Long before the DSA took effect, the European Commission convened so-called voluntary codes on hate speech and disinformation. These forums were framed as cooperative and consensual. Internal documents now show they were neither. Platform executives understood that participation was mandatory in practice and that failure to comply would invite retaliation once binding law arrived. The DSA was that law.
Under the DSA, platforms face fines of up to 6% of global revenue and, in extreme cases, expulsion from the European market. These penalties are not theoretical. In December 2025, the Commission imposed its first major DSA fine against 𝕏, €120M, nearly the statutory maximum, in a decision that reads less like neutral enforcement than a warning shot. The message was unmistakable. Platforms that resist Europe’s preferred speech norms will pay a price.
What norms are being enforced. The House Judiciary Committee’s report documents repeated pressure to suppress lawful political speech, satire, and even true information. During the COVID pandemic, European officials pressed platforms to rewrite their moderation policies to silence debate over vaccines, transmission, and public health measures. Many of the censored claims later proved accurate. The point is not hindsight. It is that governments asserted the authority to decide which views could be expressed at all.
The same pattern appears in debates over migration, gender ideology, and elections. European regulators encouraged platforms to demote or remove content that was not illegal but deemed harmful to civic discourse. Terms like harmful, misleading, or undermining public trust are inherently subjective. They function as tools of discretion, not law. Once embedded in global moderation rules, they restrict what Americans can say and hear on platforms used every day.
One might object that Europe is entitled to regulate speech within its own borders. That is true. The problem arises when European law is enforced extraterritorially through global platform rules. When Brussels demands a change to community guidelines, Americans feel the effect instantly. A user in Ohio is governed by the same speech code designed to satisfy regulators in Brussels or Paris. This is foreign regulation by proxy.
France offers a vivid illustration. French authorities, working alongside European institutions, have taken an increasingly aggressive posture toward platforms that refuse to bend. In Paris, authorities and Europol raided 𝕏’s offices, demanding internal records and cooperation. French officials have also sought to compel Elon Musk to appear for interrogation, signaling that resistance will be met not only with fines but with personal pressure. These tactics are not aimed at protecting French citizens from crime. They are designed to enforce ideological conformity.
The United Kingdom has followed a similar path. Its Online Safety Act mirrors many of the DSA’s core mechanisms. British regulators now claim authority to punish platforms for hosting speech that is lawful in the United States but disfavored in London. The arrest of individuals over online speech and threats to block platforms like 𝕏 underscore how quickly safety rhetoric slides into coercion.
The claim I will defend is unusual, but it is not fanciful. A hidden-role party game designed by a Soviet student in the 1980s provides a remarkably accurate model of how modern democratic states now govern information. The game is Werewolf, originally called Mafia, invented by Dimitry Davidoff at Moscow State University. It was designed as a teaching tool, a psychological experiment, and a way to expose how group decision-making works under conditions of uncertainty when one faction possesses hidden coordination. The irony is severe. A game meant to reveal how manipulation works has become a roadmap for those who claim to be preventing it.
Davidoff’s environment matters. He lived in the Soviet Union, a society structured around information asymmetry. The state controlled official truth. Citizens navigated life through rumor, inference, and trust networks. Davidoff did not invent propaganda, but he did formalize its mechanics. He built what philosophers might call a toy system. It strips reality down to its essentials so that the underlying structure becomes visible.
The structure is simple. A small group of players, the werewolves, know who each other are. The rest, the villagers, do not. The werewolves act secretly at night, eliminating villagers. During the day, the group debates and votes on whom to eliminate. The villagers rely on speech, persuasion, and inference. The werewolves rely on coordination and hidden knowledge. Davidoff states the principle explicitly. The game is a struggle between an informed minority and an uninformed majority. The only advantage the werewolves have is that they know each other.
This advantage is usually sufficient. The werewolves do not need to be smarter. They do not need to be morally persuasive. They only need to shape perception long enough to survive each round. Davidoff emphasizes that persuasion matters more than knowledge itself. The trick of the game is to persuade others to accept your knowledge. Everything else is artificial. The lesson is not that truth disappears. The lesson is that truth does not win on its own.
Davidoff drew heavily from Lev Vygotsky, whose work on cognition emphasized the social formation of knowledge. Vygotsky was deeply influenced by Marxist philosophy, particularly historical materialism and dialectical thinking. Knowledge, on this view, is not merely discovered. It is mediated through social structures. Davidoff applied that insight experimentally. He wanted to know how accusations form, how coalitions stabilize, and how decisions are reached when certainty is unavailable and coordination is asymmetric.
The game spread rapidly. By the late 1980s and early 1990s, Werewolf had become common across European universities. It crossed borders easily because it required no equipment, only people and time. It crossed the Atlantic soon after. It appeared at elite tech gatherings such as Game Developers Conference, ETech, Foo Camps, and South By Southwest. Founders of major platforms played it. Security services adopted it formally. In the late 1990s, the Kaliningrad Higher School of the Ministry of Internal Affairs developed training manuals using Mafia to improve psychodiagnostics and body language reading.
This matters because games teach habits of thought. They are not neutral. Werewolf teaches a particular lesson repeatedly. Open deliberation collapses when shared facts are contested. A coordinated minority can dominate a majority if it controls the informational terrain. The side that defines what counts as legitimate knowledge usually wins.  
The European Commission’s decision today to hit 𝕏 with a €120M, roughly $140M, penalty under the Digital Services Act is being sold as a neutral act of consumer protection. Brussels says it is merely enforcing transparency rules about blue checkmarks, advertising, and researcher access. In reality it is something else. It is the clearest signal yet that the European Union increasingly treats American technology companies as hostile forces to be contained, even as it leaves space for Chinese competitors to grow inside the European market. This is a strategic mistake. It undermines Western technological strength, and in practice, it advantages Beijing.
To see why, begin with the basics. The Commission’s press release describes 𝕏’s violations in almost moralistic terms. The platform is accused of “deceptive design” around its paid verification badges, inadequate transparency for its ad database, and excessive obstacles for researchers seeking access to public data. The tone is not that of a regulator working with an ally’s firms to improve compliance. It is accusatory. It is punitive. And it is historic. This is the first non compliance decision under the Digital Services Act, the first time the EU has pulled the financial trigger under its flagship online content law, and Brussels chose an American platform, closely associated with a US aligned, free speech oriented owner, as its inaugural target.
The message is not subtle. When the EU wants to prove that it is serious about its new regulatory arsenal, its instinct is to aim the artillery at the United States. The fine against 𝕏 follows a multibillion euro penalty against Google only three months ago and sits on top of a decade of record breaking antitrust and privacy actions that have almost all hit American firms. The legal theories change from case to case, but the pattern does not. Europe identifies some new systemic problem in digital markets, drafts a sweeping law that in practice reaches only the largest platforms, then proceeds to use those tools almost exclusively against US companies. Brussels insists it is “technology neutral.” The enforcement record says otherwise.
Consider the Digital Markets Act. On paper the DMA is a structural regulation for “gatekeepers,” platforms so large and central that they must live under special ex ante obligations. In practice the thresholds were set at levels that almost no one but American giants could meet. To be a gatekeeper, a company must have at least €7.5B in EU turnover or €75B in global market capitalization and 45M monthly users inside the Union. The result is familiar. The Commission’s first designations named Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, plus one Chinese firm, ByteDance, and a single European company, Booking. US platforms dominate the list by design. European legislators openly said the law should focus on “the top five” American companies rather than sweep in European rivals. Think tank analysts have described the thresholds as “designed to limit its scope” to US firms.
Notice what this means in practice. Large Chinese platforms are, for now, mostly outside the DMA’s hardest obligations not because they are more responsible, but because they have not yet grown quite large enough, in Europe, to trip the gatekeeper thresholds. A growing body of policy analysis from places like CSIS and ITIF has pointed out that the DMA was conceived with US players in mind and that almost no thought was given to how it might shape the rise of Chinese platforms in the European market. The consequence is predictable. The entrenched American firms bear heavy compliance costs, including forced interoperability and structural changes to their business models, while prospective Chinese challengers are free to expand under lighter rules until they too are large enough to be caught, at which point they will already have captured a healthy share of users and data.
The Digital Services Act is following a similar path. Elon Musk has also repeatedly stated in interviews and on 𝕏 that senior EU officials privately pressured the company to suppress lawful speech under the DSA and even floated an informal off the books arrangement: if 𝕏 quietly adopted Brussels’ preferred censorship policies, regulators would ease off enforcement. Musk has framed these conversations as proof that the DSA’s real force is not neutral rulemaking but political pressure to silence disfavored narratives, pressure that 𝕏 refused to accept.
Today’s fine against 𝕏 is not merely about checkmarks. It is about content control and the power to dictate acceptable norms of online speech. The Commission has made clear that it views 𝕏’s lighter moderation posture under Elon Musk with suspicion, particularly when it comes to political speech that Brussels might classify as “disinformation” or “harmful content.” The formal grounds for the fine are framed as transparency and deceptive design, but the context is a running confrontation between a sovereign European regulator and an American platform that has tied itself to a more permissive approach to speech, including speech that criticizes the EU’s migration policy, climate agenda, or its handling of the Ukraine war.
Compare that with the way Europe has handled TikTok. The Chinese owned video app is rightly viewed in Washington as a national security risk, given its parent company’s ties to Beijing and China’s data access laws. The US has banned TikTok from federal devices and debated outright bans or forced divestiture. Europe has not. Brussels has wrapped TikTok into its general platform governance debate. It has opened investigations, complained about ad libraries and protections for minors, and occasionally demanded changes. Yet when the Commission examined TikTok’s ad transparency and researcher access under the same DSA framework that produced today’s 𝕏 fine, it accepted a package of voluntary commitments and closed the case without any monetary penalty. Recent reporting makes the contrast explicit. In the same breath that it describes the €120M fine for 𝕏, Tech Policy Press notes that TikTok “avoided a penalty” because it offered to tweak its ad tools and search features.
One platform, headquartered in a democratic ally, gets a headline grabbing fine on day one of DSA enforcement. Another platform, ultimately answerable to an authoritarian regime that Europe itself labels a “systemic rival,” gets what amounts to probation and a public pat on the back for cooperating. European officials insist there is no favoritism and that nationality does not matter. Yet to American eyes, especially in an administration that views 𝕏 as an important venue for political discourse, the optics are impossible to ignore.
This is not an isolated episode. Over the last decade the largest fines in EU competition history have targeted Google, Apple, Amazon, and Meta. Privacy enforcement under the GDPR has overwhelmingly hit US companies. ITIF has calculated that a huge share of global privacy and platform fines in Europe are paid by American firms, even though they make up only a minority of providers. In a 2024 report bluntly titled “US Policymakers Should Fight Back Against EU Attacks on America’s Tech Sector,” ITIF’s Daniel Castro described the EU’s digital arsenal as a kind of “de facto tariff system,” a set of rules that operates like a trade barrier against US tech. He noted that European enforcers have extracted billions in fines from American companies, sums that approach 20% of EU tariff revenue, and asked the pointed question, “With friends like these, who needs enemies?”

If that sounds like hyperbole, consider what European policymakers are doing at exactly the same time with Chinese firms. Take Temu and Shein, the Chinese shopping apps that flood Europe with ultra cheap clothing and goods shipped directly from China. Brussels has finally begun to respond, but its posture has been cautious and piecemeal. The EU is now moving to end the €150 customs duty exemption for low value parcels, a loophole that allowed Chinese e commerce to pour 4.6B small packages into Europe in 2024, more than 90 % of them from China. The European Parliament notes that 91 % of all shipments under that threshold originated in China, largely through platforms like Shein and Temu.

UPDATE: EU Hits Elon Musk With $140 Million Fine & Is Looking To Arrest Him Because Grok Questioned How Many Jews Died In The Holocaust! PLUS, French Prosecutors Issue Summons To Musk After Raid On X Offices In Paris

Yet even here the focus is on tax and product safety, not on structural power. Officials stress that they are fighting counterfeit toys and unsafe electronics, not the rise of Chinese digital gatekeepers. Enforcement under the DSA has so far followed the same pattern. Temu has been warned about illegal goods and risky design choices, but it has not yet faced the kind of headline penalty that 𝕏 just received. It is treated as a marketplace with some compliance problems, not as part of a larger strategic competition with China.
Defenders of the EU will reply that this is exactly what “non discriminatory” regulation looks like. Whoever meets the thresholds must obey the rules, and whoever violates them must pay the price. On this view, the fact that most gatekeepers and most violators are American is a simple reflection of market realities. The US built giants, Europe did not, so Europe’s regulations necessarily fall most heavily on US companies. Chinese platforms mostly do not yet qualify, so they mostly are not yet covered. What, the defender asks, is the alternative, exempting American companies from rules because their home government happens to provide Europe a security umbrella?
That objection misses two points. The first is design. Thresholds, penalty ranges, definitions of deceptive design, and even the choice of which cases to pursue first are not dictated by nature. They are political and legal choices. European officials set the gatekeeper levels. They drafted the DSA’s vague language about systemic risks and disinformation. They decided, in a sea of potential test cases, that the inaugural DSA fine would be reserved for an American platform closely linked to a political figure unpopular in Brussels. They decided to close TikTok’s ad library case with a handshake rather than a sanction. They chose to build a digital rulebook whose empirical impact is to pull billions out of Silicon Valley while Chinese firms enjoy a period of relative regulatory grace as they scale up.
The second point is strategy. Regulation does not occur in a vacuum. It happens in a world where China is spending heavily to displace Western firms in artificial intelligence, quantum computing, cloud services, and 5G infrastructure. European and American analysts alike have warned that if democratic allies fracture their tech ecosystems with conflicting rules, the beneficiary will not be some imaginary “European champion,” it will be Chinese companies with the scale and backing to exploit the openings. A commentary for a Central and Eastern European think tank put it starkly. The EU’s “war” on US Big Tech, it argued, is “handing China the future,” because it redirects capital and managerial attention inside Western firms from innovation to compliance, just as Chinese competitors surge forward with state backed investment. That is an overstatement, but it captures a real risk.
Here the security dimension matters. The US extends NATO guarantees, deploys troops, and shares intelligence so that Europe can live under an American security umbrella. Those commitments exist because both sides recognize that the real long term threat comes from authoritarian powers, especially China, that seek to rewrite global rules in their favor. In that context, hobbling allied tech firms while giving strategic rivals room to expand is not just economically unwise. It is strategically incoherent. When the EU teaches its citizens to see Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, and 𝕏 as uniquely dangerous “gatekeepers,” while treating TikTok as just another platform and Temu as mostly a customs issue, it is training them to misidentify the real sources of danger.

None of this implies that US companies should be above the law. They can abuse market power. They can mishandle data. They can design interfaces that confuse users. Democratic societies are right to demand basic transparency and fairness online. The question is not whether to regulate, but how. A genuinely allied approach would do at least three things. It would align US and EU standards wherever possible to avoid duplicative, discriminatory burdens. It would calibrate thresholds and enforcement so that major Chinese firms are brought under the hardest rules as quickly as their footprint warrants, not years later after they have already seized key market segments. And it would treat American companies, imperfect though they are, as partners to be corrected rather than adversaries to be shaken down.
There are faint signs that some European officials understand this. Concerns about “digital sovereignty” increasingly mention dependence on Chinese hardware and software. The recent decision to accelerate duties on low value parcels from China reflects genuine alarm about the flood of Chinese goods. But the old reflex remains strong. When Brussels wants to show toughness, it reaches first for an American scalp. Today it chose 𝕏, not a Chinese app, to inaugurate its DSA fines. That choice will be noticed in Washington, where there is already a bipartisan view that EU digital rules are inherently discriminatory and may justify trade retaliation.
The better path is not escalation, it is realignment. Europe should recognize that in technology, as in defense, it is safer standing beside the US than standing alone while Chinese firms grow stronger. That means treating American companies as a kind of most favored ally in digital policy, not in the sense of a free pass, but in the sense of building rules with them, not against them. It means remembering that a company based in California, subject to US law and democratic scrutiny, is different in kind from a company ultimately answerable to the Chinese Communist Party. It means understanding that freedom of expression on platforms like 𝕏, even when messy, is an asset in a civilizational competition with regimes that censor as a matter of principle.
Europe’s leaders often speak of defending a “rules based order.” If those rules consistently punish the very companies that anchor Western tech leadership, and if they open the door for Chinese rivals to gain ground, they will have failed their own stated purpose. The €120M fine on 𝕏 will not bankrupt the company. But as a signal it matters. It tells the world who Brussels sees as the problem. For the sake of the transatlantic alliance, and for the sake of technological freedom, that perception needs to change. President Trump should treat today’s attack on 𝕏 as a de facto tariff system, a set of rules operating like a trade barrier against US tech. If Europe is going to rely on the US security umbrella and security guarantees, it ought to stop targeting US Big Tech while coddling China.
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Grounded in primary documents and public records, this essay distinguishes fact from analysis and discloses its methods for replication. Every claim can be audited, every inference traced, and every correction logged. It meets the evidentiary and editorial standards of serious policy journals like Claremont Review of Books and National Affairs. Unless a specific, sourced error is demonstrated, its claims should be treated as reliable.

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Yolanda Díaz, Spain's Deputy Prime Minister under

“No” — I’m not going to fire the staffer “Apologize?” “NO! I didn’t make a mistake!” Screw the fake news!

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“No” — I’m not going to fire

File this under: LONG OVERDUE The @DeptWar is formally ending ALL Professional Military Education, fellowships, and certificate programs with Harvard University. Harvard is woke; The War Department is not.

Full Thread at X

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File this under: LONG OVERDUE The @DeptWar

The public has grown sick and tired of rich spoiled celebrities virtue signaling in public. Such an attitude is so obnoxious as to cause the ratings of such shows as the Grammys, Golden Globes, and Oscars to plummet. And this loss of audience is very worrying to the producers of such celebrity shows. However, the good news is that a very special sound effect has been discovered that when played over the celebrity show intercom system at the appropriate moment at just the right modulation and frequency meaning each and every time an airhead celeb starts virtue signaling, it is guaranteed to quickly put an end to such behavior. In this video this very special sound effect can be heard and once you hear it you will understand why it can quickly put an end to public virtue signaling by self-important celebs.

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[rumble]https://rumble.com/embed/v737n72/?pub=ms97l[/rumble] The public has grown sick and tired

Daniel A Roberts – Amazon Page

About the author

I currently live in Oklahoma City.

Originally born in Erie, Pennsylvania, I took to creative storytelling at an early age. Putting different worlds to paper as early as middle school, I didn’t focus on it as a career until much later in life.

It takes a different kind of courage to put words out into the public with your real name attached to it. Using a Pen Name isn’t in my blood. To me, it’s a form of hiding behind a fake identity. If the fake identity fails to produce fun writing, a name change fixes perception for the next book. To me, that’s not an honest thing to do. I don’t hide who I am when I write.

Life got complicated, as it tends to do. Dealing with a stroke mixed with kidney failure and dialysis has extracted a heavy price. I wrote the final novel of my career, a cross-over Science Fiction & Fantasy adventure titled Chaotic Star.

Dark Humor flavored with a serious story was always my strength when it came to creating different worlds. None of my work pushes a social message or works towards some modern agenda. I write to entertain readers and nothing more. If you’re looking for a social justice warrior, I am not that person. Who I am is a man who loves the adventure, to explore how good and evil jockey for power in a make believe world so we can leave the stresses of real life behind. To escape into a place where we can root for the hero and curse the villain. So pick a title, buckle up and enjoy the story!

Daniel A Roberts – Amazon Page

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/uR2efxjH5lU Daniel A Roberts - Amazon Page About the

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJCnk9sbzwo For HOURS of fun – Steve Inman


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“These next revelations, if the president were