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A Familiar Face FROM Crime Drama Passes Away
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A Familiar Face FROM Crime Drama Passes Away

Alex Duong, the talented actor and comedian best known for his role on the long-running CBS police drama Blue Bloods, passed away peacefully Saturday morning at age 42 after battling an aggressive form of cancer, surrounded by loved ones who supported him through his final moments. A Devoted Father’s Final Goodbye Hilarie Steele, who organized a fundraising campaign to support Duong’s family during his treatment, shared the heartbreaking news through an update on the family’s page. Duong’s wife Christina and their young daughter Everest were able to visit him Friday night, where he remained alert enough to say goodbye to the little girl he treasured deeply. Steele noted that Duong passed comfortably and out of pain, offering some comfort to the devastated family who expressed profound gratitude for the outpouring of support and prayers they received throughout this difficult journey. Rapid Decline and Aggressive Diagnosis The actor had been diagnosed with alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare soft-tissue cancer that typically affects children but can strike adults with equal severity. According to reports, Duong’s symptoms began with a persistent headache behind his eyes, which quickly progressed to a noticeable bulge in his left eye that alarmed his employer enough to send him home. Medical tests revealed a tumor blocking blood flow to his optic nerve, which doctors classified as extremely aggressive following a biopsy. Duong entered septic shock on Friday, and his condition deteriorated rapidly, with everything changing within hours according to family updates. A Career Celebrating American Television Duong portrayed Sonny Le on Blue Bloods from 2021 to 2024, appearing on the show that celebrates law enforcement and family values. His television credits extended across numerous American productions including Pretty Little Liars, The Young and the Restless, and the popular teen drama 90210. His work brought entertainment to millions of American families and demonstrated the talent and dedication that defined his career. The entertainment community mourns the loss of a performer who brought joy to audiences while battling his illness with courage and maintaining his focus on what mattered most: his family and his faith. Sources Nbcnews: Alex Duong, actor and comedian, dies at 42

Pentagon PANIC – Iran’s Ground War Challenge
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Pentagon PANIC – Iran’s Ground War Challenge

Iran’s “set U.S. troops on fire” warning isn’t just trash talk—it’s a roadmap to where Tehran believes America bleeds most. Iran’s Threat Targets the One Move Washington Can’t Undo Iran’s threat to set American troops “on fire” aims at the scenario Tehran views as most politically and militarily decisive: a U.S. ground invasion. Air campaigns can punish and retreat; ground operations create captives, body counts, and open-ended commitments. Iranian leaders want U.S. voters picturing a long casualty list before any landing craft moves. That rhetorical choice also admits something: Iran expects air pressure and plans to survive it. U.S. deployments in late March added weight to the threat. Reports described thousands of additional American personnel arriving over the March 29–30 weekend, alongside high-end platforms and rapid-response capabilities. Iran’s parliament speaker sharpened the deterrent message with a tactical framing: once Americans enter Iranian territory, the fight moves to “level ground,” where Iran can throw large numbers of troops and paramilitary forces into sustained combat. Why Tehran Focuses on Ground War: Attrition, Optics, and Geography Iran’s deterrence logic leans on arithmetic and terrain. Ground conflict converts a high-tech American advantage into a test of endurance: logistics routes, convoy protection, urban fighting, and constant exposure to ambush. Tehran also knows the American public’s patience has limits when objectives blur and casualties rise. From a common-sense standpoint, this is the most credible part of Iran’s messaging: even a weaker force can impose unacceptable costs if it chooses the battlefield. Pentagon preparations reported in the press add another layer. Contingency planning for coastal and island-related operations suggests U.S. leaders are at least exploring options beyond airpower. Strategic chokepoints and infrastructure targets sit near waterways, and Iran has long threatened to widen pain by menacing maritime traffic and regional infrastructure. A ground move, even limited, would signal escalation and risk igniting the kind of regional chain reaction that planners struggle to control once it starts. The Escalation Ladder Was Built Months Earlier The March 30 warning didn’t appear out of thin air; it arrived after a rapid sequence of shocks. Tensions already ran hot from decades of hostility dating to 1979. Early 2026 added new fuel: internal unrest and mass violence inside Iran, followed by American rhetoric signaling readiness to intervene. By February, the U.S. buildup was described as the largest since 2003, and the crisis moved from posturing to action. Operation Epic Fury, launched with Israel at the end of February, marked the true point of no return. Strikes reportedly hit missiles, air defenses, infrastructure, and leadership, with heavy casualties across Iran and spillover effects in the region. When decapitation-style operations kill senior leaders, deterrence messaging often turns theatrical because fear becomes a substitute for lost command stability. Tehran’s “set on fire” line fits that pattern: intimidate, mobilize, and signal that the next step will be uglier. Domestic U.S. Politics Now Competes With Military Logic Washington’s internal split matters because Iran is trying to widen it. Reports described Republicans arguing that military operations must finish the war, while Democrats warned about the consequences of ground escalation. Iran’s parliament speaker explicitly tied a ground invasion to higher American deaths and falling popularity for the war, essentially aiming propaganda at U.S. living rooms. Tehran can’t outspend the U.S. on defense, but it can try to outlast the U.S. in political will. Conservative instincts typically favor strength, clarity, and achievable objectives. A ground invasion without a crisp, enforceable end state—nuclear rollback, regime collapse, or negotiated surrender—risks becoming the opposite: a costly mission defined by shifting rationales. Iran’s threats should not frighten U.S. policymakers into paralysis, but they should pressure them into discipline. The public deserves a strategy that matches the scale of sacrifice being asked. The Off-Ramp Is Real, but It Narrows Fast Diplomatic signals still flicker. Reports suggested peace talks could happen soon even as deployments and threats intensify. President Trump’s claim that Iran met many demands in a 15-point plan clashes with earlier accounts that Tehran rejected the proposal, leaving outsiders to guess whether positions changed or rhetoric got ahead of reality. Meanwhile, regional escalation continued as Houthi militants fired missiles toward Israel, reminding everyone how easily this war spreads sideways. Iran warns U.S. troops would be 'set on fire' if they invade https://t.co/M9VryHXhOs — Just the News (@JustTheNews) March 30, 2026 Iran’s warning should be read as both deterrence and confession: Tehran expects pressure, but it believes America’s weak point is a prolonged ground fight. U.S. leaders now face a hard choice—finish objectives with measured force and a defined endgame, or slide into the type of occupation-style problem that drains strength and invites wider chaos. The next decision won’t be made by slogans; it will be made by logistics, alliances, and political endurance. Sources: 2026-Iran-War 2026 Iran war

Rothschild Banker SEIZES Vatican’s Financial Throne…
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Rothschild Banker SEIZES Vatican’s Financial Throne…

The Vatican Bank just appointed a former Rothschild banking executive to its top leadership position, igniting a firestorm of questions about global financial elites infiltrating one of Christianity’s most sacred institutions. Banking Executive Takes Vatican Financial Helm François Pauly assumed the presidency of the Institute for the Works of Religion’s seven-member supervisory board in late April 2026, transitioning from his prior role as a board member since 2024. The Vatican Bank oversees financial strategy, compliance operations, and manages funds for approximately 12,000 Church clients supporting charitable missions worldwide. Pauly previously served as general manager for the Edmond de Rothschild banking group, though he has no family ties to the Rothschild dynasty. His appointment represents an internal promotion within an institution answering directly to the Pope and cardinals. Rothschild Alum Tapped to Lead Vatican Bank VATICAN CITY — Luxembourg financier François Pauly, a former managing director at Edmond de Rothschild Group, was named Wednesday to head the supervisory board of the Vatican Bank, known as the Institute for the Works of Religion. The… pic.twitter.com/DVpailb4qR — SafetySwipe (@SafetyNotorious) March 26, 2026 Rothschild Connection Fuels Elite Control Concerns The Rothschild name carries significant historical weight among Americans frustrated with global financial elites who seem untouchable regardless of which party holds power. This appointment arrived as Edmond de Rothschild’s Paris headquarters faced a police raid connected to Jeffrey Epstein email investigations, though Pauly had no involvement in that matter. The Rothschild family provided legitimate 19th-century loans to the Holy See during economic crises, creating factual historical financial ties that conspiracy theorists now reframe as evidence of ongoing elite influence. For conservatives already skeptical of globalist institutions, the optics of a Rothschild-connected banker overseeing Vatican finances raises legitimate transparency questions, even if wild Illuminati theories lack supporting evidence. Deep State Takeover or Administrative Routine Social media erupted with questions like “Deep state taking over the Catholic Church?” immediately following the announcement in March 2026. Catholic Online urged prudence, characterizing the decision as routine administrative stewardship for financial compliance rather than evidence of shadowy control. Yet this dismissal misses why ordinary Americans feel uneasy watching elite banking networks penetrate religious institutions promising spiritual independence from worldly powers. The Vatican Bank itself underwent money laundering investigations during the 2010s, requiring international compliance reforms that continue today. These reforms supposedly increased transparency, but appointing someone from elite European banking circles doesn’t inspire confidence among conservatives who watched similar “experts” drive America into endless foreign entanglements and economic instability. Historical Precedents and Conspiracy Theory Roots Conspiracy theories linking Rothschilds, Illuminati, and Vatican control stretch back to post-French Revolution antisemitic narratives, blending anti-Masonic and anti-Jewish tropes without factual foundation. Academic sources trace these theories to figures like Nazi sympathizer Gerald Winrod, who promoted “Jewish Money Power” claims thoroughly debunked by historians. However, dismissing all concerns as baseless conspiracy ignores how global financial elites genuinely do wield disproportionate influence over institutions affecting ordinary people’s lives. The challenge for discerning conservatives is separating legitimate questions about Vatican financial transparency and elite banking connections from unsubstantiated Illuminati fantasies. No evidence proves Pauly participates in secret societies or pursues anything beyond professional banking stewardship, but the appointment symbolizes broader frustrations with unaccountable global networks operating beyond democratic oversight. Faith Communities Navigate Truth From Speculation Catholics face pressure to discern fact from fiction as online speculation erodes institutional trust within faith communities. The Vatican maintains ultimate authority through the Pope and cardinals who approved Pauly’s appointment, suggesting confidence in his administrative capabilities regardless of employment history. Yet transparency remains paramount for institutions managing funds intended for spiritual missions and charitable works. Conservatives rightly demand accountability from powerful organizations, whether governmental, corporate, or religious, especially when elite banking backgrounds intersect with sacred duties. The Vatican’s financial operations should withstand scrutiny without defensive dismissals characterizing all questions as conspiracy mongering, particularly when historical scandals justify skepticism about institutional claims of reform and oversight. Sources: Vatican Bank Appointment Sparks Online Conspiracy Claims – Catholic Online News New Vatican Bank Chief Sparks Illuminati Takeover Speculation After Rothschild Ties Surface – Charisma Judeo-Masonic Conspiracy Theory – Wikipedia Historical Analysis of Illuminati and Antisemitic Conspiracy Theories – Academic Publication

LEAKED FBI Memo Targets Sunday Mass…
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LEAKED FBI Memo Targets Sunday Mass…

A single leaked FBI memo turned Sunday Mass, Latin hymns, and parish friendships into a federal “mitigation opportunity,” and the government still won’t fully show its work. The Richmond Memo That Made Religion a Lead The FBI’s Richmond field office finalized a January 23, 2023 intelligence product with a title that read like a policy verdict: “Interest of Racially or Ethnically Motivated Violent Extremists in Radical-Traditionalist Catholic Ideology Almost Certainly Presents New Mitigation Opportunities.” The thrust mattered more than the phrasing. It sketched “radical-traditionalist Catholics” as a potential node of far-right white nationalist overlap and urged source development in Traditional Latin Mass parishes and online spaces. That recommendation is the hinge of the story. The federal government can investigate violence; it cannot treat faith practice as a proxy for suspicion without a clear, specific predicate. When an agency’s own document moves from “watch for threats” to “cultivate sources” inside a religious community, the ordinary guardrails of American life—free exercise, associational privacy, and the presumption of innocence—start to feel negotiable. Readers don’t need a law degree to sense the danger. How a Narrow Case Became a Broad Template Reporting and congressional material indicate the memo built from a single Richmond-area investigation involving a suspect who described himself as tied to this “RTC” label, then stretched that into a broader analytical framework. That leap matters because the memo never settled a stable definition of “radical-traditionalist Catholic.” Without a clean definition, the category risks swallowing normal people: families who prefer older liturgy, converts attracted to tradition, or simply Catholics who distrust modern politics. The memo also drew from outside designations, including references tied to the Southern Poverty Law Center’s labeling ecosystem, according to critics. Americans can debate advocacy groups all day, but law enforcement should ground surveillance decisions in concrete behavior: credible threats, weapons procurement, explicit operational planning, or a documented pattern of violence. “This community shares some cultural grievances” is not a conservative or common-sense predicate for undercover sourcing inside churches. Leak, Retraction, and a Question That Wouldn’t Die The memo leaked in early February 2023 and detonated instantly because it touched a third rail: the idea that federal agents might be encouraged to build human sources in parishes. The FBI then retracted the memo and removed it from internal systems, saying it failed to meet standards. Retraction usually ends a story. Here, it widened it. A retracted memo can still reveal institutional instincts—what seemed acceptable long enough to draft, vet, circulate, and defend. State attorneys general, led by Virginia’s Jason Miyares, sent a letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray and Attorney General Merrick Garland criticizing what they saw as anti-Catholic bias. Local church leadership also protested, framing the memo as a threat to religious liberty rather than a neutral threat assessment. That blend—legal officials and bishops converging—signaled something rare: the issue wasn’t partisan messaging alone; it was a lived fear of political profiling dressed as counterterrorism. FOIA Becomes the Real Battlefield Judicial Watch, joined by CatholicVote Civic Action, filed a FOIA lawsuit in April 2023 seeking records behind the memo and the decision-making around it. The public later saw more than 200 pages released in two batches—131 pages in November 2023 and 98 pages in December 2023—yet the documents arrived heavily redacted. Judicial Watch argues the redactions lack adequate legal justification and conceal internal efforts to manage public blowback rather than disclose the underlying rationale. A March 20, 2026 federal court hearing spotlighted the central tension: transparency law exists to prevent agencies from grading their own homework in secret, yet national-security bureaucracy defaults to black ink. A conservative lens doesn’t demand that the FBI publish sensitive methods; it demands that the government explain, at least in principle, why innocent religious practice was treated as an investigative foothold. If officials can’t defend the predicate, the public reasonably suspects the predicate never existed. Congressional Oversight and the “Weaponization” Argument House Judiciary Republicans, led by Chairman Jim Jordan, pushed oversight and released material arguing the memo lacked a legitimate basis and imported a biased framing into federal work product. Separate reporting said the Senate Judiciary Committee identified similar anti-Catholic language across more than a dozen Biden-era FBI documents, implying the Richmond memo wasn’t a one-off but part of a broader pattern or at least a broader vulnerability to ideological sourcing. Director Wray told lawmakers the memo’s authors were admonished but not removed, a bureaucratic outcome that reads differently depending on your trust level. If you believe the memo was merely sloppy, admonishment fits. If you believe it signaled improper religious profiling, admonishment looks like accountability theater. Conservative common sense lands on a simple standard: when government puts religion in the crosshairs, consequences should be proportional to the constitutional stakes. Why This Still Matters After the Memo’s “Death” The memo’s retraction didn’t restore the lost trust because the proposed tactic—source development in parishes—attacks the fabric of community life. People confess sins, not crimes. They argue about theology, not insurgency. When federal analysis blurs that line, citizens start self-censoring: fewer candid conversations, fewer online comments, fewer new visitors at a Latin Mass who don’t want their name floating in a file. That chilling effect is real even when no agent ever walks in. The conservative legal group Judicial Watch is continuing to push for more transparency around a memo targeting traditionalist Catholics, which was issued in early 2023 by the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) Richmond field office. https://t.co/WrPfzxuAfs — Catholic News Agency (@cnalive) March 24, 2026 The cleaner long-term question is whether the system learns. FOIA litigation, oversight reports, and public scrutiny can force reforms in how analysts define threat categories and what evidence they must show before touching religious spaces. Americans over 40 have watched institutions drift toward opacity; this fight is the opposite impulse. The public doesn’t need perfection from law enforcement. It needs a government that remembers the difference between investigating violence and surveilling belief. Sources: Judicial Watch Pushes for Transparency in 2023 FBI Memo Linking Extremist Risk to Some Catholics FBI Targeting of Traditionalist Catholics The FBI’s Breach of Religious Freedom: The Weaponization of Law Enforcement Against Catholic Americans FBI Richmond Catholic memo Senate Judiciary Committee: Anti-Catholic texts found in 13 more Biden-era FBI documents New report details extent FBI’s weaponization law enforcement against FBI director says anti-Catholic memo authors were admonished, not removed

Iran’s Multi-Year Plot Against Trump REVEALED…
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Iran’s Multi-Year Plot Against Trump REVEALED…

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard cyber operatives have spent years executing one of the most audacious digital election interference campaigns in modern American history, targeting the inner circle of a presidential candidate with precision that should alarm every citizen concerned about national security. The Anatomy of Iran’s Election Interference Campaign The Justice Department’s September 2024 indictment revealed a sophisticated Iranian operation that went far beyond amateur cybercrime. Three unnamed IRGC cyber actors executed a coordinated assault on American democracy, stealing confidential materials from Donald Trump’s presidential campaign and the personal accounts of his closest advisors. The hackers operated under the alias “Robert,” a digital phantom designed to mask the Iranian government’s fingerprints. This wasn’t opportunistic hacking but calculated state-sponsored warfare aimed squarely at influencing the outcome of an American presidential election. Targeting Trump’s Inner Circle With Surgical Precision The hackers demonstrated remarkable intelligence about their targets, zeroing in on figures whose communications would yield maximum political damage. Susie Wiles, Roger Stone, and attorney Lindsey Halligan found their private correspondence compromised. The operation employed classic phishing techniques, with attackers posing as legitimate tech support from Microsoft and Google to gain access to WhatsApp accounts. Between late June and early July 2024, stolen Trump campaign documents began arriving unsolicited in the personal email inboxes of Biden campaign associates. None responded, and Harris campaign spokespeople later denied any direct contact with the hackers. The Broader Pattern of Iranian Cyber Aggression This wasn’t Iran’s first rodeo in American election interference. The IRGC’s cyber units have conducted hack-and-leak campaigns since at least 2020, targeting U.S. officials across administrations. The escalation traces directly to heightened tensions following the 2018 U.S. withdrawal from the JCPOA nuclear agreement. What distinguishes the 2024 operation is its scale and brazenness. Former CISA Director Chris Krebs confirmed Iran’s multi-pronged efforts specifically targeted Trump, while Microsoft intelligence documented parallel Russian operations aimed at different candidates. The asymmetric nature of foreign interference reveals sophisticated understanding of American political divisions. Private Sector Steps Up Where Government Gaps Exist Major tech companies became essential partners in disrupting the Iranian campaign. Meta, Microsoft, Google, and Yahoo detected suspicious activities, blocked compromised accounts, and shared critical intelligence with federal investigators. This public-private collaboration proved vital in limiting the damage. The FBI’s Washington Field Office led the investigation, benefiting from the tech sector’s ability to identify patterns invisible to traditional law enforcement. Christopher Wray, FBI Director during the initial investigation, warned that Iran couldn’t hide behind keyboards. His successor, Kash Patel, inherited an ongoing probe that intensified when hackers reversed their May 2025 claim of “retirement” and threatened new leaks. The Threat That Refuses to Fade After briefly signaling to Reuters they were stepping back in May 2025, the “Robert” hackers resurfaced with renewed threats. They now claim possession of approximately 100 gigabytes of emails from Trump’s inner circle, threatening to sell or release the materials. Attorney General Pam Bondi characterized it as an attack by a “rogue group” and vowed protection for officials and prosecution for perpetrators. The timing proved particularly provocative, coming after U.S. military strikes on Iranian targets. This pattern suggests the cyber operations serve dual purposes: electoral interference and retaliation for kinetic military actions against Iranian interests. Iran-linked hackers claim breach of FBI director's personal email; DOJ official confirms break-inhttps://t.co/HbD6Ymq0Lp — Anonymous (@YourAnonNews) March 27, 2026 The broader implications extend beyond one election cycle. No evidence suggests the leaked materials actually influenced voting outcomes; Biden campaign associates ignored the unsolicited emails, and mainstream media largely declined to publish stolen documents. Yet the operation succeeded in sowing distrust, forcing expensive security upgrades, and demonstrating American vulnerability to foreign digital intrusions. The indictments set important precedents for holding state sponsors accountable, even when extradition remains unlikely. Future election security depends on maintaining the public-private partnerships that helped contain this threat and expanding defensive measures across campaigns and government communications networks. Sources: Three IRGC Cyber Actors Indicted for ‘Hack-and-Leak’ Operation Designed to Influence the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election – U.S. Department of Justice Iran-linked hackers threaten release of new trove of emails stolen from Trump’s inner circle after strikes – Fox News Iranian hackers sent Biden campaign info stolen from Trump – Politico Iran hackers sent stolen Trump campaign info to Biden campaign, FBI says – CBS News Iranian hackers sent information stolen from Trump campaign to Biden, FBI says – ABC7 Chicago